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Putting thoughts into my head yet again, tonnaree...
I like it!
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My dirty mind and I thank you all.
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*applauds tonnaree*
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Ladies, sorry to disappoint you but I had a look at John's purple shirt. It has breast pockets. So it cannot be Sherlock's.
The good news is that this could nevertheless be taken as a hint. The colour is so not John that it must have a deeper meaning.
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*stubbornly holds onto headcanon version of events*
Last edited by tonnaree (May 1, 2014 3:24 pm)
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Okay, let's forget the pockets.
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Damn his pockets!
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We should delete them from our hard drive.
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What pockets?
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Never heard of those.
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Ha ha, you always put it the way you want.
Online!
What on Earth are you all talking about?
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Gently, this is what human brains are for!
Last edited by Harriet (May 1, 2014 4:50 pm)
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Really?
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besleybean wrote:
What on Earth are you all talking about?
Something about purple shirts and getting dressed in the dark but then I saw a butterfly and got distracted.
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Shirts with pockets don't exist, and if they did John wouldn't wear one of them.
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And life is good!
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Ladies, you are marvelous.
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*chases butterflies around the forum*
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Sorry for getting a bit more serious but when I woke up this morning (thinking about Sherlock as usual) a thought struck me:
Apart from the fact that they turned the nice governess/housewife into an assassin there is another difference to canon (and e.g. the Ritchie films) maybe as important:
John falls in love with Mary only after he has presumably lost Sherlock. Can anyone really imagine him doing this in series 1 or 2? Giving up their life in Baker Street for marriage?
In canon he moves out to marry and we get "For me there still remains the cocaine bottle." and "The good Watson had at that time deserted me for a wife, the only selfish action which I can recall in our association. I was alone." (I leave you to your thoughts about that).
Of course Moftiss opted for higher drama while Doyle very conveniently got Mary (and enigmatically) out of the way. Still, I like to think that John only was able to start a serious relationship with a woman after having lost Sherlock.