but yes. memory less appealing than observation. capacious high-recall memory feels like it's special - we can't do it, our memories don't work like that. reasoning from observation feels like we should be able to do it and indeed can do it to a lesser extent.
― Fizzles, Wednesday, January 15, 2014 3:34 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this has always bugged me but sherlock isnt really a sociopath is he? i thought sociopaths were supposed to be quite charismatic, very good at mimicking normal human interaction, and so on. i mean you could argue that he IS all those things but i think the point is that with sociopaths they appear in general to be "normal" at all times. sherlock presents as difficult from the start; he seems more autistic than sociopathic.
― max, Wednesday, January 15, 2014 3:37 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
curious how long 'actually sherlock is a monster!' has been around. the first time i can remember coming across it was mark s here and then it kinda became the norm to have sherlock as clearly understood to be some asshole weirdo instead of just incredibly smart and observant (even the recent sherlock but not really precursors to the current wave had this eg house). seems like previously any revisionism of sherlock usually just focused on drug use or they'd have it turn out that watson was actually the smart one like some remington steele situation.
― balls, Wednesday, January 15, 2014 3:42 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
fyi in the superior product ELEMENTARY they make a lot of the above issues converge (no idea how well/where this tracks the canon) by making sherlock kind of a totally committed utility-maximizer, like if john stuart mill discovered that his greatest duty to the world could be found in performing investigations of murderers and then did everything he could to shape his life toward that end. so he's very smart and observant etc, but also constantly training himself with memory games and skill maintenance and relevant scientific inquiries. more than once he has floated the idea to others that essentially the normal rules, laws, etc. ought reasonably not to be applied to him in virtue of the greater good that is done by him being allowed to operate as he sees fit. thus his trying to murder M when he believes M to have killed irene adler, his defiant response to a police dept hearing aimed at canning him for recklessly causing his police colleague to be shot, lastrade's ominous warning to watson that seems to be connected to signs of sherlock's willingness to be utterly deceptive and manipulative to those around him (his doing 'voices'), etc.
i assume a lot of that is pretty normal. as they do it it comes across like sherlock is just an incredibly tense but subtly unstable balance of all the strengths and flaws necessitated by having shaped himself from the person he was born as, with the person with his biography, into the person he is. at times it makes it seem like he's an embodied interpretation of a nietzschean utilitarian.
― j., Monday, 21 December 2015 04:12 (ten years ago)
How can anything with Lucy Liu be superior to a British production?
― :wq (Leee), Monday, 21 December 2015 18:11 (ten years ago)
she's great!
― j., Monday, 21 December 2015 18:22 (ten years ago)
can you have nietzchean utilitarians
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Monday, 21 December 2015 21:27 (ten years ago)
are they a thing
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Monday, 21 December 2015 21:28 (ten years ago)
right that's what i'm saying, it's weird. to feel a moral (in the customary sense) demand on oneself despite conducting oneself sort of as if no such demands had any claim on you.
perhaps the out would have something to do with the fact that sherlock really only seems to care about personal injustices. when he serves the state w/ his talents it's still in the service of catching muuuuurderers etc
― j., Monday, 21 December 2015 22:15 (ten years ago)
fyi in the superior product ELEMENTARY they make a lot of the above issues converge (no idea how well/where this tracks the canon) by making sherlock kind of a totally committed utility-maximizer, like if john stuart mill discovered that his greatest duty to the world could be found in performing investigations of murderers and then did everything he could to shape his life toward that end.
FYI, this concept is introduced in the very beginning of the very first Conan Doyle story, where Watson tells us that Holmes doesn't know Earth revolves around the Sun, because information like that isn't useful to solving crimes, and he's committed to learning only things that help him in his detective work.
I agree that Elementary is underrated, and the way it explores Holmes' utilitarianism is intereresting (in ways Sherlock isn't), but I still wouldn't call it superior... Mostly because the actual mysteries in Elementary are almost never as clever as in Sherlock, and they rely even more on ridiculous coincidences, sometimes to the point breaking the suspension of disbelief. Also, while Jonny Lee Miller himself is good, the other actors simply cannot manage to make their characters as fascinating as those same characters are in Sherlock. Still, gotta give props for the makers of Elementary for avoiding the wiener-fest of the original stories, Watson isn't the only character who's a woman in this version.
― Tuomas, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 10:06 (ten years ago)
there's a series called something like Doyle and Houdini on soon, which is Arthur Conan Doyle and Harry Houdini solving the crimes. him from Dirk Gently's in it, Mangan.
http://www.itv.com/presscentre/press-releases/itv-commissions-supernatural-crime-drama-houdini-doyle-itv-encore
ITV though.
― koogs, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 15:18 (ten years ago)
xp i don't have room in my brain for mysteries, it's a waste of space i could be using for theorizing about police procedurals
― j., Tuesday, 22 December 2015 17:42 (ten years ago)
this was godawful
― pandemic, Sunday, 3 January 2016 13:01 (ten years ago)
To such an extent that i wonder how anyone let it get through unaltered. A horrible mess from start to finish.
― On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Sunday, 3 January 2016 13:07 (ten years ago)
It played like terrible fan-fic.
I was enjoying it in an unchallenged way* up until the point when Sherlock woke up on the plane and it became clear that Moffat was about to start Moffatting in a way that showcased all his worst traits as a writer and true to form it just deteriorated from there. The final stretch was an incoherent mess and the less said about the Suffragette stuff the better. A straightforward Victoria episode would have been so much stronger.
*Except Gatiss in the fat suit. Nothing in the history of TV has been made better by putting someone in a fat suit.
― Matt DC, Sunday, 3 January 2016 13:32 (ten years ago)
I liked the suggestion that Moriarty = nemesis = drug addiction, but otherwise bleh meh blurgh.
― barbarian radge (NotEnough), Sunday, 3 January 2016 15:11 (ten years ago)
Gatiss in the fat suit was easily the highlight. The rest was pretty wretched. Preposterous premises. Half-baked profundities. Self-referential smirkiness. No one watching that as their first exposure to the series would ever watch another.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Sunday, 3 January 2016 19:09 (ten years ago)
Despite prior misgivings about the pointlessness of a Victorian episode, I quite liked the purely Victorian half - a bit heavy on the injokes but I have a guilty childish habit of enjoying the little neural spark from spotting a reference, so I mostly enjoyed it right up until I didn't enjoy it any more with Moriarty's arrival, and then obv as Matt says it all went very wrong on the plane.
(I am trying to train myself out of that habit and luckily Moffatt zapping the viewer's reference-spotting aren't-you-clever neuron so relentlessly provides v. good training material)
Had a little tingling sense of impending wankery when Sherlock had a torch in the mansion but I somehow convinced myself that some kind of oil lamp happened to resemble a flashlight. Should've just turned it off then instead.
― a passing spacecadet, Sunday, 3 January 2016 19:58 (ten years ago)
some kind of oil lamp happened to resemble a flashlight
a bullseye lantern?
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Sunday, 3 January 2016 20:05 (ten years ago)
it looked quite small and cylindrical (I see the first electric tubular flashlight was invented in 1898 but was presumably rather more bulky) but yeah, I was trying to tell myself it was just a small bullseye lantern, except I didn't know what they were called, so thanks!
― a passing spacecadet, Sunday, 3 January 2016 20:35 (ten years ago)
Agree that this one would've been much better as a pure alternate universe Victorian mystery. Now all the meta-wankery at the end meant we didn't even get a proper solution to the mystery; at the end, Sherlock ask Lady Carmichael why she hired him if she was the killer all along, and the question is never answered. I did actually like the idea that a Victorian conspiracy of Suffragettes was behind the murders, so if they'd developed that into a proper story, this could've been a classic episode.
Seems to me that they added the modern-day bits because they thought people are tired of waiting until 2017 to finally get the resolution to the cliffhanger of "His Last Vow", so they had to add some bits that at least address that plot. But it was mostly pointless, and I think the stupidest part was that the one bit of new evidence about Moriarty we got didn't even make sense in light of what happened earlier in the episode... At the end, Sherlock says that no one could survive blowing their brains out, and that his mind palace hallucination proved that to him. But in the actual hallucination we saw how someone could fake their suicide like that, so why did Sherlock claim the opposite?
― Tuomas, Sunday, 3 January 2016 21:41 (ten years ago)
i enjoyed this, probably at least as much because of the silliness as despite the silliness, but moffat's tedious convolutions (here and on doctor who) wouldn't be nearly as tiresome if he were ever able to actually resolve them in a clever, honest way. the 'why did lady carmichael hire sherlock?' thing is this lazy trick he does where he thinks if he openly acknowledges the obv inconsistencies or problems maybe he can fool some ppl into thinking he's solved them. 'moriarty is really dead' is moffat conceding he can't think of a way to twist himself out of that plot development but when sherlock says 'i know what moriarty is going to do' does anyone actually believe moffat knows also?
― balls, Sunday, 3 January 2016 22:05 (ten years ago)
Thought this was probably the worst of these nu-Sherlock episodes. And then there's that wedding one.
― Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Sunday, 3 January 2016 22:24 (ten years ago)
'why did lady carmichael hire sherlock?'
― kinder, Sunday, 3 January 2016 22:30 (ten years ago)
incipient alzheimers?
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Sunday, 3 January 2016 22:39 (ten years ago)
to make Sherlock feel smart.
― glandular lansbury (sic), Monday, 4 January 2016 00:42 (ten years ago)
Well she didn't *actually* hire him, she only hired him in his mind, in order to solve the case. Once the actual case was solved that little invented detail was irrelevant. n.b. I'm not trying to defend the ridiculousness, merely explain...
Had a little tingling sense of impending wankery when Sherlock had a torch in the mansion
Don't know if this was before or after the big giveaway, fat moriarty talking about 'the virus in the data'.
― ledge, Monday, 4 January 2016 09:16 (ten years ago)
To me the first giveaway was the Bride using the term "shotgun wedding", which obviously sounded way too modern to be used in Victorian England. And later on Sherlock is using similarly modern terms while talking with Mycroft, and Mycroft comments on that, which I think was the point where you were supposed to figure out something's not right with the setting. "The virus in the data" was then the final nail in the coffin.
― Tuomas, Monday, 4 January 2016 10:47 (ten years ago)
for the excitement of trying to fool sherlock/having their case heard/perpetuate the 'Bride' story to allow more killings? I dunno.
But if Lady Carmichael simply wanted to witnesses so the Bride legend could go on and she herself wouldn't suspected of the murder, she could've hired any random person. What was the point of hiring a legendary crime-solver who might, you know, actually solve this crime too?
But this is the problem with inserting an "it was all a dream" twist into a series like Sherlock. The satisfaction the viewers get from Sherlock solving the crimes comes from the dissection of tiny, seemingly insignificant detail and how they fit into the solution, as well as from understanding how a seemingly illogical/inexplicable/impossible crime makes perfect sense. That's why you have all those big "Sherlock summing up how the crime happened" monologues in every episode. So taking away that and instead saying "all the details don't actually fit and it only makes sense because Sherlock wanted it to" removes the primary source of enjoyment people get from most Sherlock Holmes stories, including this series.
Even though it's horribly cliched, "it was all a dream" can be a satisfying trope in some types of stories, but not in whodunnit/howdunnit crime fiction like this.
― Tuomas, Monday, 4 January 2016 10:59 (ten years ago)
you just displayed all the enjoyment you got out of putting together that it was SHERLOCK'S BRANE wot dun it, in your previous post! the inexplicable hiring was another one of those discrepancies (just not a very useful or satisfying one as a clue).
― glandular lansbury (sic), Monday, 4 January 2016 12:24 (ten years ago)
I said I spotted those clues, but who said anything about enjoying it? "It was all a dream" is one of the oldest, most predictable twists in the book, so realizing the story was heading for that direction was more groanworthy than satisfying. It certainly wasn't the sort of clever, unexpected solution better Sherlock stories end with.
― Tuomas, Monday, 4 January 2016 12:34 (ten years ago)
Also, the fact hiring Sherlock was inexplicable wasn't even revealed until well after we found out it was all dream, so it wasn't even a clue, just an example of the writers trying to cover up their own ineptitude with a meta wink.
― Tuomas, Monday, 4 January 2016 12:38 (ten years ago)
"the fact that hiring Sherlock"
straight dope gives the first recorded usage of 'shotgun wedding' as 1903 fyi (shotguns are pretty old!)
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Monday, 4 January 2016 12:46 (ten years ago)
this was really enjoyable, if you would have preferred a straight up victorian murder mystery alternative entertainments are available, for boring people
― carly rae jetson (thomp), Monday, 4 January 2016 12:49 (ten years ago)
https://antiscribe.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/the-hound-of-the-baskervilles-2002.jpg
i see a lot of complaining about the "mansplaining" on the most recent episode. which is fair enough, but i'm racking my brain and i can't actually recall sherlock holmes ever _not_ "mansplaining" anything.
― new zingland (rushomancy), Monday, 4 January 2016 13:02 (ten years ago)
^seems like a misuse of 'mansplaining'.
one could easily imagine transposing Holmes' character as a woman, doing precisely the same shtick, and it being both equally entertaining and equally (im)plausible.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:21 (ten years ago)
The first 20 mins were terrific, and then all the "this isn't what it seems" hints, which could have been fun and mysterious, were so jackhammeringly obvious they spoiled the fun for the rest of the episode.
I think the mystery of why Lady Carmichael hires Sherlock is pretty clearly resolved without being too lampshade-y: she doesn't hire him *at all* because it's a dream, as Lestrade (I think) points out. Tuomas right to be confused by this, though:
I think the stupidest part was that the one bit of new evidence about Moriarty we got didn't even make sense in light of what happened earlier in the episode... At the end, Sherlock says that no one could survive blowing their brains out, and that his mind palace hallucination proved that to him. But in the actual hallucination we saw how someone could fake their suicide like that, so why did Sherlock claim the opposite?
Apart from that, does anyone find "fan favourite Moriarty" unutterably awful? God what an annoying performance.
― Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:43 (ten years ago)
They deliberately pushed the portrayal of Moriarty to an extreme and then pushed him over a cliff, where he should have stayed.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 19:50 (ten years ago)
Not really, mansplaining is 'explaining' something that the listener already understands. The whole point of Sherlock Holmes is that he is supposed to explain shit that no one else gets.
There's a vague get-out-of-jail card about that scene all being in Sherlock's head - and in any case I think Dream-Sherlock was explaining feminism to Dream-Watson rather than the Suffragettes themselves - but the whole thing was so flimsy, clunky and stupid that I'm not inclined to play it. And that's before you get onto the issue of the world's greatest detective being unable to spot a woman in a false moustache.
― Matt DC, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:56 (ten years ago)
Mansplaining is when men explain things for women, instead of letting them have their own agency and explaining things themselves. In that sense Sherlock's final summation was a perfect example of it, because it was inexplicable why the women couldn't explain their scheme and motivation themselves, and this being inside Sherlock's dream is no excuse, because Watson still had plenty of agency there... Unless the point of that scene was to expose Sherlock's inner sexism, but it didn't really read that way.
Also, Aimless' "what if the genders were flipped" excuse doesn't really work, because mansplaining is about the difference in power positions of genders, so a woman can't mansplain, just like a white Westerner can't be a victim of racism.
― Tuomas, Monday, 4 January 2016 20:14 (ten years ago)
In my first iteration I also mentioned the point Matt made, that Holmes' ability to explain was unique to him, and therefore 'uniquesplaining', which part I removed, but I shouldn't have. It was the combination of the two (flipping gender and uniqueness of ability) that removed the 'man' from the 'splaining'. My error.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:18 (ten years ago)
To think I assumed this worst of all things couldn't get worse
― The difficult earlier reichs (darraghmac), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:49 (ten years ago)
enjoying the men splaining mansplaining itt a lot more than I did that episode
― sktsh, Monday, 4 January 2016 20:54 (ten years ago)
all-purpose use of mansplaining as a rhetorical device is reminiscent of the many uses of rubber-glue in elementary school
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:59 (ten years ago)
As a rough guide:
The random guy at the bike store who wanted to tell my partner how to use a bicycle pump properly = Mansplaining
Sherlock summing up whodunnit at the end of a TV show/short story = Not Mansplaining
Sherlock summing up whodunnit at the end of a TV show specifically about how men deny agency to women = Probably Mansplaining
― Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 4 January 2016 22:33 (ten years ago)
wasn't even revealed until well after we found out it was all dream, so it wasn't even a clue
this is what I said
just an example of the writers trying to cover up their own ineptitude with a meta wink.
since they have the ability to go back pages in Final Draft, I would assume that they didn't accidentally realise that it made no sense for Lady Carmichael to hire Sherlock on page 80 and have to go with it. therefore it seems more reasonable to read it as, especially as it becomes apparent after the meta nature of the 1880s story is entirely revealed, a further commentary on Sherlock's narcissism and selective observation, which at this point has become a major theme of the episode.
again, I'm not arguing that it is a great or clever or satisfying element. but in context it does appear to be deliberate.
(same goes for Sherlock's line about shooting the back of one's head off: it could be that he is speaking specifically and only about Moriarty's suicide, by intentional contrast to the Abominable Bride scenario - as the Moriarty one took place directly in front of his eyes, not on a mid-distant balcony, with a lace curtain behind him that an accomplice could spray fake blood through. It could be a set-up for a revelation in S4 that Moriarty did somehow fake his own death after all, by showing that it can be done. Or it could just be one of many, many examples across the five years of this series of Sherlock saying things that are wrong - again, possibly as a herald of a twist in 2017, or as in other instances in this episode of imaginary-Sherlock making incorrect observations, or of drugged-up real-world Sherlock being incoherent in his chemical cocktail haze. The audience has a year or two to enjoy the tension caused by this ambiguity, if they want to.)
― glandular lansbury (sic), Tuesday, 5 January 2016 02:20 (ten years ago)
it's interesting that in august of 2010, martin freeman was "tim from the office". from that to arthur dent to watson to the greatest little hobbit of them all.
― remove butt (abanana), Tuesday, 5 January 2016 03:00 (ten years ago)
bravest, rather
― remove butt (abanana), Tuesday, 5 January 2016 03:01 (ten years ago)
This is pretty much accurate. I didn't mean to say that every Sherlock summation is mansplaining, since besides Irene Adler there haven't even been female master criminals in the series, but with this particular case and these particular culprits it veers towards it. Note that mansplaining isn't some special way of talking, nor are the men doing it usually even aware that they're doing it... So Sherlock could be doing the same style of summation he did when talking about Moriarty's crimes, but because the power dynamic is different, because he denies agency from someone not socially equal to him while talking for her, it's mansplaining.
― Tuomas, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 10:44 (ten years ago)
mansplaining is totally a special way of talking
that is why you can make the #actually joke
― j., Tuesday, 5 January 2016 10:46 (ten years ago)