![]() ![]() ![]() Throw in the fact that this version of Moriarty is quite possibly Television's most chilling villain ever, and you've got an absolute Grand-Slam of an episode trilogy. The best part is that the show is simply highly intelligent, and never once asks the audience to stop thinking in fact, it demands you keep up, and asks you to guess all of the answers, almost none of which I guessed correctly when I first watched it. The characters are extremely engaging and well-acted, the dialogue snappy, the plots intricate, inventive (in their updating) and gripping, and the Directing is genuinely outstanding, combining a strong sense of atmosphere with solid cinematography, consistent energy and some truly creative editing. Sherlock is a British mystery crime drama television series based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyles Sherlock Holmes detective stories. The entire Season is only 4.5 hours long, but it's 4.5 hours of some of the best television I have ever seen, bar none. The Empty Hearse, with its heady revelations and the promise of future mayhem via a new nemesis. And thanks to the dramatic impact achieved by director Rachel Talalay, the murder of Mary. Sherlock Season 3 focuses on character development much more than it has in previous Seasons. The middle episode, 'The Hounds of Baskerville', is genuinely excellent, being tightly written and intensely atmospheric, so the fact that this is actually the WEAKEST episode of Season 2 (and by a considerable amount) really speaks for how genuinely amazing Season 2 truly is. Season 3 of 'Sherlock' starts with a baffling, inventive, exciting episode. The episode felt very Bond overall Holmes has never done so much running towards or away from explosions. This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. ![]()
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