‘Sherlock’: How did he do it? (Slight return)
After a week of fevered conjecture about how Sherlock miraculously survived his apparently fatal fall from the roof of Barts Hospital, Steven Moffat has said: ‘There is a clue everybody’s missed.’
After a week of fevered conjecture about how Sherlock miraculously survived his apparently fatal fall from the roof of Barts Hospital, Steven Moffat has said: ‘There is a clue everybody’s missed.’
There is a tiny loose thread, a minor perplexity left to tease us until Sherlock returns to our screens: just how the hell did he get out of that?
As we all ponder just how Sherlock defied the one mistress harsher than Irene Adler – sweet lady Gravity – we’ve picked out 10 standout moments to look back on.
The Reichenbach Fall is not just magnificent, not just the best episode of the series (and thus the best of the show so far) and not just most likely the best thing you’ll see on the telly this year.
In the concluding part of Sherlock‘s second series, Sherlock and John lock horns with their old enemy in one final problem that tests loyalty and courage to their very limits.
Sherlock Holmes is more than a man, he’s a symbol, and you can’t kill a symbol… can you?
In the concluding part of Sherlock‘s second series, Sherlock and John lock horns with their old enemy in one final problem that tests loyalty and courage to their very limits.
We were more worried about this story being updated than any other, but our fears were entirely groundless.
The tired old dog of adaptations, The Hound of the Baskervilles has always been a bafflingly popular choice when it comes to pasting Sherlock onto the screen.
A Hound from Hell. A terrified young man. Sherlock’s most famous case. But is a monster really stalking Dartmoor?