Posts tagged PBS.

(Dr Henry Lee, Forensic Scientist, New Haven, CT. Credit: Love Productions)
HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLDEXPLORES THE IMPACT OF THE LEGENDARY DETECTIVE ON CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION– Two-Hour Special Assessing the Influence of the Fictional Detective on Real Forensic Techniques Slated for Fall 2013 on PBS –
PASADENA, CA; JANUARY 14, 2013 –  Today at the Television Critics Association meeting, PBS announced the premiere of  HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD, a two-hour special about the world’s most legendary fictional detective — Sherlock Holmes. The special will reveal for the first time the astonishing impact that Holmes has had on the development of real criminal investigation and forensic techniques. The program is slated to premiere in fall 2013 on PBS.
Sherlock Holmes is, without doubt, the most famous fictional detective the world has ever known. HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD will show that Conan Doyle’s hero not only revolutionized the world of fiction, but also changed the real world in more ways than many realize. Holmes was a scientist who used chemistry, fingerprints and bloodstains to catch an offender in an era when eyewitness reports and “smoking gun” evidence were needed to convict criminals, and police incompetence meant that Jack the Ripper stalked the streets freely. In many ways, the modern detective can be seen as a direct extension of Conan Doyle’s literary genius. 
“We are delighted to bring this exclusive special about Sherlock Holmes to PBS,” said Beth Hoppe, Chief Programming Executive and General Manager of General Audience Programming for PBS. “HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD takes Conan Doyle’s creation from fiction to reality, revealing the real-life importance of Holmes as a revolutionary crime fighter.”
“It is clear, especially of late, the lasting impact that Holmes has had, both nationally and internationally,” added Trish Powell, Executive Producer at Love Productions, the studio behind the special. “The worldwide success of the BBC drama on MASTERPIECE MYSTERY! and recent box-office hits Sherlock Holmes and Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows have proven Holmes to be a timeless source of entertainment. With this recent resurgence of interest, it is a perfect time to present this Sherlock Holmes special that demonstrates how the character was a catalyst for meaningful advancement and change in the field of criminal investigation and forensic science.”
Through the use of compelling archival material and reconstruction, HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD tells the true stories of the scientists, detectives and even criminals who were inspired or influenced by the legend of Holmes. The program explores real crimes that were solved thanks to a piece of equipment Holmes used, a technique he popularized or invented, or even his method of reasoning. The special will also assess the history of Holmes’ techniques from the 1880s to the present, showing how the scientific techniques Holmes introduced to the world have evolved into the stunning CSI-style forensic labs of Scotland Yard and the FBI. 
“Sherlock Holmes is the grandfather of forensic science,” states top forensic scientist Dr. Henry Lee. “Today when I go to a crime scene I use his logic, his method of deduction. That’s how we do it today, solving cases based on Sherlock Holmes’ logic.”
HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD will demonstrate how the legacy of Holmes, as the first crime profiler, was not solely a reservoir of brilliant stories and wonderfully drawn characters, but that it has saved lives and led to the capture of some of the worst criminals in modern history. 
PRODUCTION CREDITSExecutive Producer: Trish Powell; Director: Paul BernaysA production of Love Productions, © 2013

(Dr Henry Lee, Forensic Scientist, New Haven, CT. Credit: Love Productions)

HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD
EXPLORES THE IMPACT OF THE LEGENDARY DETECTIVE ON CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION

– Two-Hour Special Assessing the Influence of the Fictional Detective on Real Forensic Techniques Slated for Fall 2013 on PBS –

PASADENA, CA; JANUARY 14, 2013 –  Today at the Television Critics Association meeting, PBS announced the premiere of  HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD, a two-hour special about the world’s most legendary fictional detective — Sherlock Holmes. The special will reveal for the first time the astonishing impact that Holmes has had on the development of real criminal investigation and forensic techniques. The program is slated to premiere in fall 2013 on PBS.

Sherlock Holmes is, without doubt, the most famous fictional detective the world has ever known. HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD will show that Conan Doyle’s hero not only revolutionized the world of fiction, but also changed the real world in more ways than many realize. Holmes was a scientist who used chemistry, fingerprints and bloodstains to catch an offender in an era when eyewitness reports and “smoking gun” evidence were needed to convict criminals, and police incompetence meant that Jack the Ripper stalked the streets freely. In many ways, the modern detective can be seen as a direct extension of Conan Doyle’s literary genius. 

“We are delighted to bring this exclusive special about Sherlock Holmes to PBS,” said Beth Hoppe, Chief Programming Executive and General Manager of General Audience Programming for PBS. “HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD takes Conan Doyle’s creation from fiction to reality, revealing the real-life importance of Holmes as a revolutionary crime fighter.”

“It is clear, especially of late, the lasting impact that Holmes has had, both nationally and internationally,” added Trish Powell, Executive Producer at Love Productions, the studio behind the special. “The worldwide success of the BBC drama on MASTERPIECE MYSTERY! and recent box-office hits Sherlock Holmes and Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows have proven Holmes to be a timeless source of entertainment. With this recent resurgence of interest, it is a perfect time to present this Sherlock Holmes special that demonstrates how the character was a catalyst for meaningful advancement and change in the field of criminal investigation and forensic science.”

Through the use of compelling archival material and reconstruction, HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD tells the true stories of the scientists, detectives and even criminals who were inspired or influenced by the legend of Holmes. The program explores real crimes that were solved thanks to a piece of equipment Holmes used, a technique he popularized or invented, or even his method of reasoning. The special will also assess the history of Holmes’ techniques from the 1880s to the present, showing how the scientific techniques Holmes introduced to the world have evolved into the stunning CSI-style forensic labs of Scotland Yard and the FBI. 

“Sherlock Holmes is the grandfather of forensic science,” states top forensic scientist Dr. Henry Lee. “Today when I go to a crime scene I use his logic, his method of deduction. That’s how we do it today, solving cases based on Sherlock Holmes’ logic.”

HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD will demonstrate how the legacy of Holmes, as the first crime profiler, was not solely a reservoir of brilliant stories and wonderfully drawn characters, but that it has saved lives and led to the capture of some of the worst criminals in modern history. 

PRODUCTION CREDITS
Executive Producer: Trish Powell; Director: Paul Bernays
A production of Love Productions, © 2013

Sherlock Holmes gets modern treatment in two TV shows ›

bakerstreetbabes:

We’re in USA Today along with Benedict Cumberbatch, Jonny Lee Miller, and Les Klinger! Kristina/Curly did this interview not too long ago, so it’s great to see it out and her rounding off the end of the piece! Very exciting and a great article too. Do give it a read!

———-

Sherlock Holmes gets modern treatment in two TV shows

By Carol Memmott, USA TODAY

Sherlock Holmes may not be the first name that comes to mind when you think “superhero.” But based on his recent TV and big-screen track record, the world’s most famous literary detective, at the very least, is a globe-trotting time traveler.

The world’s love affair with Holmes in all his mutations — be it in films, on TV or re-imagined in new novels — is cyclical. And “we seem to be at the peak of another wave,” says Leslie Klinger, a Holmesian scholar and member of the Baker Street Irregulars, an organization of Holmes devotees.

“Every age takes something different from Sherlock Holmes,” says Klinger, who worked as a consultant on the 2009 and 2011 films that starred Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law as Holmes and Dr. John Watson (a third installment is in development). Klinger cites Guinness World Records, which lists Holmes as the most portrayed movie character; 75 actors have played the part in more than 200 films.

“There is something that every actor brings to this role,” says Benedict Cumberbatch, who is up for an Emmy for lead actor in a miniseries for his work on Sherlock, in a phone interview from London. “Like Hamlet, if you’re any good, you bring enough of your own personality and talent to bear that you will make it your own.”

“There is nothing new under the sun. It has all been done before,” Holmes says in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s 1887 A Study in Scarlet, but the notion hasn’t stopped filmmakers from experimenting with new interpretations of the Holmes legacy.

Sherlock, which premiered in 2010, has had fans swooning over Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman as Holmes and Watson.

And whether CBS’ Elementary, which premieres Sept. 27 (10 ET/PT) and stars Jonny Lee Miller as Holmes and Lucy Liu as Joan Watson, is a misstep or a stroke of genius is a case waiting to be cracked.

“Every vision of Holmes is a legitimate one,” Klinger says. And great actors, including Downey, Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett, who starred in the acclaimed Granada television series The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1984-1994) in England, have found the role irresistible and inspiring.

Men for all seasons

Placing Holmes and Watson in the 21st century is not the first time the detectives have been shifted to an era other than the Victorian period in which they were first written. Universal Studios’ 12 movies starring Rathbone all took place in the 1940s, the decade in which they were made. He’s seen driving a car and even goes head-to-head against the Nazis.

From these films grew the iconic image of Holmes (in part because of Rathbone’s Shakespearean training) as a suave English gentleman decked out in a Deerstalker cap and Inverness cape. The films also are why Watson (as portrayed by Nigel Bruce) is considered by many to be a bumbling fool. But Conan Doyle envisioned him as a competent surgeon and excellent marksman, and quite intelligent.

As for the original Holmes, created in the 19th century and featured in four novels and more than 50 short stories, he was famous for his logic, disguises, a tobacco fetish and the occasional use of cocaine and opiates.

Current novels range from The House of Silk by Anthony Horowitz, a period piece that was authorized by the Conan Doyle estate, to Laurie R. King’s Mary Russell novels, which give Holmes a wife who also solves mysteries.

In film, Downey buffed Holmes into more of an action-adventure hero who brings mixed-martial-arts chops to his bare-chested street fights. On television, Cumberbatch’s Sherlock is a nicotine-patch-wearing, tech savvy, fast-talking, antisocial genius whose brain analyzes clues at lightning speed. Elementary’s Sherlock is a man with self-doubts, a secret past and a Watson described as his “sober companion.”

Cumberbatch’s drama may be set in modern times, but, he says, “we came from a place of absolute reverence for the original. So it was always going to be an interpretation of the original, however much Sherlock fiddles with an iPhone or fusses around with modern graphics.

“Obviously there are some witty adaptations of certain ideas, but an awful lot of the material we use is from the canon. And the references are rich throughout,” he says. “I guess that’s why we’re scoring high. We’re appealing on both of those levels, and the traditionalists love the updates.”

Masterpiece executive producer Rebecca Eaton says she isn’t sure there’s room for two modern-day Sherlocks on TV. “It’s already a crowded field. … I think (CBS is) skating a little close to the risky edge, because there’s already such a successful TV show out there.”

She acknowledges, however, that “there are a lot of Sherlock Holmes fans out there. I don’t know how those people will react to another Sherlock. Either they could be quite dismissive, or they could welcome any bit of Sherlock in the drought between our last season and the next one.”

Elementary executive producer Robert Doherty says: “Sherlock has broad shoulders, and I believe he can carry us all. I’ve seen Sherlock in other novels, in comic books, in television shows, in movies, in TV movies. Some are better than others, but nobody has managed to ruin the franchise. It’s a credit to what Conan Doyle did in the very beginning.”

Overall, Doherty says, it’s a good time to be in the Sherlock business, “but you also want to make sure that you’re telling your own story, and that you can sit down and be excited about your vision for the show and not think about the others.”

Room for everyone

Don’t expect a Cumberbatch vs. Miller smackdown over the franchise. The actors are friends who co-starred in Danny Boyle’s theatrical production of Frankenstein. And Miller called Cumberbatch before accepting Elementary. “Benedict has been very supportive, and I wanted to reassure him about how different this script was and project was,” Miller told reporters in July. “All of the other differences will kind of be apparent.”

“I genuinely, as a friend, wish him all the luck in the world,” Cumberbatch says. “It’s a wonderful role, and I hope it’s as enjoyable for him as it has been for me. I think there’s room for both of us, (but if) his takes over, then I’ve had a fantastic time doing it and I wouldn’t bear any grudge. I adore Jonny.”

“It is a great honor to be asked to play such a rich character,” Miller says via e-mail, “and I felt there were many differences in Rob Doherty’s great script to anything I had seen previously. I particularly like the darker struggles our version of Sherlock is dealing with.”

As to how he’ll make Holmes his own, Miller says: “I used the books. There is so much material there that you can try to find aspects that maybe haven’t been seen so much. You can also discard what you feel has been seen a lot. I am trying to show some conflict and difficulty in Sherlock’s life, so he seems a little at odds with the world.”

For now, while Sherlock balances its story lines atop Conan Doyle’s body of work including The Hound of the Baskervilles, Elementary will devise new Holmes stories.

“We’re really trying to embrace our setting, trying to embrace our Watson,” Doherty says. “That’s not to say we won’t ever take something from the canon and try to make it an episode, but it’s not what’s really driving us.”

In the end, it will be up to fans to decide whether there’s room for two modern-day Holmes/Watson teams on TV.

Kristina Manente, who last year founded the London-based fan group Baker Street Babes (bakerstreetbabes.com), says Sherlock “is so brilliant, but when I first heard about it, I didn’t like the idea of modernizing it. But it makes so much sense: Holmes was always a modern man. The acting and writing is flawless.”

And she’s “quite open-minded about Elementary. I love Jonny Lee Miller. I’m definitely going to check it out.

“To be fair, BBC’s Sherlock has brilliantly used the canon as its base, so (Elementary) can’t really mimic that. They have to do something new for it not to be thought of as a copycat.”

Sherlock Holmes gets modern treatment in two TV shows ›

We’re in USA Today along with Benedict Cumberbatch, Jonny Lee Miller, and Les Klinger! Kristina/Curly did this interview not too long ago, so it’s great to see it out and her rounding off the end of the piece! Very exciting and a great article too. Do give it a read!

———-

Sherlock Holmes gets modern treatment in two TV shows

By Carol Memmott, USA TODAY

Sherlock Holmes may not be the first name that comes to mind when you think “superhero.” But based on his recent TV and big-screen track record, the world’s most famous literary detective, at the very least, is a globe-trotting time traveler.

The world’s love affair with Holmes in all his mutations — be it in films, on TV or re-imagined in new novels — is cyclical. And “we seem to be at the peak of another wave,” says Leslie Klinger, a Holmesian scholar and member of the Baker Street Irregulars, an organization of Holmes devotees.

“Every age takes something different from Sherlock Holmes,” says Klinger, who worked as a consultant on the 2009 and 2011 films that starred Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law as Holmes and Dr. John Watson (a third installment is in development). Klinger cites Guinness World Records, which lists Holmes as the most portrayed movie character; 75 actors have played the part in more than 200 films.

“There is something that every actor brings to this role,” says Benedict Cumberbatch, who is up for an Emmy for lead actor in a miniseries for his work on Sherlock, in a phone interview from London. “Like Hamlet, if you’re any good, you bring enough of your own personality and talent to bear that you will make it your own.”

“There is nothing new under the sun. It has all been done before,” Holmes says in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s 1887 A Study in Scarlet, but the notion hasn’t stopped filmmakers from experimenting with new interpretations of the Holmes legacy.

Sherlock, which premiered in 2010, has had fans swooning over Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman as Holmes and Watson.

And whether CBS’ Elementary, which premieres Sept. 27 (10 ET/PT) and stars Jonny Lee Miller as Holmes and Lucy Liu as Joan Watson, is a misstep or a stroke of genius is a case waiting to be cracked.

“Every vision of Holmes is a legitimate one,” Klinger says. And great actors, including Downey, Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett, who starred in the acclaimed Granada television series The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1984-1994) in England, have found the role irresistible and inspiring.

Men for all seasons

Placing Holmes and Watson in the 21st century is not the first time the detectives have been shifted to an era other than the Victorian period in which they were first written. Universal Studios’ 12 movies starring Rathbone all took place in the 1940s, the decade in which they were made. He’s seen driving a car and even goes head-to-head against the Nazis.

From these films grew the iconic image of Holmes (in part because of Rathbone’s Shakespearean training) as a suave English gentleman decked out in a Deerstalker cap and Inverness cape. The films also are why Watson (as portrayed by Nigel Bruce) is considered by many to be a bumbling fool. But Conan Doyle envisioned him as a competent surgeon and excellent marksman, and quite intelligent.

As for the original Holmes, created in the 19th century and featured in four novels and more than 50 short stories, he was famous for his logic, disguises, a tobacco fetish and the occasional use of cocaine and opiates.

Current novels range from The House of Silk by Anthony Horowitz, a period piece that was authorized by the Conan Doyle estate, to Laurie R. King’s Mary Russell novels, which give Holmes a wife who also solves mysteries.

In film, Downey buffed Holmes into more of an action-adventure hero who brings mixed-martial-arts chops to his bare-chested street fights. On television, Cumberbatch’s Sherlock is a nicotine-patch-wearing, tech savvy, fast-talking, antisocial genius whose brain analyzes clues at lightning speed. Elementary’s Sherlock is a man with self-doubts, a secret past and a Watson described as his “sober companion.”

Cumberbatch’s drama may be set in modern times, but, he says, “we came from a place of absolute reverence for the original. So it was always going to be an interpretation of the original, however much Sherlock fiddles with an iPhone or fusses around with modern graphics.

“Obviously there are some witty adaptations of certain ideas, but an awful lot of the material we use is from the canon. And the references are rich throughout,” he says. “I guess that’s why we’re scoring high. We’re appealing on both of those levels, and the traditionalists love the updates.”

Masterpiece executive producer Rebecca Eaton says she isn’t sure there’s room for two modern-day Sherlocks on TV. “It’s already a crowded field. … I think (CBS is) skating a little close to the risky edge, because there’s already such a successful TV show out there.”

She acknowledges, however, that “there are a lot of Sherlock Holmes fans out there. I don’t know how those people will react to another Sherlock. Either they could be quite dismissive, or they could welcome any bit of Sherlock in the drought between our last season and the next one.”

Elementary executive producer Robert Doherty says: “Sherlock has broad shoulders, and I believe he can carry us all. I’ve seen Sherlock in other novels, in comic books, in television shows, in movies, in TV movies. Some are better than others, but nobody has managed to ruin the franchise. It’s a credit to what Conan Doyle did in the very beginning.”

Overall, Doherty says, it’s a good time to be in the Sherlock business, “but you also want to make sure that you’re telling your own story, and that you can sit down and be excited about your vision for the show and not think about the others.”

Room for everyone

Don’t expect a Cumberbatch vs. Miller smackdown over the franchise. The actors are friends who co-starred in Danny Boyle’s theatrical production of Frankenstein. And Miller called Cumberbatch before accepting Elementary. “Benedict has been very supportive, and I wanted to reassure him about how different this script was and project was,” Miller told reporters in July. “All of the other differences will kind of be apparent.”

“I genuinely, as a friend, wish him all the luck in the world,” Cumberbatch says. “It’s a wonderful role, and I hope it’s as enjoyable for him as it has been for me. I think there’s room for both of us, (but if) his takes over, then I’ve had a fantastic time doing it and I wouldn’t bear any grudge. I adore Jonny.”

“It is a great honor to be asked to play such a rich character,” Miller says via e-mail, “and I felt there were many differences in Rob Doherty’s great script to anything I had seen previously. I particularly like the darker struggles our version of Sherlock is dealing with.”

As to how he’ll make Holmes his own, Miller says: “I used the books. There is so much material there that you can try to find aspects that maybe haven’t been seen so much. You can also discard what you feel has been seen a lot. I am trying to show some conflict and difficulty in Sherlock’s life, so he seems a little at odds with the world.”

For now, while Sherlock balances its story lines atop Conan Doyle’s body of work including The Hound of the Baskervilles, Elementary will devise new Holmes stories.

“We’re really trying to embrace our setting, trying to embrace our Watson,” Doherty says. “That’s not to say we won’t ever take something from the canon and try to make it an episode, but it’s not what’s really driving us.”

In the end, it will be up to fans to decide whether there’s room for two modern-day Holmes/Watson teams on TV.

Kristina Manente, who last year founded the London-based fan group Baker Street Babes (bakerstreetbabes.com), says Sherlock “is so brilliant, but when I first heard about it, I didn’t like the idea of modernizing it. But it makes so much sense: Holmes was always a modern man. The acting and writing is flawless.”

And she’s “quite open-minded about Elementary. I love Jonny Lee Miller. I’m definitely going to check it out.

“To be fair, BBC’s Sherlock has brilliantly used the canon as its base, so (Elementary) can’t really mimic that. They have to do something new for it not to be thought of as a copycat.”

sherlockology:

USA: PBS/Masterpiece Sweepstakes Competition to win Sherlock series 1&2 DVD boxset.

Check it out!

sherlockology:

USA: PBS/Masterpiece Sweepstakes Competition to win Sherlock series 1&2 DVD boxset.

Check it out!

Bullseye Interview with Benedict Cumberbatch

A fantastic interview with Benedict Cumberbatch about Sherlock and the car-jacking in South Africa. It’s quite emotional, but it is very worth listening to.

——

From Public Radio International’s Bullseye with Jesse Thorn:

Benedict Cumberbatch is a British actor, and the man currently responsible for instilling life into a modern Sherlock Holmes on PBS’s Masterpiece series Sherlock, alongside Martin Freeman of The Office as John Watson. While Cumberbatch and Freeman are the latest in a long line of actors to play these characters, there is something fresh about their adaptation: Sherlock takes place in the present day, updating the classic detective to our modern era. In the past year, Cumberbatch has memorably stolen scenes in period dramas like War Horse and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and is currently filming his first major villainous role as Khan in next summer’s J.J. Abrams Star Trek sequel.

Benedict joins Jesse to discuss bringing a new take to an iconic character, and what keeps Holmes relevant to both writers and audiences all these years later. He also opens up about how a life-threatening altercation while filming in South Africa in 2004 left him changed as a person. The Series Two finale of Sherlock airs this Sunday, May 20th, on PBS Masterpiece. Series Two will be available on DVD just two days later, on Tuesday the 22nd.

For more interviews about the best in pop culture, comedy, and recommendations every week, visit us in iTunes, our RSS feed or www.maximumfun.org.

As you value your life or your reason keep away from the moor

Sherlock’s The Hounds of Baskerville is on tonight on PBS 9PM EST! Check out Masterpiece Theatre’s website and check your local listings!

Don’t forget that we’ll be live tweeting the episode along with others. Following along @BakerStBabes and the hashtag #SherlockPBS

Even if you’ve already seen it, watch it on PBS and help out the ratings and support Sherlock! Besides, it’s just great to see it on the television rather than your computer screen!

Sherlock Holmes - Martial Artist?

martialspirit:

Currently, many of us in the States are enjoying the 2nd series of “Sherlock” from the BBC (Thank you PBS!). Last year, US cinemas saw the release of the second Holmes movie, “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” with Robert Downey Jr. as the world’s first, and only, consulting detective.

The Downey version displayed a more physically active Holmes. The fight scenes seemed to be inspired by MMA bouts. Downey himself trains in the Chinese martial art of Wing Chun and adapted some of those moves into the movie’s fight choreography. Click here for an article on how the martial arts helped Downey overcome drug and alcohol addictions.

Watch one of the fights scenes from the Downey’s first Sherlock film.

Holmes purists bristled at just how active the cerebral detective is in these new movies but Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock’s creator, wrote that Holmes had used a martial art called “baristsu” to defeat Professor Moriarty at Reichenbach Falls. You can find the reference in the 1901 short story “The Adventure of the Empty House.” Holmes is quoted by Dr. Watson as saying that “baristu, the Japanese system of wrestling, (which) has more than once been very useful to me”.

Doyle was probably referring to bartitsu, a stick-fighting self-defense technique developed by E.W Barton-Wright (1860-1951) in England in 1898. It is believed the Doyle either changed, or simple misremembered, the correct spelling of the new martial art.

Bartitsu enjoyed a revival in 2000. You can even find this website devoted to it.

A new documentary was produced last year called “Bartitsu: The Lost Martial Art of Sherlock Holmes.” Click here for a preview.

I read all of the Doyle canon, starting in the 4th grade. Holmes became popular around that time thanks to Nicholas Meyer’s excellent pastiche, “The Seven Percent Solution” which he also turned into a great movie. Of course, I also watched the Jeremy Brett series. While I moved more into James Bond fandom, my interest was reignited by the new BBC series. 

So as we enjoy the last episode of Series 2, “The Reichenbach Fall,” I wonder when our modern day Sherlock (played by the outstanding Benedict Cumberbatch) returns for Series Three, if he will also have new-found martial arts skills that help him dispatch the evil Professor Moriarty. After all, the new series will open with an adaptation of…”The Adventure of the Empty House.”



sherlicious:

©MCaric [x]

This a fantastic graphic made out of Melinda’s photos!

sherlicious:

©MCaric [x]

This a fantastic graphic made out of Melinda’s photos!

(via curlyfoureyes)

Regarding US transmission cuts: A Scandal In Belgravia

For those who wanted to know what was cut from the USA showing of A Scandal In Belgravia. (please let me know if I’ve missed anything)

  • Some of the montage at the beginning of the episode, including The Speckled Blonde
  • 243 types of tobacco ash
  • “Sex doesn’t alarm me,” exchange in Buckingham Palace
  • Smoking deduction in Buckingham Palace and not being part of The Commonwealth.
  • Sherlock stealing the ashtray (:( sadface)
  • Random bits of dialogue and some entrances and exits
  • Some of the Christmas scene regarding Irene’s death and John’ breaking up with his girlfriend.
  • Mycroft calling John about drugs and it possibly being a “danger night.” Sock index, etc.
  • Some of the scene with Mycroft and John at Speedy’s.

It’s very important to understand that cuts are for time and not content (obviously as all the nudity stayed in). Sherlock has a shorter block than 90 minutes on PBS, so they have to cut to fit it. Hartswood make the cuts, not PBS, so the decision lies with Sue Vertue & co. Please don’t be angry at them, it just has to be done and you’ve all seen the episode anyways, and it’ll be in full on the DVD.

We hope you had fun livetweeting with us at the #SherlockPBS party on Twitter!


Remember to join us again next Sunday for The Hounds of Baskerville :)

bakerstreetbabes:

Exciting announcement!!!! We’ve been asked by PBS to livetweet Masterpiece’s airing of Sherlock Series 2! [x]

We’ll be joined by Sherlock Holmes bloggers  @BakerStreetBlog, (Baker Street Babe and mad talented author) @lyndsayfaye and Guy Ritchie Sherlock Holmes consultant @lklinger [our interview with Les: HERE]

You’ll be able to follow along during broadcast and join in the discussion by following and tweeting #SherlockPBS!

Find out more info by following @masterpiecePBS & @PBS

Yes… we are slowly taking over the Sherlockian world ;), no, seriously, we’re so chuffed and thankful and everything for this and coming opportunities! We love everyone in this bar.