The stakes are higher than ever for Enola, who needs to free these poor match girls before they all develop a highly fatal disease called “phossy jaw,” an occupational disease that cursed a slew of folks working with white phosphorus in the late 1800s. This historical event, woven in with Enola’s fictionalized personal life and separate pursuits, adds an extra layer of thrill to the mix. There’s just one problem: Everyone thinks they’re going to get Sherlock Holmes on the case, not his pipsqueak sister. She doesn’t need a man! She’s beginning her very own young ladies’ detective agency, where she’ll gladly take on any and all cases to solve around the city. Gone are the boyish days of sneaking away and goofing around he’s now passing bills and standing up for environmental protection as the Industrial Revolution takes over London. Now, two years after the first film, Tewkesbury is a whole man. Enola’s also not so sure where she stands with her love interest, the devilishly charming Lord Tewkesbury (Louis Partridge). Heard of him? Well, he’s also on board with becoming Enola’s legal guardian, since their mother’s got bigger fires to put out (or rather, set). In the wake of finding her radical feminist mother Eudoria ( Helena Bonham Carter), the young lass realized her calling in life was to become a detective-just like her older brother, Sherlock ( Henry Cavill). Since it’s been a few years without her, let’s recap where we left little Miss Enola.
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