anjaH_alias wrote:
Hanka wrote:
miriel68, you're not really contradicting me here. I'm okay with people murdering others on TV, it happens, it should be shown on TV/in literature. I am just very unhappy with the way it is dealt with: not at all. Sherlock kills somebody, then there's about a minute of people being shocked, and then, surprise, three minutes later, Sherlock just comes back to solve yet another crime. Mycroft is over it. John is over it. Nobody even implies that this is wrong, a murderer not facing justice because he is oh so intelligent and needed (why? He just 'solved' a problem in the worst possible way). The characters are joking again already, and apparently ready to go 'back to business'.
I actually don´t get what you feel here, but I can tell you what I feel since Sunday: I feel a huge cramp around and in my breast whenever I am thinking about that scene. It´s so dark, really dark. I see that child crying, which brought himself into that hopeless dead end situation. I understand it and I see and feel how it suffers, how everybody around him is suffering. The jokes I hear are bitter gallows humour, grim, not funny at all. Sardonic. I am really touched and feel sad.
I can´t understand what you read in that scene, I don´t see what you see. It´s one of the most striking, impressing, tragic and thinkworthy scenes which I saw since ages. It makes me think about that matter, I am asking myself questions - what if or if not? -, and this is much more moving and deep as any of that morally clotted, political correct blab of so many other films I saw. I really salute to Stephen Moffat here - what he made is courageous and profound.
And so I can´t understand how anybody can watch this with his/her everyday point of view, doesn´t see the beauty of that scene and is resistant to that tragedy. Is it self protection or am I too romantic?
I'm with you here, I did like that scene, it was very well done. I think I spoke too harshly when I said the murder was not dealt with at all - it was. However, only incredibly short so, and, as I expressed, the scene on the plane - Sherlock talking to Mycroft, the two of them as well as John joking again already - redeems the scene right after the murder for me. They should've cut that thing with Moriarty and Sherlock coming back out - I would've been better off with a cliffhanger rather than a nice, short wrap-up telling us that everything's okay. And as some of you mentioned, I do hope and expect, obviously, that this murder will be dealt with in the next series, but I was very disappointed in the way it has been dealt with by now.