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Sherlock: The Hounds Of Baskerville

Posted on Tuesday January 10, 2012, 14:01 by Stephen Carty in Small Screen
Sherlock: The Hounds Of Baskerville

So last week I thoroughly enjoyed the marvellous season two opener of Sherlock, which welcomed the Beeb’s modern day story of Arthur Conan Doyle’s legendary sleuth back to our screens with assurance. Like the first season’s opening instalment, it was penned by co-creator Steven Moffat and offered a frequently-breathless plate-spinning act of knotty plotting, dazzling dialogue and Watson-impressing deductions. Admittedly, there were one or two niggles (as Ali Plumb pointed our in his well-reasoned blog piece), but on the whole it was sufficiently superior viewing to result in many critics and industry bods gushing with enthusiastic praise via Twitter and elsewhere.

The problem was, as I sat there afterwards trying to collate my thoughts and play mental catch-up, I began to anticipate what lay ahead (in true Sherlock fashion, floating text explaining my thoughts appeared around me), and found myself wishing that Moffat’s writing credits appeared on every episode. Of course, co-creator Mark Gatiss’ finale last year was a dizzying, event-packed affair, and all three instalments maintained an admirably high standard (other TV showrunners – take note). But for me personally, Moff’s opener was the undoubted peak of season one - speaking as someone who would also argue that the Doctor Who episodes not written by him usually feel like something of a comedown by comparison. Would history repeat itself?

Well, given that The Hounds Of Baskerville inevitably didn’t live up to last week’s new benchmark-setting antics, the answer is, thus far, on its way towards ‘yes’. Importantly though, episode two was another intelligent-written ninety-minute slice of Sherlock and far from a clanger, with Gatiss tackling what is undisputedly Sherlock Holmes’ most iconic and well-known case. While those of us who prefer Moffat’s twisty, turny plot-gymnastics didn’t get quite the same cerebral workout, the well-adapted cocktail of horror and the supernatural played to Gatiss’ strengths as a Hammer aficionado. A more straightforward and linear adventure, the narrative didn’t unfold like a scheme-within-a-plot-within-a-device-within-an-overarching-masterplan, but as a mystery thriller it was still very watchable.

And, as well as managing to generate a genuinely chilling and spooky atmosphere when required, the show’s playful nature was also in joyful evidence. Aside from a few neat gags (LOVED the dogging red herring) and geek-references (such as Watson calling Holmes “Spock”), there was a nice piece of meta-casting in the selection of Being Human’s Russell Tovey (who plays a werewolf there) as the man haunted by past visions of a giant, beastly hound. To be honest, the always-excellent Tovey wasn’t as natural a fit at playing posh as he is at essaying the ordinary bloke (see his flawless turn in the underrated Him & Her), yet he slotted in well amongst a cast of familiar British faces (including Amelia Bullmore and Clive Mantle).

Once again, Paul McGuigan imbued proceedings with a sense of style, but the episode’s most successful moments where those which highlighted John and Sherlock’s friendship. Along with the latter smirking with impressed approval after the former improvised some military patter during their compound infiltration, there was a particularly lovely moment where Holmes admits that he doesn’t have friends plural – just the one. By now, there’s no question that Martin Freeman is a very fine John Watson, but is it just me, or is Benedict Cumberbatch becoming dangerously close to surpassing Basil Bathbone as the most popular Sherlock Holmes? From what I’ve read online, the “Mind Palace” sequence has proved divisive among viewers, but surely it was worth it for the brief inclusion of Elvis?

So, overall not on par with last week’s sizzling opener, but an effective mystery thriller regardless, and that final incarcerated glimpse of Moriarty is surely enough to have us all tantalised for next week’s finale. Which, as Holmes fans no doubt know, is based on Doyle’s eventful short story, The Final Problem. Obviously. But what about you? Did you prefer Gatiss’ more linear take? Or did you hanker for some of Moffat’s hard-to-keep-up-with plot aerobics? As always, let us know below…

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Comments

1 Kained but Able
Posted on Tuesday January 10, 2012, 16:12
My main problem with this Holmes is his unpleasantness and rudeness to everyone around him which is completely against Doyle's portrayal. Holmes is a Gentleman, yes he is cocky and revels in toying with those slower than him, but he is always a gentleman and avery charming one at that. Cumberbatch's Holmes is just straight up mean to everyone he meets and it's really beginning to take me out of theshow.

2 RyanShanks
Posted on Tuesday January 10, 2012, 18:29
I disagree, Kained but Able. I think enough reverence is paid to the novels by Gattiss and Moffat, and the completely deliberate anti-hero portrayal of Holmes is a neat injection of valuable subtext. It is most certainly not a misinterpretation of the source material. And I think it serves the dark-to-light, heart of darkness, redemptive-journey-of a-slowly-unraveling-character tone of the piece as a whole.

3 Paxton
Posted on Tuesday January 10, 2012, 21:05
Mind Palace was gash.

No more of that, thank you.

4 dreamdragon
Posted on Tuesday January 10, 2012, 23:33
Mind Palace Gash but Mr H Lector doing the same thing is great, right? ow and the line after. "of course its a palace". Have you ever not said anything corny? ow wait, Gash..at least clunge would have been more acceptable for your age group.

5 DMeister
Posted on Wednesday January 11, 2012, 00:33
I thought that Empire's last blog on 'Sherlock' came rather too close to nit picking for my taste although well reasoned in other regards. Here however I find myself in complete agreement with Empire and I did kind of the miss the structure and style of ep 1 but I thought this worked very well and I was hooked throughout. I love this series so much and hope it returns for a third series as well.

6 loafroaster
Posted on Wednesday January 11, 2012, 10:03
The 'Mind Palace' was cringe-worthy; he's Sherlock Holmes, not Professor X! And is anyone else growing weary of the Bromance angle? Oh look, people keep mistaking them for a gay couple, ha ha ha!

7 Dr Science
Posted on Wednesday January 11, 2012, 10:19
I doubt I could have been more disappointed with this episode. It was too camp, too dumb and too forced. There was nothing cerebral to enjoy, it relied to too heavily on the buddy/odd-couple relationship. The plot holes and contrivances were unforgivable nonsense - they tried too hard to find parallels to Conan Doyle’s story rather than taking the premise as inspiration and crafting a decent plot around it.

I very much enjoyed the previous episode, and I look forward to the climactic confrontation with the ridiculously camp joker-lite Jim M next week, but I won't be revisiting Baskerville anytime soon.

8 pgmark
Posted on Thursday January 12, 2012, 16:18
The 'Mind Palace' though coming in other names and forms is a genuine technique for remembering things. I thought it was a good piece of editing and served well against the manner in which Holmes makes deductions against people. It is a nice character piece for him.

I agree with the blog and the comment about the tiresome 'gay couple' joke but to stick up for Mark Gatiss, the actual storyline would not have lent itself to as complex a set-up as episode 1. The tone was spot on and the lighter parts well recieved. An excellent episode in my book.

9 Lucy McCaul
Posted on Tuesday January 17, 2012, 13:08
I sort of applaud them for doing something completely different, rather than just "modernising" the original Hound- but then again I still prefer Brett and Harwicke over Cumberbatch and Freeman. On a related but different note: Jim Moriaty? Really? *Sigh* I guess nobody listens to the Goon Show anymore.

10 Lucy McCaul
Posted on Tuesday January 17, 2012, 13:09
and yes I do know that Professor Moriaty's name is James.

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