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he world's greatest detective has a mind that can
swing from the height of triumph to the depths of despair in the
blink of an eye. Triumph when he thinks he's close to catching his
evil nemesis, Ratigan; despair when the cad slips through his
fingers once again. For comfort he turns to his trusty violin.
Basil has amazing powers of deduction ("Offhand I can deduce only
little, only that the list is written with a broad-pointed pen ...
the paper is of native Mongolian manufacture ... and has been
gummed, unless I'm very much mistaken, by a bat that has been
drinking Rodent's Delight!") and uses them to help his clients in
trouble. When a mere tiny slip of a girl and a bespectacled doctor
arrive on his doorstep, the Great Basil cannot be bothered -- until
he deduces that the simple Case of the Missing Toymaker may
actually be a hellishly fiendish plot that leads straight to his
nemesis! Ah-ha! The game is afoot! |
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Basil of Baker Street is, of course, based on that famous creation
of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes. Basil shares with his
predecessor (aside from the obvious detective abilities) his
sometimes irascible temperament and the love of the violin. "The
Great Mouse Detective" is based on the book "Basil of Baker Street"
by author Eve Titus.
Film: "The Great Mouse Detective" (1986)
Voice Artist: Barrie Ingham |
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