The decoy That Guy is a good gambit. The decoy Trudy gambit deserves a try.
"What do you call this room, is this the box?" amused me.
Buffy ,'Same Time, Same Place'
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
The decoy That Guy is a good gambit. The decoy Trudy gambit deserves a try.
"What do you call this room, is this the box?" amused me.
Yeah, that was cute.
Wow, my feelings about the Sherlock special are complicated and require a whiteboard and they make heavy reference to Elementary. Mostly regarding drug use and (separately) Moriarty.
That said, when I realized that Sherlock made Mycroft quite portly per ACD canon in his mind palace, I laughed myself into a coughing fit. Sick burn, Sherlock.
I realize I shouldn't have bothered watching the special, since I haven't been big on the BBC Sherlock, but my whole reaction is the jerk-off hand motion.
And I was pissed about Mycroft shoving food into his face, even when I realized (about then) that none of this was real.
And I was pissed about Mycroft shoving food into his face
It made me laugh, because Sherlock is SUCH a dick.
I turned it off as soon as I realized it was a dream sequence.
I turned it off as soon as I realized it was a dream sequence.
Not all of it, though. In fact, I was super confused as to why they would show the "previously on" if the story was set in the 19th century. (And then it made sense.)
I disliked Moriarty less, but I still don't like him. (And is it just me, or was him sticking the gun in his mouth and licking it SUPER gay?)
And I am fascinated, looking at the show from outside, that the show decided to introduce Sherlock's drug use after all, and I can't help wondering if that's, even in part, a response to how well Elementary has done with it.
Because, honestly, from inside the show, it was ridiculously abrupt to just be like "Oh and by the way here's a list of the many drugs I just took even though it's never been an issue before kthxbai."
I was only interested in it because I thought it was going to be a traditional Holmes tale told by this particular crew. I stopped watching the regular Sherlock series when they introduced Moriarty, because I just don't like that version of him.
I didn't turn it off as soon as I realized it was a dream sequence/memory palace, but when they revealed the killer, I did turn it off. Thought parts of it were legitimately creepy.
And I am fascinated, looking at the show from outside, that the show decided to introduce Sherlock's drug use after all, and I can't help wondering if that's, even in part, a response to how well Elementary has done with it.
Having not seen the special (not sure if I'm going to bother: ah, the sensation of waiting so long between canon that YOU ACTUALLY SLIDE OUT OF THE FANDOM), but they have made reference to it (and shown it at times) previously in all three series.
As I recall (also have not seen the special b/c I didn't even know it was going to be on/available and now I'm actually kind of angry at PBS/BBC/whomever makes these decisions for going with the livestream option in an on demand world), in Sherlock it's more recreational use than addiction and accordingly gets casual mention