SiB questions and answers thread

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Posted by Kittyhawk
July 3, 2015 7:26 pm
#81

Incidentally, I asked a very similar question in the Bond Air thread - and we pretty much agreed that the whole "terrorist plot" didn't make a lot of sense. Btw, there was no crypted mail - the line on Irene's phone, photographed from a Ministry of Defense employee, was seat assignments in clear. There's absolutely no indication in the show of how "the government" ever learnt of the terrorists' plans, or why it is a problem that Moriarty now knows which airplane will be filled with dead people.

At least I haven't found anything in about half a dozen viewings. And it took me a number of viewings to even realize that the plot doesn't make much sense - the episode is just so much fun to watch!

 
Posted by nakahara
July 3, 2015 7:34 pm
#82

Kittyhawk wrote:

And it took me a number of viewings to even realize that the plot doesn't make much sense - the episode is just so much fun to watch!

Well said! 
 


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I cannot live without brainwork. What else is there to live for? Stand at the window there. Was there ever such a dreary, dismal, unprofitable world? See how the yellow fog swirls down the street and drifts across the dun-coloured houses. What could be more hopelessly prosaic and material? What is the use of having powers, Doctor, when one has no field upon which to exert them?

 
Posted by kornmuhme
July 3, 2015 7:47 pm
#83

Kittyhawk wrote:

Incidentally, I asked a very similar question in the Bond Air thread - and we pretty much agreed that the whole "terrorist plot" didn't make a lot of sense. Btw, there was no crypted mail - the line on Irene's phone, photographed from a Ministry of Defense employee, was seat assignments in clear. There's absolutely no indication in the show of how "the government" ever learnt of the terrorists' plans, or why it is a problem that Moriarty now knows which airplane will be filled with dead people.

At least I haven't found anything in about half a dozen viewings. And it took me a number of viewings to even realize that the plot doesn't make much sense - the episode is just so much fun to watch!

 
Oh sorry, haven't checked if there had ever been a similar question. I just thought this thread would be the best one for my question.
But obviously I'm not the only one having a hard time to struggle through the twisted plot . I just don't know why this all this terrorist-plane-dead people plot is needed and what should it lead to.
From the beginning the case deals with Irene having some delicate photos but not wanting to blackmail anybody, but "just" wanting to keep the photos to have a personal insurance. Until the point when the CIA guys from America come to her house to get the phone. WHY?


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I'm your landlady - not a plot device!

There are 10 voices in my head. 9 of them tell me I'm crazy. One is humming.
 
Posted by Vhanja
July 3, 2015 11:45 pm
#84

kornmuhme wrote:

I just don't know why this all this terrorist-plane-dead people plot is needed and what should it lead to.

It leads to Sherlock's most embarrasing moment. When his fascination over Irene, and his willingness to play into her game and impress her, leads to the huge project of 007 being shut down. Excellent character development, I think.
 


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"We'll live on starlight and crime scenes" - wordstrings


Team Hudders!
 
 
Posted by Kittyhawk
July 5, 2015 12:52 pm
#85

The "terrorist-plane-dead people plot" comes from a deleted (or not even filmed?) scene in a James-Bond-movie (which is why Mycroft says: "Bond Air is Go!"). Moftiss liked the idea and so they used it.

Personally I have doubts whether Moftiss could write a good thriller/crime story (along the line of "Inside Man", "Bound", "Die Hard", or "Jack Reacher") to save their lives. For me the plots have always been the weakest point of the show. And Moftiss are constantly saying something like "Sherlock is not a detective story, it's a story about a detective...."

 
Posted by kornmuhme
July 5, 2015 8:16 pm
#86

Vhanja wrote:

kornmuhme wrote:

I just don't know why this all this terrorist-plane-dead people plot is needed and what should it lead to.

It leads to Sherlock's most embarrasing moment. When his fascination over Irene, and his willingness to play into her game and impress her, leads to the huge project of 007 being shut down. Excellent character development, I think.

 
What do you think is his most embarassing moment? The moment when he finds out that Irene has manipulated and used him to decipher the mail on her phone? (I'm thinking of the scene in the plane with Mycroft, Sherlock and Irene. Mycroft is revealing to Sherlock that he's become a traitor.)


-----------------------------------------------------------------
I'm your landlady - not a plot device!

There are 10 voices in my head. 9 of them tell me I'm crazy. One is humming.
 
Posted by Vhanja
July 5, 2015 8:24 pm
#87

kornmuhme wrote:

 What do you think is his most embarassing moment? The moment when he finds out that Irene has manipulated and used him to decipher the mail on her phone? (I'm thinking of the scene in the plane with Mycroft, Sherlock and Irene. Mycroft is revealing to Sherlock that he's become a traitor.)

Yeah, that scene. Personally, I think the most embarrasing moment would be when Mycroft says: "I'm sorry. I didn't realise." If I was Sherlock, that would've been the most humiliating thing Mycroft could've said. Much, much worse than any anger or smugness.

That moment is Sherlock at his lowest, in my opinion. (Not lowest as in Sherlock acting horribly or low, but the moment when he feels the lowest and smallest). Or so I see it.
 


__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
"We'll live on starlight and crime scenes" - wordstrings


Team Hudders!
 
 
Posted by D. Michele Jackson
February 3, 2016 6:34 pm
#88

Does anyone know what kind of car Irene Adler was being driven in in A Scandal in Belgravia?  It was absolutely gorgeous and I'm now obsessed to find out what kind of vehicle it was.

 
Posted by Liberty
June 11, 2020 3:43 pm
#89

SusiGo wrote:

Just bumping a very old thread. 

There seems to be a logical error in the Christmas scene. Sherlock gets Irene's text, walks to the mantelpiece, unwraps the phone, and instantly deduces she must be dead. And (immediately) afterwards he and Mycroft meet at the morgue where Sherlock identifies her alleged body. So she must have been "dead" when she sent the message to him. Of course she could have sent the text immediately before being murdered but then she had already sent the phone to his flat. So why does he not at once deduce that something is fishy? Am I missing something or is it just a plothole? 

Bumping an even older thread! I must have missed this first time round!

Not a plothole, this is just more evidence for my pet theory that Sherlock was colluding with Irene!   I think he does deduce something: that Irene wants him to cover for her.   There are a few supposed "plot holes" that I think are in fact clues.  I think some of what you are saying here is actually part of Sherlock's deduction.  It's clear that Irene is alive when she sends the text, so why would Sherlock think there was a body?  And why wouldn't he try to stop her being killed - he doesn't even try to phone or text back or track the phone?   Why does he immediately phone Mycroft instead?  Because he's covering for her. 

The morgue scene could well be immediately afterwards because of course Irene would have prepared the body before sending the text.  But Sherlock needs to be quick if he's to be the one to identify the body.  With him there, I suppose they don't do anything further to check the identity, which wouldn't have happened if (Irene hadn't sent the cryptic message and Sherlock hadn't deduced she needed him to help her fake her death and hadn't told Mycroft to look for a body and) Sherlock, the great detective, hadn't been there. 

Because that was the "plot hole" which had me seeking out forums (and finding luckily finding these ones!) all those years ago - how could the great detective misidentify a body - one which we'd been told he'd seen clearly (the code for the safe).  After all these years, the only explanation that really fits is that of course he knew it wasn't Irene - he didn't even have to deduce that, because he had gone there, knowing Irene was alive, with the purpose of misidentifying the body so Mycroft wouldn't look for her any more.  And then he vaguely pretends to grieve, just as he does at the end, when he helps her fake her death yet again.

(I actually think that as well as covering for Irene, he gets some enjoyment out of fooling Mycroft!).

Anyway, thanks to the lovely Ariane De Vere https://arianedevere.dreamwidth.org/19415.html I found yet another clue.  The texts that Irene has sent.  She gives him a headsup with the one before "Mantelpiece".  "I'm thinking of sending you a Christmas present".  (What better Christmas present than the phone for him to puzzle over?).  So he knew to expect something.

I'm sure it's been mentioned before, but I'm guessing "I saw you in the street. You didn't see me" is a nod to the ACD story where Irene's disguise fools Sherlock in the street! 

 

Last edited by Liberty (June 11, 2020 4:18 pm)

 
Posted by besleybean
June 11, 2020 4:34 pm
#90

I knew about the last one!


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Posted by Liberty
June 11, 2020 8:57 pm
#91

It's a nice touch!  And of course, the end seems to be a nod to the end of The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes!  I'm sure we've discussed it before - my memory is hazy.   I do miss these discussions! 

I was just watching some of this episode again and thinking how great Lou is in it!

 
Posted by besleybean
June 12, 2020 5:43 am
#92

Yeah they said, didn't they...
an invented character who was only ever gonna be used to in ep, certainly S1 I think.
But she proved so good and so popular....
they then wrote bigger roles for her.


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Posted by JP
June 12, 2020 7:53 pm
#93

Liberty, I think the meeting in the morgue could be the next day. Or late the same night.

BUT - I loved that theory, especially because you watch an entirely different movie with this assumption in mind, it makes Sherlock even smarter and we know he can fake feelings - or lack of them. The only element that doesn't really work 100% with this version is the scene in the power plant.

This was bugging me so much, that I asked Steven about it. Was a bit of hardship with my English, at first he didn't understand what I'm talking about. Apparently I'm cursed to ask crazy questions.

And - according to him Sherlock thought Irene is dead. Which it's kind of funny: sometimes Mofftiss seem to have no idea what they are actually doing, lol.

 
Posted by besleybean
June 12, 2020 7:57 pm
#94

I think Mark and Steven just change their minds.


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Posted by Liberty
June 13, 2020 8:16 am
#95

I have always wanted to ask them about it, JP!  I'm so glad you did!  Just wish they would have said more about it. 

I agree about it making Sherlock smarter - I love that it makes the story involve another deduction, and more deception.  And I completely believe Sherlock would be driven not only be being fascinated by Irene, but by wanting to get one up on Mycroft! 

But the comments about the power station scene: I can think of a couple of possiblities.  One is that it's written ambiguously, because we are meant to try to make our own deductions but never really know, so both alternatives have to be possible.  I think that is very likely, but it's not completely satisfying for me!  

The other is that (given that Sherlock has to know that wasn't Irene's body on the slab, and so has to know she's faking her death) Sherlock thinks that Irene was killed anyway, after she faked her death.   Why would he think that?  My only suggestion is that he expected that there would be contact from her and that she would get the phone back somehow.  She did say she needed it.  So Sherlock thinks she sent him the phone to help fake her death, but then the fact that she doesn't try to get it back means she died anyway.

My problem with that theory is that it's such a short space of time (it is just a few days between Irene's "death" and Battersea, isn't it?  Not a year?  I get so mixed up with the timelines!).  

Then there's Irene meeting John at Battersea.  Apart from it being a great set piece, why did she do that?  The surface explanation is that she doesn't think it's safe to let Sherlock know she's alive, so she contacts John expecting him to lie to Sherlock, get the phone off him and give it back to her.   But I don't think she would think that John would do that - and he doesn't.  But leaving all that aside, I do think the scene maybe plays better if Sherlock thinks she is dead.

But then the flaw with that surface reading, is that Irene seems to need Sherlock to deduce what's on the phone, doesn't she?  So there's no point in her having the phone back without him knowing.  She needs to seduce him into breaking the code. Maybe she didn't plan to do that and only thought of it later, but I like to think of them both deducing and planning! 

Another thing in favour of Sherlock thinking Irene is dead, is that he doesn't try to break into her phone until after he knows she's alive.  You'd think the "Christmas present" might be the puzzle of the phone and he would have fun trying to guess the password.  But he doesn't seem to want to until later.
 

 
Posted by JP
June 13, 2020 11:52 am
#96

Also, I found it kind of cute that everybody assumed Sherlock was mourning, completely misinterpreting his behaviour, while he was just obsessed with breaking into Irene's phone. :D

His first attempt at breaking into the phone was before they meet Irene - it's the "composing help me think scene".

That's the problem with Moffat's scripts. On the surface, all seems to be okay, but if you look closer, there are some, actually quite obvious problems with the logic. And that's where the metas start. :D
Dracula was the same, btw.
It's funny because I'm rather a fan of logic in stories, but Moff pulls all my strings so well, that I usually forgive him.
 

 
Posted by besleybean
June 13, 2020 12:03 pm
#97

He's a darling.


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Posted by Liberty
June 13, 2020 12:55 pm
#98

Yes, he seems to be more of an emotional writer than an "logical" writer.  I agree that the logic doesn't always hold together but the writing still gets me!  Maybe he just wanted to show grieving Sherlock, especially if they were so influenced by TPLOSH, as they say.  So grieving, naive, clueless Sherlock exists as well as scheming, devious, clever Sherlock as he wanted to put both of them in there - it just depends what angle you look at it.  Anyway, funny that we're talking about this and a major point is that Sherlock thinks he's logical but ends being more emotional.

I think Sherlock helping Irene fake the death makes a better story in several ways though.  I agree about the grieving being funny (and John does say something about him always being like that), as well as both Sherlock and Irene being more clever and more tuned in to each other, and it setting things up nicely for Irene's disappearance at the end and of course Sherlock's disappearance shortly after. 

I forgot about him trying to get into the phone before Irene reappeared.  That sways me to thinking he knew she was alive. Especially as he seems to think she's giving him a message through John's blog.

Last edited by Liberty (June 13, 2020 12:56 pm)

 


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