Thursday, January 23, 2014

5 Stars for Sherlock

CBS has brought a contemporary Sherlock Holmes to America and added a whole new look (and gender) to Dr. Watson (played by Lucy Liu) in their hit show Elementary. I hear it is very good. I'm sure it is. But I have a problem with it even though I've never seen it.

It's not the BBC's rendition of Sherlock Holmes, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as the world's greatest detective, and Martin Freeman as Dr. John Watson. (Freeman starred as Bilbo Baggins in the second installment of The Hobbit, The Desolation of Smaug, and I kept waiting for him to help someone solve a crime.)

Having read all of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories and novels as a kid, I love that the producers are steeped in the history and nuances of the Victorian Holmes. They have done a masterful job in bringing him to life in modern London while honoring Doyle's original stories. It is obvious they are raving fans. And thank you to another fan, my daughter Lindsey, who introduced me to the BBC iteration.


Cumberbatch's Sherlock is clever, quirky, humorous, dark, and intelligent in sufficient measure that fans (like my wife and I) put up with a second two-year hiatus as we waited for Season Three to arrive without abandoning ship. This is not normal TV viewing. The first two seasons had only three episodes each. It helps that each episode is ninety minutes long but I could still do with more.

Consider this my personal recommendation to watch Sherlock and watch Sherlock now. But don't start with Season Three. It's hard to find anyway. You have to hope you can find it on PBS's Masterpiece Theater in those short interludes when they aren't doing reruns of Downton Abbey. Or you can buy it by the season or episode on Amazon Prime or Vudu or another streaming service. Seasons One and Two are available for no cost on Netflix.

The other reason not to start watching with Season Three is how Season Two ended. So if you haven't seen that, stop reading now, and consider this a spoiler alert.

Sherlock is so well done that we can (and do) forgive each long wait for new episodes ... and for the pain and suffering the producers inflicted on us when Sherlock fell to his apparent death at the end of Season Two. His unforgettable return created a masterful interplay between Holmes and Watson as they painfully ... awkwardly ... hilariously reconnect. At the end of Season Three's opening episode, "The Empty Hearse," you realize "we" were Watson, and we too wondered why Sherlock let us think he was dead without a word for two long, painful years.

But the return was so satisfying that we, like Watson, have to forgive Sherlock. He's just too fun to be around to stay mad at him forever.

In my humble opinion, Sherlock is the best show on TV today.

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