Set in the late 1800s and turning the spotlight on Sherlock's younger sister, Enola Homes is everything a modern Holmes film for kids (and like-minded adults) should be: fresh, engaging, not preachy, with a loveable female protagonist who grates on nobody's nerves.
Since Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes first appeared in print in the 19th century, the forensic detective and his comrade, Dr. John H. Watson, have been enduring figures in global literature and other media,
Morris Chestnut stars as Dr. John Watson in this medical drama that is a warmer, fuzzier version of "House," another Sherlock Holmes-derived series.
Morris Chestnut, who plays John Watson on CBS's newest medical drama, exclusively told Us Weekly who had his vote to play Sherlock Holmes
CBS revisits the world of Sherlock Holmes with Watson. Showrunner Craig Sweeny discusses how Sherlock is killed off, Randall Park as Moriarty & more.
Morris Chestnut exclusively told Us Weekly about what Sherlock Holmes fans can expect from his new CBS medical drama 'Watson'
A new eight-part TV series being filmed in Cardiff is projected to add tens of millions of pounds of economic value as well as creating jobs and a bespoke
Set in the English rural county of Dorset, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s novel “The Hound of the Baskervilles” starred Sherlock Holms and Dr. Watson solving a murder that took place amid the legend of a cursed,
Enola Holmes and Watson divert from Doyle's source material, so it's only a matter of time until a Sherlock Holmes favorite gets their own spinoff.
It’s a bit weird, the number of shows streaming on our televisions and iPads that take their bearings from glowingly remembered originals. Just at the moment we have a stylistically glamorous The Day of the Jackal with Eddie Redmayne as a very pulled back assassin.
The Gist: This is where Dr. John Watson (Morris Chestnut) comes upon his friend and mentor, Sherlock Holmes fighting his archnemesis, James Moriarty. When the two plunge over the falls, locked in combat, Watson dives in after them.