Forget More Sherlock Holmes Adaptations, I Want To See THIS Classic Detective Make A Comeback

Modern adaptations of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes are almost never-ending, but there’s a different iconic detective who I would much rather watch a TV show about. Through the years, Sherlock Holmes has been ripe for adaptations. Hardly a decade has gone by since the 1930s without a major Sherlock Holmes adaptation in either film or television, and countless actors have taken on the mantle of the world’s greatest detective. Conan Doyle’s work has been popular for well over a century, and it shows no signs of slowing down.
In fact, there will be three new Sherlock Holmes adaptations in 2025 alone. Morris Chestnut’s Watson is already getting a season 2 after it debuted in January. The CW’s Sherlock & Daughter has a release date of April 16, while Guy Ritchie’s Young Sherlock is expected to release in 2025. Sherlock Holmes fans are never left wanting for more adaptations of Conan Doyle’s work, but I think a different detective deserves his chance in the spotlight. If for no other reason, it will provide a break from the constant deluge of Sherlock Holmes stories.
Modern Sherlock Holmes Adaptations Are Fun, But We Don’t Need More
There Have Been Major Sherlock Holmes Adaptations Every Year For Over A Decade
I like adaptations and modernizations of Sherlock Holmes as much as anyone, but we’re getting to a point where we’ve had enough. It seems like there’s been either a direct or indirect retelling of Sherlock Holmes every year since Guy Ritchie’s 2009 movie Sherlock Holmes, and the character has been popular in film and TV since the 1930s. Many of the shows and movies either based on or inspired by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s work are really great and well worth watching, but at some point, the TV landscape got oversaturated by the world’s greatest detective.
Modern Sherlock Holmes Adaptations |
|
---|---|
Title |
Year |
Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes |
2009 |
BBC Sherlock |
2009–2017 |
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows |
2011 |
Elementary |
2012–2019 |
Mr. Holmes |
2015 |
Holmes & Watson (parody) |
2018 |
Enola Holmes |
2020 |
Enola Holmes 2 |
2022 |
Watson |
2025 |
Sherlock & Daughter |
2025 |
Young Sherlock |
2025 |
The problem gets even worse when you look at indirect retellings of Conan Doyle’s work. There are countless TV detectives who were inspired by Sherlock Holmes: just to name a few, there’s Psych, Luther, House, Bones, True Detective, and Monk. You can pretty much name any mystery show from the past 30 years, and the chances are it has some striking similarities to Sherlock Holmes. Even Benoit Blanc in Knives Out is, to an extent, inspired by Sherlock Holmes. I’m not trying to say that these shows are bad in any way; what I’m saying is that we’ve gotten our fill of Sherlock Holmes.
I’d Rather See A New Columbo Show Than Another Sherlock Holmes Story
Columbo Would Be A Much More Refreshing Reboot Than Another Sherlock Holmes Show
Instead of getting yet another Sherlock Holmes adaptation, I would much rather see a reboot of Peter Falk’s Columbo. Simply put, a Columbo reboot would be a lot more original and interesting than more Sherlock stories. For example, Columbo features its unique “howdunnit” formula, where viewers see the murder and watch the lieutenant piece it together. Monk had the same formula, but Columbo did it first. Likewise, there simply isn’t another TV detective who’s as endearing as Frank Columbo is. He’s working class, he’s modest to a fault, and I, for one, could watch him go toe-to-toe with society’s elite endlessly.

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I, for one, would welcome something that could really shake up TV mystery shows the way a Columbo reboot could. Almost every Sherlock-inspired TV mystery is, at its core, predictable. There’s the relationship dynamic between Holmes and Watson, the arch-nemesis Moriarty, and plenty of brilliant crimes that are miraculously solved in the final moments. Columbo flips all that on its head: he works alone, we already knew who committed the crime at the start of the episode, and the thrill of each episode was watching Frank unravel his suspects in a brilliant cat-and-mouse game, not trying to figure out who could have committed the murder.
Columbo Is One Of The Only Detectives Who Isn’t A Sherlock Holmes Copycat
Columbo Is The Antithesis Of Sherlock, Which Makes Him A Great Change Of Pace For Modern TV
Another big reason I think Columbo would succeed in the modern TV landscape is because of how different its protagonist is from Sherlock Holmes. As previously mentioned, there have been countless retellings, adaptations, and Sherlock-inspired stories in just the last 25 years. At some point, they started to blend together. How different, really, are Psych and Monk? Shawn and Adrian have different personalities, but they’re essentially the same show at their core. Columbo is one of the few detective shows that’s truly different from Sherlock Holmes and all the stories inspired by him, which makes it the perfect show to stand out as unique.

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As mystery novelist B.K. Stevens noted (via SleuthSayers), Columbo is the American version and complete antithesis of Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock is noble-born, naturally talented, arrogant, and a symbol of everything Victorian England idolized. Columbo, on the other hand, is blue-collar, diligent, modest, and a symbol of the ideals of democracy and equality that America is supposed to idolize. Frank Columbo and Sherlock Holmes couldn’t be more different, which makes Columbo the perfect detective to capitalize on the Sherlock-dominated mystery genre. If any detective would stand out among the Adrian Monks and Gregory Houses of the TV landscape, it would be Frank Columbo.
If any detective would stand out among the Adrian Monks and Gregory Houses of the TV landscape, it would be Frank Columbo.
Oh, and one more thing. There’s never been a better time for Columbo to make a comeback. Columbo‘s last season aired in 2003, more than 20 years ago. Mystery shows and movies in general have also been steadily rising in popularity, with recent additions like Glass Onion and The Residence finding massive widespread appeal. The audience is there, and that 20-year hiatus makes Columbo perfectly primed to be a completely different offering for mystery fans. I only hope that someone with some power realizes the potential Columbo has, especially in relation to Sherlock Holmes.