MovieChat Forums > The Adventures of Shirley Holmes (1997) Discussion > A Decade Later, It's Stood the Test of T...

A Decade Later, It's Stood the Test of Time [to be updated regularly]


I've caught a few episodes of this since they started running it again on YTV. As well, this past weekend, I found an old videotape I had made of various episodes. Watching this show again for the first time in several years, I suddenly realised just how damn good it was. I mean, I knew it was good from the minute I accidently caught an episode on YTV one boring evening over a decade ago, when I was in my mid to late 20s; I just never realised before how good this show actually was. Now that enough time has passed, one can objectively analyse it; and from my perspective, this show has definitely stood the test of time—being not only the best adolescents'/family show of the past fifteen years, but also one of the best television shows in general. The writing was excellent, the acting was excellent, the directing was excellent, the characters were genuine and endearing, etc. Given its complex plots, eccentric characters and dark humour, this show was like ‘David Lynch for the Young and Smart’—check out the ‘Second Take’ episode and tell me it's not reminiscent of Lost Highway.

In the late '90s, Canadian philospoher Mark Kingwell was going on and on about how good Buffy the Vampire Slayer was. I thought that show was a load of overrated bollocks, featuring genuinely unlikable dimwit actors. Why he would overlook this youth-oriented show in favour of Buffy remains a mystery to me. This show transcends the ‘adolescents' show’ category far more easily than the other does; it's far more adult-compatible, given the complexity of much of the writing. (I've considered contacting Kingwell and challenging his view.)

The official reason behind Shirley Holmes's cancellation was the aging of the actors. Supposedly, the tone of the show would have had to change if the characters had aged along with their actors—in other words, they were scared of dealing with sexual themes. If true, I think this is a cop-out: the characters were almost all intellectuals—romance was of lesser importance to them. Furthermore, intimacy had already been dealt with to some extent on the show: Shirley's summer romance; Bo's fling with an Asian schoolgirl; Alicia's much older, fraudulent boyfriend; Molly's sleek, darkly sexual, ‘evil feline’ persona, etc.

Frankly, I think the real reason behind this show's cancellation was an issue of demographics: In an era when standards were being lowered and young people were being raised and schooled to be increasingly ignorant and uncultured, there was simply no viable youth audience left to watch this series. Low-culture crap like The Spice Girls, Brittney Spears, Eminem, ‘reality’ shows, and commercial hip-hop had been elevated to a position of influential dominance by the late 1990s, and the effects were detrimental. I remember attending a party in 1999 or 2000, where there were numerous young people in their early teens to early thirties. The subject of Shirley Holmes came up amongst two or three of us, and so I asked for a show of hands: There was not one person there under 20 who had actually watched a single episode of the show! So I've come to the conclusion that Shirley Holmes was too intelligent and complex for most of the children and teenagers of the day, and was watched primarily by people in their twenties and older in the first place. When the producers and number-crunchers at YTV and Nickleodeon realised this, they probably decided to drop it in favour of producing/promoting more simple-minded junk of the comic variety (e.g., Radio Active) to suit the less-sophisticated youth demographics of the period.

Anyway, it's great to see YTV has had the good taste to run this show again. I hope more people, young and old, come to appreciate it for its quality.



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The Four Seasons/Series, Ranked in Terms of Essential Viewing:


Season/Series 3 (1998-99)
—essential episodes (in order of original broadcast):
The Case of the Crooked Comic
The Case of the Mysterious Message
The Case of the Second Take
The Case of the Code of Silence
The Case of the Real Fake
The Case of the Miraculous Mine
The Case of the Forbidden Mountain

Season/Series 1 (1996-97)
—essential episodes (in order of original broadcast):
The Case of the Burning Building
The Case of the Ruby Ring
The Case of the Maestro's Ghost
The Case of the King of Hearts
The Case of the Second Sight

Season/Series 4 (1999-00)
—essential episodes (in order of original broadcast):
The Case of the Calculated Crime
The Case of the Virtual Zeus
The Case of the Hidden Heart
The Case of the Dragon's Breath

Season/Series 2 (1997-98)
—essential episodes (in order of original broadcast):
The Case of the Golden Cave
The Case of the Exploding Puppet
The Case of the Broken Oath


Notes on Ranking. Season 3 ranks highest because it has the most (five) Molly Hardy episodes (generally the best ones), as well as Shirley's reunion with her mother and other well-written plots. Deciding whether Season 1 or 4 should be the runner-up was a difficult call. Both had an equal number of ‘Molly Hardy-heavy’ episodes, but the non-Molly episodes of Season 1 were generally better written and more interesting, and thus its ranking at second place. Season 2 ranks last due to lack of emphasis on Molly (she is crucial to the plot of only two episodes, and appears in only two others), as well as its having the least believable and often hokiest of the episodes.

Opinions? Input?


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i loved this show! i've not seen much of seasons 3 and 4 because they weren't shown in the UK. i've only watched some on YouTube.

Goblin King! Goblin King! Wherever you may be take this child of mine far away from me!

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I actually forgot the name of this show and have spent a long time trying to track it down. I first came across it by accident when i was around 15, and now six years later, i have found it. I'm going to check out youtube now to see if hopefully they have some episodes on there. It was obviously a terrific show if i have remembered it all this time.

Just because i live in London does not mean i walk around with a bowler hat and an umbrella

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What day/time does it play on YTV now??

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They've long since dropped it from syndication again. They ran the first season and that was that. It'll no doubt show up on YTV again, though, somewhere down the road.

I wish someone who owns a copy of the unofficial (i.e., bootleg) box set would post all the episodes online--by bit torrent or otherwise. It's been almost a decade since the programme ended, and there's still been no official DVD release.

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Well Shirley Central has a few full eps and I also found a few on Youtube.

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Interesting you should bring that up--I just discovered the new full downloads via z-Share a few hours ago. I successfully downloaded the first episode ('Burning Building'), and it had really nice video but numerous 'dropouts' in the audio (probably the result of the WMV file being created through AVS converter which gives hideous results). I've tried downloading the second episode ('Ruby Ring') several times over the past two hours, but it always 'finishes' downloading before its complete. It seems this great old series will be forever plagued by technicalities of one kind or the other....

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