Sherlock the abominable bride movie review
Moriarty lights up every scene he is in, and the piece de resistance is Moriarty in a wedding dress, the most hideous bride Sherlock’s mind palace can conjure up!
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I also like this version of Moriarty because he is so full of mischief, always ready with a witty one-liner to throw at Sherlock, “Why don’t you two just elope, for God’s sake?!”.
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This being the Moriarty of Sherlock’s mind palace, he is even madder than before. Andrew Scott is on top form throughout the Special, and revels in playing mad, bad and dangerous to know. Sherlock is trying to figure out how Moriarty managed to blow his brains out and remain alive. As Sherlock’s arch-enemy and nemesis this was inevitable, as Sherlock cannot get him out of his head. Much to the delight of his legions of fans, Moriarty returned for the Victorian Special. This version of Mycroft, was a total contrast to the Mycroft we see in modern day Sherlock, where he is as thin and sleek as a cat. I was delighted to see this description fully realised in the Victorian Special, where Mark Gatiss playing Mycroft was as big as a house, and resolutely set on eating his way to an early grave. In a later story, The Bruce-Partington Plans, Mycroft is described as “tall and portly”, “heavily built and massive”, with a “gross body”. In the original stories, when we are introduced to him in The Greek Interpreter, Mycroft is described as “a much larger and stouter man than Sherlock.
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Mycroft Holmes in the Canon has a very different physical appearance to that portrayed in the modern day Sherlock (and in this respect he is similar to Moriarty!). As viewers we are left in no doubt as to the pivotal role Mrs Hudson plays, and her importance as a character, and a substitute mother, to both Holmes and Watson. Having made her point clearly and concisely at the start, Mrs Hudson refuses to let Watson reduce her to a minor character, she falls silent, refusing to speak, and her silence speaks volumes. She stated clearly at the start that she does not just show people up and serve them breakfasts she is not just a plot device she is an important character part and parcel of the Holmes myth. This version of Holmes is closer to that in the original Canon. He retains his razor-sharp mind, but here he conforms more to society’s rules and norms. Relocated to Victorian London, Cumberbatch delivers a calmer, more rational, more conventional Holmes. Would they survive being transported back in time to Victorian London? For me, the answer to this question was a resounding yes, and it was a real delight to see characters whom I know and love placed in Victorian London, interacting with that world.īenedict Cumberbatch, when he is playing Sherlock in the modern day, is a ball of energy, quick as lightning in thought and deed, but hyperactive and slightly autistic in his behaviours. As viewers, we have grown to love Sherlock and John, the modern day Holmes and Watson.
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Sherlock’s USP was that it was a re-imagining of the Sherlock Holmes characters and stories, relocated to present day London. Like most Sherlock fans, there were aspects of the Special I loved, and other aspects which were … a bit not good! Exactly one month after its original screening, this review is my very personal take on what I thought was the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of the Victorian Sherlock Special. The reaction to this Special was, it is fair to say, mixed.
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My review of "The Abominable Bride", the Sherlock Victorian Special, can be found here:Īfter a two year hiatus, Sherlock returned to cinema and TV screens on New Year’s Day 2016 with a Victorian Special, placing our modern day Sherlock and John back in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s original Victorian London setting. I gave my personal take on the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of the Sherlock Special. My EQView feature this week was a review of The Abominable Bride, the Sherlock Victorian Special, where Sherlock and John are placed back in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s original Victorian London setting.