besleybean wrote:
You think Canon and Brett are more Johnlocky than BBC Sherlock?
There's a novelty!
The reason I say this is:
1) BBC Sherlock teases us with many more potential love interests - introduces considerably more sexual tension between Sherlock and Irene than in canon where she outwits him but they really hardly interact (though many adaptations are guilty of that), and BBC also suggests his possible interest in Molly and Janine. In canon, there is NO ONE else significant in Holmes' life, and the only canonical love interest for EITHER is Mary.
2) In canon, they don't fight and snark at each other the way they do hear. Holmes can be blunt to the point of unkindness in criticizing Watson's inability to deduce the way he does. And Watson will sometimes stand up for himself in his response to that...and Watson certainly expresses his disapproval of some of Holmes' more dangerous habits...but their relationship is..."softer" for lack of a better word. There is a sense of mutual caring and protectiveness, and, on Watson's side, hero-worship. And we see them spending time together when not on cases. And there's a fair amount of physical contact (usually done by Holmes).
In some ways, the fact that there IS "Victorian sensibility" in canon makes it easier to imagine Johnlock behind the scenes: just because they're not saying it doesn't mean it isn't happening - they can't say it. In today's media, pretty much anything goes, so if they don't say, you wonder why they don't, if it's happening?
As for the Brett series...the physical contact is there, and well, there's something about Brett's voice. You can hear Holmes talking to Watson in that voice in more...private...moments.
Getting back to Irene, another thing - I don't know if Sherlock has any moralistic feelings about her sex life, or sex in general, but I guess I kind of think that ego would play a role in Sherlock's relationships. He learned to be friends with John in part because John found him brilliant and fascinating. So maybe he'd feel that way about a love interest, too? In other word, he would want a woman to be interested in him because she found him amazing, more so than other guys?
Now, Irene DOES admire his intellect, but she's a...sex worker...by profession. Wouldn't Sherlock ever think, "Well, she has sex with a lot of powerful people, and she probably flatters them too? What makes me different?
Last edited by SherlocklivesinOH (February 23, 2014 4:02 am)