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I've often considered joining the Sherlock Holmes Society; I still might, yet I feel it would be much more interesting for me if I lived near enough to London to get to their events.
I wait out the new season by watching the past ones; it doesn't get better than that. Of course, now I will be spending my time going through the novels/stories I haven't read yet that are to be featured in the upcoming season 3.
Really looking forward to 'The Empty Hearse.'
Yes, Mr. Gatiss did a fantastic job of updating the Baskervilles story and did something so out of left field and clever with it.
I love how the episode
Also, I love how Gatiss
You are right, Moffat and Gatiss wouldn't make that mistake. Here is an entry in John Watson's blog to accompany the conversation that takes place in the first episode, A Study in Pink. It made me smile while I was watching it and think "You really got him right" :D
In Moffat and Gatiss we really are in the safest hands since the old Jeremy Brett series aren't we?
I loved that little twist too @0Brady. They even kept the name. It's the little touches that make all the difference.
Golden age indeed for Holmes.
Well, I went online and checked out the Sherlock Holmes Society of London site. this is the old one, begun about 1950. Tons of members, some famous, over the years. Hadn't been there in a while. Nicely surprised.
Still plenty of good Holmes events, including pub meets, tours, and meetings. Then I saw: Review of Series 2. (!!)
So here is one member reviewer's impressions of the new BBC Holmes series:
[url]http://www.sherlock-holmes.org.uk/event_info.php?id=270 [/url]
I found it an enjoyable read; you may find it interesting.
And I just found out that Stephen Moffat spoke at the society's annual dinner last year, Jan. 2012. :)
http://www.sherlock-holmes.org.uk/event_info.php?id=269
Hope I put the links in correctly for you to read.
The body was Moriarty
Watson hallucinated the entire thing
Holmes landed in the rubbish truck
A Time Lord was involved somehow
The body was a dummy
Mycroft Holmes arranged it
Molly Hooper arranged it
The body was one of Moriarty's henchmen, surgically altered to look like Sherlock
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8262/8666006719_6840478c24_b.jpg
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8259/8667108222_bbe4271c54_b.jpg
Wow, some of those suggestions are really out there 8-} .
I also don't get bored watching the series again; chock full of great detail and wit.
The various versions of Holmes stories over the years differ wildly in both quality and faithfulness to Conan Doyle (faithfulness not necessarily being a prerequisite to being successful, of course) but I've managed to find many of them to be enjoyable. I take them for what they are, and enjoy the Holmes content. From the slightly creaky earlier stabs, to the comedic Without A Clue, with Michael Caine, to Ian Richardson's short tenure, to the sublime Jeremy Brett, right up to the Downey Junior movies, and into this year's exciting Series 3 of 'Sherlock'.
I think, for differing reasons, that the three versions I put on a pedestal, are the current Moffat/Gatiss incarnation, Brett's ultra-faithful Granada TV version (definitive in my mind) and Basil Rathbone's 1930s/40s Hollywood era. Nothing better on a rainy Sunday afternoon than to put a light-hearted Rathbone/Bruce outing on.
There have been some stinkers over the decades though...
You get the feeling that Benedict Cumberbatch was destined to become either Sherlock Holmes or one of the 'Doctors'. Fortunately for us, he headed to Baker Street rather than into the TARDIS. He would have been great at both, of course.
The problem was not that Nigel Bruce, a superb actor, failed as Watson, but that he was so popular that he created a new stereotype for John Watson that was far removed from Conan Doyle's original.
I'm rather fond of Rathbone and Bruce.
I think most of us on here would agree on one point, and that is that Martin Freeman has absolutely nailed the character. His achievement is on a par with that of Cumberbatch.
I think most of the options in that poll are outrageous. I voted for the option
Does anyone have a favorite Sherlock Holmes website? Yes, I do check thescienceofdeduction from time to time now. It's great. Anything else out there someone recommends?
http://www.sherlockology.com/
I would say the same. I only found out about it recently but it is excellent.
I just realized, @Sandy, you could probably write up a good villain maybe on the Profession of the Villains thread (taking my hint that the villain be a researcher - ha!)
What would Sherlock say about villains? "Ah, there is no uncommon criminal anymore. Crime has become so commonplace, so mundane. After Moriarty, what fun is there? Where is the challenge? I'm BORED!"
John: "Try annotating your tobacco ash paper for the millioneth time, Sherlock, while I just lock up the syringes again, and hide the cigs ..."
I have no imagination for villains, I'm sorry :))
Seeing as Sherlock is often concerned about solving crimes for the puzzle, I am shocked at how differently he acts towards Moriarty. Yes, he has respect for the professor, but is determined to stop him any way he can, even if that means the puzzles stop. He is so determined in fact, that he is willing to die just so that London is freed of Moriarty.
Sherlock [to Professor Moriarty]: 'If I were assured of your eventual destruction I would, in the interests of the public, cheerfully accept my own.'
'But I could not rest, Watson, I could not sit quiet in my chair, if I thought that such a man as Professor Moriarty were walking the streets of London unchallenged.'
What I am trying to say is, Doyle's Holmes can at times sacrifice the puzzle for the common good. That is what I love about his chase after Moriarty. We see his true care for those that Moriarty has hurt through his organization/crime network and the countless others in danger because of his existence, even admitting to Watson that his brilliance often over shadowed his crimes.
'My horror at his crimes was lost in my admiration at his skill.'
I dream of seeing Milverton! I love how Holmes and Watson are even willing to break the law to stop his cruelty. If we do this Holmes book/story club that has to be one we read. :)