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Public Domain
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon 1943
mystery, Roy William Neill, Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce, Lionel Atwill, Kaaren Verne, William Post Jr., Dennis Hoey, Holmes Herbert, Mary Gordon, bomb, inventor, nazi, Gestapo, sherlock holmes, Dr. Watson, nemesis, hospital, doctor, England, Europe, Kidnapping, trap door, a secret passageway, Scotland Yard, police, detective, crime
Starring Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce, and Lionel Atwill. You can read about this movie on it's IMDb page.

File: Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon(1943).webm
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943) is the fourth in the Sherlock Holmes (1939 film series) series of Sherlock Holmes films. The film is credited as an adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Holmes tale "The Adventure of the Dancing Men," but the only element of the source material to be used is the dancing men code.
This is the second Basil Rathbone "Sherlock Holmes" film in which Moriarty dies. He is thrown to his death from the top of the Tower of London by Holmes in 1939's The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (film). During the course of the adventure, Holmes adopts the disguises of an elderly German bookseller (taken from the Arthur Conan Doyle story The Adventure of the Empty House), the lascar sailor Ram Singh, and the Swiss scientist Professor Hoffner. His disguise as the bookseller was parodied in the film The Pink Panther (1963 film). The film is a loose adaptation of The Adventure of the Dancing Men; while credited as an adaptation, the only content which bears similarity is the "dancing men" code.
Cast
Basil Rathbone as; Sherlock Holmes
Nigel Bruce as; Doctor Watson
Lionel Atwill as; Professor Moriarty
Kaaren Verne as; Charlotte Eberli
William Post Jr. as; Dr. Franz Tobel
Dennis Hoey as; Inspector Lestrade
Holmes Herbert as; Sir Reginald Bailey
Mary Gordon (actor) as; Mrs. Hudson
=Cast notes=
This film marks the first appearance of Dennis Hoey as Inspector Lestrade - the Scotland Yard detective who, with Watson, provides much of the comic relief in six of the films of the series.
Lionel Atwill appeared previously in the film The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939 film) (1939) as Dr. Mortimer.