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Seaoson 4 review sherlock
Seaoson 4 review sherlock








seaoson 4 review sherlock

It’s just enough to keep him in that limbo of being either a genius or a genuine mess – by the time the tension is dripping into your bloodstream in the finale, you genuinely aren’t sure who’s turning the tables on whom.

SEAOSON 4 REVIEW SHERLOCK FULL

It’s a masterstroke that gives us the most astutely written episode of Sherlock since Season 2, one that sees Sherlock jump to a deduction, then spends the next 90 minutes waiting to see if it’s true or not.Ĭumberbatch is marvellous, managing to do a convincing job of pretending to be out of it on drugs – and even reciting Henry V at full tilt, while destroying a room. Crucially, that balance extends to the main narrative too: The Six Thatchers was so concerned with tying up character cliffhangers that it didn’t have the kind of mystery we could puzzle over, but The Lying Detective makes Smith’s character the conundrum. Where The Six Thatchers was unbalanced in its abundance of Mary and deficit of John (his sort-of affair jarred partly because there was no time taken to explain it or build up to it), The Lying Detective has the balance just right: after her death last episode, Mary haunts John, while he and Sherlock grudgingly begin down the awkward path to reunion. Steven Moffat takes over writing duties from Mark Gatiss this episode and runs with it in the best possible way. Could he really be up to his elbows in murder pie too?

seaoson 4 review sherlock

“A cereal killer!” He has his fingers in any number of pies, we discover, from entrepreneurial start-ups to charity work. Smith, a rich, self-made businessman, responds in kind: “I’m a killer!” he confesses to the camera with a grin. Here, he dives into the role of Smith with horrifying relish, as Sherlock (Benedict Cumberbatch) accuses him of being a killer. One of Britain’s best actors working today, Jones has always been able to inhabit any character thrown at him. That smug satisfaction was embodied by the series’ best villain yet: Culverton Smith, brought hideously to life by Toby Jones.

seaoson 4 review sherlock

How’s about that then? If that’s what the opening episode of Sherlock Season 4 seemed to be saying, as it wrapped up one of its weakest subplots, Episode 2 says it in an entirely different way.










Seaoson 4 review sherlock