besleybean wrote:
Oh I know, I just have to admit I was wrong about Sherlock(again!)...
I never would have thought Sherlock would do this.
While not condoning murder, I do think the murder says good things about Sherlock, about how far he's come in understanding how actions ricochet from one person to another and how much he cares (perhaps more importantly, how much he's not afraid of caring!).
There are huge parallels between TRF and HLV. The way that I take the end of TRF is that Sherlock is not emotionally involved in his plan. He has no idea of the repercussions of pretending to kill himself in front of his best friend (whom he doesn't even know is his best friend!). He thinks he's sacrificing himself for John, Mrs. Hudson, and Lestrade, but he has no idea what that actually means.
In the TEH, he finally gets it. He makes the emotional connection after seeing the aftermath of his 'suicide.' The rest of series three is about him learning to use that knowledge and reconcile it with his slightly sociopathic calculating side. He is experiencing a huge paradigm shift in the way he's seen the world, his place in it, and his relationships with people for almost 40 years. It's no wonder he's so muddled and seemingly slow in this series!
Assuming that Moriarty bested him in TRF (which is what I think), Sherlock finds himself bested once more in HLV and he decides to take the fall again so that his loved ones can be safe. He knows that he is going to hurt them and I'm convinced he knows that his punishment will be that suicide mission (again, TRF parallel!), but killing Magnussen is something that needs to be done and Sherlock makes the sacrifice.
You can see many times in the scenes leading up to the shooting that he is not sociopathic about it, that he is making a deliberate and painful choice, so different from John coldly shooting the cabbie for a perfect stranger. As he pulls the trigger, Sherlock makes the decision of the man he wants to be, one who is deeply flawed, yes, but good and finally worthy of the love and trust his friends have for him.
I ended TRF with nothing but disgust and loathing for Sherlock making John watch him fall and I ended HLV finally finding something sympathetic about our detective. No, I really don't think Magussen's murder is proof of a character flaw.
Mary