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THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE
aka
BASIL OF BAKER STREET; BASIL THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE
Rating:   
USA. 1986.
Directors Ron Clements, Bunny Mattinson, Dave Michener & John Musker, Screenplay Roy O. Disney, Vance Gerry, Mel Shaw & Pete Young, Based on the Novel Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, Producer Bunny Mattinson, Music Henry Mancini, Production Design Glen Keane. Production Company Disney/Silver Screen Partners II.
Voices:
Barrie Ingham (Basil), Val Bettin (Dr Dawson), Vincent Price (Professor Rattigan), Candy Candido (Fidget), Susanne Pollatschek (Olivia Flaversham), Alan Young (Mr Flaversham)
Plot: London, 1897. Dr Dawson, just returned from overseas, finds young mouse child Olivia Flaversham crying in the streets. He aids her in going to 221½ Baker Street to meet Basil, the famous mouse detective, to ask his help in finding her father. Basil realizes that Olivias father, who is a toymaker, has been kidnapped by Basils sworn enemy, the evil Professor Rattigan. Dawson and Olivia join Basil as he uncovers Rattigans nefarious scheme to create an automaton that will replace the mouse Queen during her coming diamond jubilee celebrations.
The period following Walt Disneys death in 1966 up until the 1990s was almost entirely a desert wasteland when it came to Disney animation. During this time they were only releasing one animated film about every four years. With very occasional exceptions The Jungle Book (1967), The Aristo Cats (1970) the studios animated output during this period was bland and formulaic as can be seen by the infuriatingly banal likes of Robin Hood (1973), The Rescuers (1977), The Black Cauldron (1985) and Oliver & Company (1988). Most of the time the studio was being kept going by re-releases of their classics and a regular supply of live-action comedies. The Great Mouse Detective, though, is one rare delight that the Disney studio managed to produce during this period.
It is unlikely that Arthur Conan Doyle in his wildest imaginings and if one reads about some of the spiritualist beliefs that Doyle had, believe me they were pretty wild imaginings would have produced a version of Sherlock Holmes with cartoon mice. Based on Eve Tituss popular series of childrens books, The Great Mouse Detective is a surprisingly good effort. It is packed with a dazzlingly madcap battery of visual gags that leave it one of the best, most overlooked Disney films made during these lean years.
The period style and Holmesian familiarities are pulled with such aplomb that the film is as much a knowing nod to its adult audience as it is kiddie entertainment. The characterizations are a delight the kind and gentlemanly Dawson; the eager bloodhound; and Fidget, the bat that seems to be modeled as a cast-off gremlin, who has an absolutely hilarious scene trying to escape the mouth of Rattigans cat; but especially the refreshingly uncute, dourly Scots-accented ragamuffin Olivia. Basil, the Holmes counterpart, is played with a manic lunacy, more like Nicol Williamsons characterization of Holmes in The Seven Per Cent Solution (1976) than any traditional Basil Rathbone incarnation. There are some charmingly absurd scenes with him trying to tame a bloodhound and charging into battle on a toy horse. The film has a pace that spins like a rollercoaster not only running out of control but taking in the rest of the circus too, with helter skelter chases through a toyshop and a climax in and around Big Ben that are both more exciting than one could believe possible for a cartoon. And there is that absolutely delectable moment where Basil escapes from Rattigans trap that combines everything from axes to arrows and heavy weights just in time to pose for the camera. Theres also an excellent score, most particularly a sassy dance number Look At Me, performed by a Melissa Manchester-voiced singer in a pub. This is one Disney film where the ending comes far too soon.
Disappointingly, The Great Mouse Detective was not a huge success. However co-directors John Musker and Ron Clements went solo on their next outing, The Little Mermaid (1989), which began the new Disney renaissance of the 1990s. In the 1990s Musker and Clements became one of Disneys most successful directing teams, making the likes of Aladdin (1992), Hercules (1997) and Treasure Planet (2002).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
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