Sherlock seems to be going for the meta this year.
Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
Yes, it was a very "the script is coming from inside the Internet" sort of episode.
When is that doing it's US premiere? My DVR only goes about a week out.
Frank, January 19th.
Thanks, sj!
Sherlock, whitefonted:
Oh, Moffat. Look at this brilliant episode of a show you didn't fuck up entirely. Good for you! I'm not bitter at all and now can almost forgive you for the what-the-hell-was-it you did with the other show you run, asshole.
Or not. At least not yet.
Anyway, yes, meta. And wonderful. And OMG, Cumberbatch as Holmes is a sight for eyes that never even knew they're sore. And harsh with the portrayal of the fans.
But damn, it was good, and Moffat didn't blew it.
Re: Shir's whitefont:
I suspect that Gatiss may have stood over Moffat brandishing an iron skillet and muttering "fix the plot hole you just made . . . no, better than that . . . much, much better than that . . . oh, hell, just shove Mycroft in there and let me ad lib already.
Anyway, I enjoyed it, too.
OK, Tep I don't know what the Thing was in Elementary. Good episode, though!
The conversation between Holmes and Moriarty at the end, the "I watch you to see how you can be like them" / "I don't think I *am* like them" (I'm paraphrasing) conversation.
I have such a weak spot for the poignant side of non-neurotypical characters (as opposed to what has evolved into the slapstick caricature of Sheldon Cooper, feh). Elementary manages to pull it off pretty well sometimes (other times it does fall in the trap of "Make Holmes a generic asshole to people"). But I thought the conversation between Moriarty and Holmes at the end was well done indeed.
That was very nice. I like how ambiguous the "them" was, especially.
As an aside - I can't help but think of Moriarty as Maergery from Game of Thrones, but I think that might help the characterization.
[As another aside, I have always thought that Jim Parsons deserves all the awards he gets because Sheldon is not written nearly as well as he is acted, or at least not as consistently]