Film "The Final Problem" was adapted as a 1923 silent short film as part of the
Stoll film series, starring
Eille Norwood as Holmes and
Hubert Willis as Watson, with
Percy Standing as Moriarty. The 1931 film
The Sleeping Cardinal, the first film in the
1931–1937 film series starring
Arthur Wontner as Holmes, is based in part on "
The Adventure of the Empty House" and "The Final Problem." The scene from "The Final Problem" in which Moriarty confronts Holmes at Baker Street and attempts to persuade Holmes to stop his investigations is used in
The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes (1935), another film in the series. In the
1939–1946 film series starring
Basil Rathbone as Holmes and
Nigel Bruce as Watson, a number of films borrow elements from "The Final Problem". Most noticeable of these elements are the methods of killing Moriarty off; in
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939),
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1942) and
The Woman in Green (1945), Moriarty is seen in all three films falling from a great height to his death.
The Woman in Green contains a variation on the conversation between Holmes and Moriarty in Baker Street, as well as the idea of Moriarty manipulating Watson out of the way by hoaxing an injured Englishwoman who requires his treating. The 2011 film
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows is based in part on "The Final Problem". However, in the film, the characters are attending a European Peace Conference held near the falls which Moriarty seeks to sabotage, and the two plunge down from a balcony overlooking the falls rather than from the ledge of the original story. Holmes is also shown falling over the edge with Moriarty rather than simply being assumed to have fallen, having been earlier injured trying to defeat Moriarty in a straight fight but knowing that Moriarty will go after Watson if he lives. Holmes survives, by using his brother's oxygen inhaler to survive the water at the bottom of the falls. Later, Watson is shown writing the final sentences of "The Final Problem" on his typewriter, while Holmes, having concealed himself, watches.
Television The Soviet television film series
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson (1979–1986) adapted "The Final Problem" as "The Deadly Fight" (and "The Adventure in the Empty House" as "Hunt for the Tiger"). In the television series
Sherlock Holmes starring
Jeremy Brett, the 1985 episode based on the story begins with the theft of the
Mona Lisa, masterminded by Moriarty in order to sell prepared fakes to collectors. Holmes recovers the original painting just before Moriarty makes a sale to a "Mr. Morgan". Holmes's interference with his plans convinces Moriarty that the detective must be eliminated, and Holmes is subsequently presumed to have died in a tumble down the Reichenbach Falls. This was the last episode to star
David Burke as Dr. Watson. Burke was replaced by
Edward Hardwicke until the end of the show's run, starting with the adaptation of "The Empty House" which acted as the first episode of
The Return of Sherlock Holmes. The
BraveStarr episode "Sherlock Holmes in the 23rd Century" begins with a revised version of the climax of "The Final Problem", in which only Holmes plummets down Reichenbach Falls, but instead of falling to his doom, he falls into a natural time warp that transports him into the year 2249. The first episode of the animated television series
Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century (1999–2001) begins with the climax of "The Final Problem", where it is later revealed in the second episode that while Holmes managed to survive the fall by grabbing a tree branch and would go on to solve many more cases (later being entombed in honey upon his death of old age, which preserved his body enough to be revitalized in the 22nd century), Moriarty had indeed perished and was buried by Holmes himself, preserved in ice in a freezing cave. Holmes, the robotic Watson and Inspector Beth Lestrade later visit the burial site at Reichenbach Falls to confirm Moriarty's death upon news of a lookalike causing a crime spree in New London. Upon seeing a drill hole in the ice, Holmes surmises that the new Moriarty is in fact a clone with all the original's memories and skills. The two part sixth season finale of
Monk, "Mr. Monk is on the Run" (2008), is loosely inspired by both "The Final Problem and "The Empty House." Adrian Monk is supposedly shot over a pier after being accused of murder, only to be alive in the second part. The orchestrator is revealed to be Dale "the Whale" Biederbeck, described as "the Genghis Khan of world finance," much like Moriarty as "the Napoleon of Crime." Episode three of the first season of BBC's
Sherlock, titled
The Great Game shows a variation of the part where Moriarty confronts Holmes at Baker Street in the story. The story is also the basis of the episode "
The Reichenbach Fall"(Season 2, Episode 3), which first aired on 15 January 2012 and shows Holmes falling from the roof of
St Bartholomew's Hospital in
London, supposedly leading to his death. Throughout a confrontation between Sherlock and Jim Moriarty in Baker Street, Moriarty repeatedly utters the phrase "the final problem". The special episode of
Sherlock, "
The Abominable Bride", which was broadcast on 1 January 2016, featured a re-creation of the showdown between Sherlock and Moriarty set in Victorian times, as depicted in the book. The
2017 series finale of Sherlock is named for this story, but bears little to no resemblance to the canon. The 2012 series finale of the American medical drama
House—which was inspired by the Sherlock Holmes stories—sees Dr.
Gregory House fake his own death, in an ode to "The Final Problem". The 2013 Russian television series
Sherlock Holmes adapted "The Final Problem" as "Holmes' Last Case". The 2018
HBO Asia/
Hulu Japan series
Miss Sherlock loosely adapts this story for its series finale "The Dock." In this version, the famous scene at the Reichenbach Falls is replaced by an analogous scene set at a fictional "Reichenbach Building" in Tokyo. The 2019 penultimate episode (Season 7 Episode 12) of the CBS adaptation of Sherlock Holmes,
Elementary, was titled "Reichenbach Falls", and portrayed Sherlock's ploy to bring down a powerful serial killer billionaire, Odin Reichenbach. Holmes fakes his death on a bridge, which puts Odin Reichenbach under investigation for the murder of Sherlock Holmes and thereby exposes Reichenbach's past crimes. The 2024 Indian Television series
Shekhar Home remaking the adaptation of the BBC's Sherlock in its last episode also adapts the climax of the story where the titular character Shekhar falls down the Howrah bridge with Jaimini Maurya (James Moriarty). The 2025 show
Watson is another modern adaptation of Holmes, which opens with Watson witnessing the battle between Holmes and Moriarty at the Falls, to the extent that he tries to jump in after his friend, only to suffer a traumatic brain injury and regain consciousness days later. Having opened a clinic using money Holmes left him, Watson later learns that Moriarty has survived, attempting to use Watson's genetic research to further his own schemes, but Watson is able to infect Moriarty with his own virus. The second season reveals that Holmes also survived the confrontation; he reveals that he actually arranged for another adversary, Stapelton, to fight Moriarty in his place while he took the opportunity to fake his death and retire for a time from his role as detective.
Radio and audio dramas "The Final Problem" was loosely adapted for multiple episodes of the American radio series
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes starring
Richard Gordon as Sherlock Holmes and Leigh Lovell as Dr. Watson, including episodes titled "Murder in the Waxworks" (March 1932), "The Adventure of the Ace of Spades" (May 1932), and "Murder by Proxy" (January 1933). The story was later adapted for radio by John Kier Cross; it was broadcast on the BBC Light Programme in December 1954 and starred
John Gielgud as Holmes and
Ralph Richardson as Dr. Watson, with
Orson Welles as Professor Moriarty. The production was also broadcast on
NBC radio on 17 April 1955.
Felix Felton adapted the story as a radio adaptation which aired on the
BBC Home Service in March 1955 as part of the
1952–1969 radio series starring
Carleton Hobbs as Holmes and
Norman Shelley as Watson, with
Ralph Truman as Moriarty. Another dramatisation of the story adapted by Felton aired on the BBC Home Service in November 1957, again starring Hobbs and Shelley, with Felton playing Moriarty. Hobbs and Shelley also starred as Holmes and Watson in a 1967
BBC Light Programme adaptation of the story which was adapted by
Michael Hardwick. "The Final Problem" was dramatized for
BBC Radio 4 in 1992 by
Bert Coules as part of the
1989–1998 radio series starring
Clive Merrison as Holmes and
Michael Williams as Watson. It featured
Michael Pennington as Professor Moriarty,
Frederick Treves as Colonel Moran,
Sean Arnold as Inspector Patterson,
Terence Edmond as Steiler,
Richard Pearce as Jenkinson, and
Norman Jones as Sir George.
Other media William Gillette's 1899 stage play
Sherlock Holmes is based on several stories, among them "The Final Problem." Films released in
1916 (starring Gillette as Holmes) and
1922 (starring
John Barrymore), both titled
Sherlock Holmes, and a 1938
Mercury Theatre on the Air radio adaptation titled
The Immortal Sherlock Holmes, starring
Orson Welles as Holmes, were based on the play. However, in none of these retellings does Holmes die (and indeed in the two film versions he marries). In 1975,
DC Comics published
Sherlock Holmes #1, a comic book that adapted both "The Final Problem" and "The Adventure of the Empty House". It was intended to be an ongoing series, but future issues were canceled due to low sales. The 1999 comic series
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume One by
Alan Moore and
Kevin O'Neill briefly adapts "The Final Problem" in issue #5 and shows Holmes triumphing over Moriarty and climbing the cliff, although Moriarty survives as well. The
film adaptation references these events, but does not show them; the novelization copies the event almost verbatim from the graphic novel. An arc of the Japanese manga series
Moriarty the Patriot, a series featuring a young Moriarty as a crime consultant, is named after the Japanese translation of the story's title. The final two episodes, "The Final Problem Act 1" and "The Final Problem Act 2", feature Sherlock and William (Moriarty) falling from Tower Bridge to River Thames, though revealed that both of them are alive and in Switzerland. ==References==