Offline
Tantalus wrote:
Forgive me if this has already been answered (and I vaguely remember asking before, but not sure), but here's my nagging question:
Assuming that M's suicide was unforeseen by Sherlock, how exactly does Sherlock expect to fool Moriarty with his "suicide" jump, since it is almost unbelievable that M would not look after Sherlock jumps? Does Sherlock think his plan will unfold so quickly that M won't notice?
I don't think we can assume that SH did not at least see the possibility of a JM suicide. I don't think it would be out of the question for SH to notice that JM had a gun on him when he grabbed him and held him over the edge. If destroying SH's reputation is JM's goal, then he has nothing to gain by shooting SH. So if the gun isn't for SH, then does its presence added to JM's disdain of "Stayin' Alive" give SH an idea? Quite possibly...
Tantalus wrote:
Another nagging question: How does Moriarty (and then Sherlock) arrive at the three targets of John, Mrs. Hudson & Lestrade? Why wouldn't either of them include Molly (who M knows has been close to Sherlock) or Mycroft (strained relations but brothers nonetheless)?
There is a theory that JM was bluffing. If you watch the scene, he actually just prompts SH to name those close to him. After he names JW, Mrs. Hudson & Lestrade, JM mentions there are three gunmen. That is the best theory I have seen, as the inclusion of Lestrade over the others you mentioned was quite unexpected.
Online!
I thought they were quite predictable targets:
The Mother Figure
His best friend
His(apparently) most valued colleague...
ALSO; the 3 people who knew most about the cases/Moriarty.
Offline
besleybean wrote:
I thought they were quite predictable targets:
The Mother Figure
His best friend
His(apparently) most valued colleague...
ALSO; the 3 people who knew most about the cases/Moriarty.
After dating him, I'm not sure how 1) Molly doesn't make the top three or 2) JM doesn't make it four people.
Remember, the whole reason JM "targeted" Molly was to get to Sherlock...so he certainly knows about their connection.
Offline
The three people selected represented:
Home life: Mrs Hudson
Personal life : John
Professional life: Lestrade, because without Lestrade's approval, Sherlock would meet dead ends trying to solve cases at times.
Attack someone on those 3 fronts & they know you mean business. Why not Molly? She would be considered by Moriarty to be an 'underling' to Sherlock in professional life.
There was a clue to each of these being selected. The IOU only appeared in 3 places:
On the apple, in his home : John
On the wall looking directly toward 221B : Mrs Hudson
On the building windows opposite the police station : Lestrade.
As for Sherlock's plans after his suicide seeing as he had no knowledge of Moriarty's suicide; that's an easy one. Think back to the canon.
Sherlock intended on taking Moriarty over with him. Both 'bodies' rushed away & Sherlock would have open slather on interrogating Moriarty all the while both of them presumed dead. Moriarty's network would not have been looking for him to save or protect him.
Things didn't go that way, hence he had to think fast on his feet & as he needed a witness to verify that it WAS him that died, he had to make John his eye witness, as much as he knew how it would affect John.
Offline
aWorldlyPhilosopher wrote:
After dating him, I'm not sure how 1) Molly doesn't make the top three or 2) JM doesn't make it four people.
Remember, the whole reason JM "targeted" Molly was to get to Sherlock...so he certainly knows about their connection.
Well, maybe dating her was exactly what changed Moriarty's mind not to include her. During their scene at the labhe saw that Sherlock was not jealous in the least about "Jim from IT" and he saw that Sherlock had no issues offending Molly in front of others and not waste another thought on it. Why should he presume that he would even notice her missing?
The only reason why I personally would have expected the writers to maybe make Molly a target as well is because - as a non-canon character - she is ultimately dispensible. Everybody knows that the snipers won't kill John Watson, but we no nothing about Molly's fate or future.Therefore the writers could have added another twist to Reichenbach, or to the first episode of Series 3, by having Molly killed by Moriarty's men. Luckily for her, they didn't
Offline
kazza,
Undoubtedly you are correct about Sherlock's plan to take Moriarty with him. I should have realized, based on the canon, that this would be Sherlock's plan. It really is the only satisfactory explanation other than acknowledging a plot hole (which I'm sure none of us would ever even suggest...).
One question, though. In the canon, Holmes doesn't plan to survive the falls, and pretty much is thinking on his feet as events unfold. Here, Sherlock does plan ahead, and expects to survive. If your theory is correct, you must assume that Sherlock planned on jumping before he knew about the assasins. Why? He could much less dramatically (oh, is that reason?) whisk Moriarty away for interrogation. Neither plan involves Moriarty's henchmen knowing what happened to him (unless Sherlock assumes they watch M's every move, in which case they certainly will be looking for M now, as they know he went to the roof and didn't come down).
I'm not as convinced about the 3 peoople chosen by M and Sherlock. Your explanation will work, but I think others would as well. Just leaves a bad taste in my mouth (but, I won't go so far as to blame the writers--if it's a stretch, I suppose they've earned one or two of those).
One more thought: has anyone suggested that maybe the gunmen we see are actually hired by Sherlock (or Mycroft), and not Moriarty? I mean, Moriarty wouldn't actually have to have gunmen in place--just telling Sherlock that would be sufficient to get him to jump, wouldn't it? Perhaps the gunman on John was there to protect Sherlock if something went wrong on the roof. How could Moriarty have planned to have his gunman set up (tripod and all) in a precise spot to have a good shot at John, since M didn't know where John would be? And the same goes for Mrs. H. We assume the guy with the gun is M's man; maybe he is there to protect Mrs. H, since Sherlock & John can't do so. I don't know; just seems that maybe we're seeing what the director's want us to see...
Offline
P.S.
Also, thanks, kazza, for re-stating what you've already mentioned. After my earlier post, I started going back through the previous posts--haven't finished, what with 30-something pages to read-- and I see that some of this has already been covered.
Offline
hypergreenfrog wrote:
the only reason why I personally would have expected the writers to maybe make Molly a target as well is because - as a non-canon character - she is ultimately dispensible. Everybody knows that the snipers won't kill John Watson, but we no nothing about Molly's fate or future.Therefore the writers could have added another twist to Reichenbach, or to the first episode of Series 3, by having Molly killed by Moriarty's men. Luckily for her, they didn't
We actually have no idea how many snipers Moriarty actually had in place. We know of the three, which happened to be the same ones Sherlock guessed, but there could have been others. I wouldn't be happy if when S3 begins we find Molly to have fallen victim to Moriarty's crew, not after what she did for Sherlock right before the fall. I LIKE Molly.... I hope they keep her around.
Offline
Tantalus wrote:
One more thought: has anyone suggested that maybe the gunmen we see are actually hired by Sherlock (or Mycroft), and not Moriarty? I mean, Moriarty wouldn't actually have to have gunmen in place--just telling Sherlock that would be sufficient to get him to jump, wouldn't it? Perhaps the gunman on John was there to protect Sherlock if something went wrong on the roof. How could Moriarty have planned to have his gunman set up (tripod and all) in a precise spot to have a good shot at John, since M didn't know where John would be? And the same goes for Mrs. H. We assume the guy with the gun is M's man; maybe he is there to protect Mrs. H, since Sherlock & John can't do so. I don't know; just seems that maybe we're seeing what the director's want us to see...
Intriguing ideas, Tantalus. Bravo! We have much to look forward to in S3-- and TPTB sure have some 'splainin' to do! As for seeing what they want us to see, yeah, for sure. That's a given.
Offline
ancientsgate wrote:
We actually have no idea how many snipers Moriarty actually had in place. We know of the three, which happened to be the same ones Sherlock guessed, but there could have been others. I wouldn't be happy if when S3 begins we find Molly to have fallen victim to Moriarty's crew, not after what she did for Sherlock right before the fall. I LIKE Molly.... I hope they keep her around.
Neither would I! I like Molly too, and hope they keep her as a character. I just wanted to point out that "threats" such as the three snipers only work well in stories with an unknown outcome. Killing off John Watson would not be feasible to most fans, even if they haven't read the canon. Therefore the sniper sent to kill him does not actually pose a real threat. The other two targets are also taken directly from the original ACD stories, if less well known. Therefore, Molly would be the only person who "could" be killed off without moving too far from the canon. It's just a thought, not saying it's what I would like to see.
Online!
Just sticking this here...of course Anderson was a famous writer of fairy tales too.
Offline
I don't know if we had this already. Found it just now.
Offline
Haven't seen it before! Now we know how he did it!
Offline
To me this looks as if he'd slide over the edge?
Offline
You're right. Could be painful.
Online!
He's on a wire, tho.
Offline
And the guy below is taking the slack. It it like rappelling/abseiling.
Offline
Fine, but what do they need the wrong placed cushion for, then?
Offline
Hopefully, it will nervously rotate at Sherlock's approach and thus brake the fall.
Offline
But it isn't red. Does a green one work as well?