Enola Holmes succeeds because it refuses to be a mere origin story. It is a declaration of intellectual independence, a celebration of the messy, emotional, collaborative work of solving problems, and a powerful reminder that the most revolutionary act a young woman can perform is to think for herself, speak directly to the world, and declare that her story—however small, however overlooked—is the one that matters most.
This is not an ending; it’s a beginning. The final shot—Enola setting up a chess board, moving a pawn, and saying, “My move”—is a masterstroke. It echoes the film’s opening (playing chess with her mother) but transforms the metaphor. She is no longer playing against Eudoria or Sherlock. She is playing against a system. And she has decided that the game is now hers to control. Enola Holmes
Their relationship is not romantic in the traditional sense—it is a partnership of mutual becoming. Tewkesbury learns humility and courage; Enola learns that not all members of the patriarchy are enemies, and that alliances can be built on shared vulnerability. The film’s climax, where Tewkesbury votes for the Reform Bill in the House of Lords because of what Enola showed him, is not a fairy tale. It is a political statement: real change requires not just brilliant outsiders, but sympathetic insiders willing to listen. The film ends on a perfect, defiant note. Enola rejects the offer to become a “lady detective” or her brother’s apprentice. She opens her own agency, hanging a shingle that reads simply, “ENOLA HOLMES – DETECTIVE.” She then sits alone, faces the camera, and declares, “I am a finder of lost souls.” Enola Holmes succeeds because it refuses to be