'Sherlock Holmes 2' Will Hit Theaters On December 16, 2011

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Warner Bros. aren’t messing with the release date that helped propel “Sherlock Holmes” into a worldwide box office smash, and have slated “Sherlock Holmes 2” for a December 16, 2011 release. The film is looking at a fall start date, with shooting to take place in Europe and there is a good chance it will be in 3D.

Plot details on the sequel are currently under wraps, but it will pick up where the first film left off with Moriarty now the villain. Guy Ritchie will be back behind the camera with Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law set to reprise their roles. As we reported this morning, Rachel McAdams will appear in the sequel as well, though it sounds like her part will be small. The key still to be cast is Moriarty. Brad Pitt, who was rumored and then debunked as playing the shadowy figure who appears very briefly in the first film, is still being touted as a candidate for the sequel but that remains to be seen.

As we recently noted, the December/Christmas season is becoming the new tentpole stomping ground, and December 2011 in particular is getting crowded. Right before it starts, the first installment of “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn” hits theaters on November 18; on December 9, Martin Scorsese’s first foray into the children’s genre (in 3D no less), “The Invention of Hugo Cabret,” will attempt to dazzle mass audiences; “Mission: Impossible IV” blows up in theaters on the same weekend as “Sherlock Holmes 2”; and one week later on December 23 is one of the riskiest gambles in recent studio history – “The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn” by Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg. Sure, those two are titans of modern day cinema, but North Americans don’t adore “Tintin” like the rest of the world does and the film’s star, Jamie Bell, isn’t exactly a household name (or at least not yet).

With movies already fighting for elbow room in December 2011 and surely more to be announced, expect titles to shift and move over the next 18 months. At the very least, with “James Bond 23” previously slated for a fall/winter 2011 release on ice for now, it’s one less movies the studios will have to contend with/schedule around.