Sunday, October 7, 2012

Evaluation: Sherlock



Sherlock is a critically-acclaimed British television crime drama that provides a 21st century version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes detective stories.  Sherlock started airing in 2010 and contains six episode installments.  The newest season is expected to air in 2013.  British actors Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman play Sherlock Holmes and John Watson.
Sherlock Holmes in essence is a character that has transcended decades and caters to audiences who love mystery, intrigue, and peculiarity. He is an understatement himself, for he embodies peculiar.  He possesses superior analyzing methods, and brilliant deduction skills bordering on Savant-like qualities.  Sherlock comes off as brutish, direct, and extravagant in the way he interacts with people. He finds people extremely boring, predictable, and easy to read. He thinks that the general populations of people never use their brain to their fullest potential and are inferior to him.  Emotions are useless to him, and he finds a way to get around them while questioning suspects.  During these situations, propriety and interpersonal skills are cast to the side.  It is humorous to see how flustered and confused characters become when they interact with Sherlock, as he always seems to have the upper hand while blatantly analyzing them.

John Watson is the complement to Sherlock. He provides the human element in the show and insight to Sherlock. He is a former army doctor and Sherlock’s flat mate.  They live together and John Watson is the closest thing as a friend to Holmes.  Holmes relies on Watson’s advice because Watson possesses the ‘normal human skills’ that he has been so accustomed to avoiding.  John Watson is incredibly loyal to Sherlock—though sometimes reluctant—and always seems to have his moral compass pointing north.
London’s police frequently consult Sherlock as a detective for murder investigations.  This is another reason to love Sherlock; he likes to allude to the fact that the police never know what they’re doing and ask for his skills all the time.  Other characters in the show who are easily miffed by his antics describe him as a ‘psychopath.’  One of the characters Sgt. Sally Donovan tries to warn John Watson in the first episode, “He gets off on it, you know…. One day we'll be standing around a body and Sherlock Holmes will be the one that put it there.”  The story never alludes to the fact of Sherlock’s capacity to cross over from good side to bad.  Yet, that possibility keeps the show exciting. 


The transition from the old-world Sherlock Holmes to modern day is seamless and hardly noticeable.  Taking a familiar character and placing him in a new environment is exciting for avid Sherlock fans.  The general makeups of the characters remain the same, and any new additions are brought about in such a commendable way, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle would be proud if he were here today.
The genre of the story draws people in because it centers on an incomplete mystery and later completes it. Mysteries would be nothing more than prolonged if the show was a documentation of the process of an unsolved case. In Sherlock, each case is solved at the end with a definite perpetrator. Although, sometimes the episodes end in a cliffhanger or introduce a new concept for the next season, this is usually alluded to or introduced in the middle of the episode and later develops. 
The show enthralls the audience in a variety of ways. The essence of a well-developed character supplemented by incredible acting gives people the ability to enter into the story.  Someone who is extraordinarily bizarre and brilliant transcends decades and culture barriers.  Sherlock shows that reasoning and intellect never go out of style, and as long as there are unsolvable cases, there will be Sherlock Holmes.

1 comment:

  1. I really enjoy stories of Sherlock Holmes and you sold me on this show. I love the movies with Robert Downy Jr. so I hope it is even a little simular with the humer that Jr. is so good at using. I enjoy the way you put your true feelings toward this show in this blog post, you did a great job of making it a fun read for me. You did a great job of describing the show as well,"He thinks that the general populations of people never use their brain to their fullest potential and are inferior to him", this is a perfect description of Holmes. I like the fact that in this show he is seen as a kind of, sketchy, person to have on the side of the police. I also agree that it keeps the viewer on edge and the show interesting. Over all I love your evaluation and really enjoyed reading about this new show! I'll probably be hooked on it right away.

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