Originally posted by french frank
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Sherlock BBC1
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Richard Tarleton
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Just to throw my six eggs into the mix and, or whatever......
I always thought of myself as a bit of a SH purist, having read them all avidly aged about 14. For me, Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett were just fine, but anything else was deeply suspicious.
Anyway, as I watch almost zero TV drama these days, (no time what with all that time consuming music) these passed me by until the last episode of the last series when I gave in and decided to give them a whirl. Instant hit .
Main feeling for me is that they really do capture much of the feel of the original stories....The edginess of Holmes, the great qualities of Watson, the pace, Holmes' frailties (in detection as well as as a person) the relationships, the modernity. Great stuff.
This episode is perhaps the hardest one to pull off. I suspect it was for Conan Doyle, and I think for film makers and scriptt writers too. This is always going to be a plot that has the odd hole, the occasional bit of more than the usual trickery, so I think we need to see it in that light.
If I have a criticism of the series, it would be the Mycroft character, who really seems a long way from my recollection of the superior, idle,but basically benign type portrayed in the stories. Too machiavellian, too hard? Perhaps memory is deceiving me, or the writers may have good reason for this, some deeper purpose. As an aside, I don't think the original Holmes would have treated Watson the way he did in the tube train....
However, terrific drama, if a tad too dark for my taste, but I think that is how the world is now, and how it likes (or is perhaps is told it likes) its entertainment. Looking forward to the rest of the series.
Edit: only seen 4 episodes in total: is there any music interest? Sherlock on twin turntables maybe? I see him hanging around electro gigs in the kinds of places that Beef Oven ! frequents, perhaps? The latter day SH will have moved on from the Beethoven VC , surely? but in good ways !
Super Edit: Just watching episode 3 of series 1, music question answered . Still the fiddle .Last edited by teamsaint; 02-01-14, 20:19.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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After a hot shower, I collapsed on the bed like a felled tree on returning from the first day back at work today, just in time (21:15) to hear the Radio dramatisation of 'The Empty House' (see my link above). Interesting contrasts and similarities of course.
But it was dramatised by one Bert Coules. Is this our very own 'Bert Coules' ? I can feel a PM coming on..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I can't help thinking that the train driver might have had some explaining to do at the depot when he returned his train with a carriage missing, and how long has it been since a late night traveller was the only person on the platform?
I'm sorry, but after the first ten minutes I began to find it increasingly tedious but stuck it to the end. Watching and listening with my surround system, I was glad that the neighbours were away, as the music and effects were deafening on a full range system, that is if you wanted to hear the dialogue. It was all very clever, but I'll go back to my two volume annotated edition of Sherlock Holmes.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostDrama queen
Thanks for your sympathy, though Beefy"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAre we the same people that came through the Blitz?
Churchill's power naps were a vital part of the war effort, by the way, if you wish to get historical..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostAfter a hot shower, I collapsed on the bed like a felled tree on returning from the first day back at work today, just in time (21:15) to hear the Radio dramatisation of 'The Empty House' (see my link above). Interesting contrasts and similarities of course.
But it was dramatised by one Bert Coules. Is this our very own 'Bert Coules' ? I can feel a PM coming on...
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Originally posted by jean View Post
(That station pictured above looks like cut-and-cover to me.)
And all that talk about there being no escape routes; there are plenty on all cut-and-cover routes.
But this is what we get in Sherlock:
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