← Back to Matrix Node

ENOLA HOLMES 3 IS FINALLY HAPPENING AND THE INTERNET IS NOT OKAY šŸ’€šŸ”„

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #2
TREND SIGNAL VOLUME: 20000
ENOLA HOLMES 3 IS FINALLY HAPPENING AND THE INTERNET IS NOT OKAY šŸ’€šŸ”„

ENOLA HOLMES 3 IS FINALLY HAPPENING AND THE INTERNET IS NOT OKAY šŸ’€šŸ”„

Okay besties, grab your tweed caps and your most chaotic energy because we just got the news that literally broke my algorithm. Netflix finally put us out of our misery and confirmed ENOLA HOLMES 3 is officially in the works. I’m not crying, you’re crying. Actually no, I AM crying. Full on ugly sobbing into my phone right now. 😭

Let me level with you. When the first Enola Holmes dropped back in 2020, we were all stuck inside our homes watching the world burn through a tiny screen. That movie was like a warm hug from a chaotic Victorian fairy godmother. Millie Bobby Brown doing karate in corsets, breaking the fourth wall, and basically telling every girl that she can solve her own damn mysteries? Absolute cinema. Then Enola Holmes 2 in 2022? Even better. More lore, more Henry Cavill looking like a snack in a waistcoat, more Helena Bonham Carter being an unhinged girlboss. We ate it up.

But then… silence. Radio silence. For like two whole years. We were all out here refreshing Netflix’s Twitter like clowns waiting for our turn at the teacup ride. Every time Millie posted a selfie, the comments were like ā€œEnola 3 when?ā€ and she’d just leave us on read. Brutal.

But now? The news is here and it’s giving everything. Netflix officially announced that Enola Holmes 3 is coming, and let me tell you, the timeline is about to be SICKENING. Millie Bobby Brown is back as our favorite whip-smart detective. Henry Cavill is back as Sherlock, which means another round of ā€œis he hot or is he just tall?ā€ discourse. And you know Helena Bonham Carter is gonna show up for exactly 10 minutes and steal the entire movie. That’s just her brand. Queen behavior. šŸ‘‘

But here’s where it gets juicy. The new movie is reportedly gonna be based on the sixth book in the Nancy Springer series, ā€œEnola Holmes and the White Chrysanthemum.ā€ I looked it up. The plot is WILD. Something about a secret society, a missing scientist, and Enola basically having to outsmart the entire British government. It’s giving ā€œStranger Things season 4 but make it 1800s.ā€ The stakes are higher. The corsets are tighter. The chaos is IMMACULATE.

Also, can we talk about the timing? This announcement dropped right as everyone is obsessed with mystery and detective content again. You got your ā€œWednesdayā€ fans, your ā€œKnives Outā€ stans, your ā€œOnly Murders in the Buildingā€ diehards. The genre is literally eating right now. And Enola Holmes coming back is like the final boss of this trend. Netflix knows what they’re doing. They saw the algorithm and said, ā€œBet.ā€

And let’s be real, the fan theories are already going CRAZY. Some people think Enola is gonna finally meet Moriarty. Others think Sherlock is gonna have a bigger role this time, maybe even a case where they have to work together without arguing. Some unhinged people on TikTok are convinced that Tewkesbury (Louis Partridge’s character, aka the most underrated love interest in cinema history) is gonna get kidnapped or something. Honestly? I’m here for all of it.

But the real tea is this: Millie Bobby Brown is basically running Hollywood right now. She’s got the billion-dollar ā€œStranger Thingsā€ bag, the ā€œDamselā€ movie was a hit, and now this? She’s literally the Gen Z Meryl Streep. Except Meryl never had to fight a Victorian criminal while wearing a corset that restricts breathing. Respect. šŸ™

Also, real talk: Henry Cavill’s Sherlock is the best Sherlock. Sorry, Benedict Cumberbatch. You were great. But Henry Cavill’s Sherlock actually shows emotions. He cares about his sister. He smiles sometimes. He’s not just a genius with a trench coat and a superiority complex. He’s a genius WITH A HEART. That’s the energy we need in 2025.

And can we take a moment to appreciate how Enola Holmes is literally the blueprint for female-led historical fiction that doesn’t suck? No ā€œnot like other girlsā€ nonsense. No boring romance subplot that takes over the whole story. Just a girl who loves her mom, loves solving puzzles, and refuses to let society tell her she’s too small or too young to make a difference. That’s that girlboss feminism we actually need. Not the corporate ā€œlean inā€ stuff. The real ā€œI’m gonna punch a guy in the face and then solve a cipherā€ energy.

The internet is already losing its collective mind. Twitter is flooded with memes. TikTok is having a field day with sound remixes. Someone already made a fan edit of Enola Holmes 3 using the ā€œMurder on the Dancefloorā€ audio. It works. I don’t know how, but it works.

But here’s my one concern: Netflix better not mess this up. We’ve been burned before. ā€œThe Umbrella Academyā€ final season? Disappointing. ā€œThe Witcherā€ without Henry? A tragedy. But Enola Holmes has a secret weapon: Millie Bobby Brown is literally a producer on this thing. She’s not just the star. She’s in the writers’ room. She’s making sure the vibe stays correct. That gives me hope.

So what’s the release date? Not confirmed yet, but rumors say late 2025 or early 2026. Which means we have at least a year to rewatch the first two movies, deep dive into the books, and prepare our detective cosplay outfits. I’m already planning my look: a tweed blazer, a magnifying glass, and a very dramatic hat. You know the one.

Also, random but important: Tewkesbury better get more screen time. Louis Partridge is literally the internet’s boyfriend right

Final Thoughts


Having followed the franchise’s trajectory, it’s clear that *Enola Holmes 3* faces the classic sophomore slump of a trilogy—not in quality, but in narrative necessity. The first film was a charming origin story, the second a clever expansion of the Victorian world, but now the real challenge is to evolve beyond the gimmick of breaking the fourth wall and into a genuinely mature mystery that earns its emotional stakes. If the writers lean too heavily on star power and period nostalgia, this installment risks being merely a pleasant diversion rather than the definitive chapter this clever series deserves.