MNRebecca wrote:
Howdy, all. I'm trying to find discussion of my favorite theory, that Sherlock did nothing to fake his death, that he went over that ledge fully believing he was giving his life for his friends.
Yes, I'd love some discussion on that too It was my first idea, and while I went through many other explanations and theories, I've always come back to it. Because it's unexpected and logical and just... I don't know. It has got some flaws, but other theories have got those, too.
Producers interest would be to surprise people... it’s nice if we can say: „oh, we got it all right, we’re such brilliant minds, just like Sherlock is“...
But i guess we would be even more thrilled if the explanation turned out to be something completely different, a real surprise... and I suppose that’s what the producers tried to achieve, so I’m sure it’s gonna be the Unexpected (like the mobile during the pool scene). Sherlock doing nothing to fake his death would be just that.
Also, in the original stories, in "The Empty House" Sherlock confesses to John that he honestly thought he was going to die when he met Moriarty. I know there are loads of changes in the series, but I'd like to see that this, and Mycrofts involvement, will somehow still be true. I do not doubt Mycrofts involvement, so why should I doubt the above? :D
I like to think that Mycroft is doing the thinking there, making the plans - and Sherlock is for once just a pawn in the game. Because Sherlock is a match for Moriarty, but in the end he is just good enough - he isn't ahead of the game, he isn't cleverer than Moriarty - he did believe in the computer key code, as he did believe that Moriarty really wanted the USB stick in "The Great Game". So maybe both dying, Moriarty and Sherlock, would have been a fair end for two equals. So maybe with choosing the rooftop Sherlock was just trying to show Moriarty that he understood the plan with the genius suicide - but maybe Sherlock, at that point, still thought he could bargain with the key code, or maybe he had some other plan up his sleeve... and then Moriarty surprises him, the key code means nothing, Sherlock has to think things over, and the shock when Moriarty shoots himself seems genuine to me.
Mycroft is clever enough, maybe he could see where Moriarty would take the game. His apology to John isn't just for selling out Sherlocks life story, I don't think so. And I do think Mycroft is the genius there, not Molly. I would really like to see Sherlock putting all his trust to Molly, but no, I don't think so. And the teaser trailer suggests otherwise anyway. But Mycroft telling Sherlock he plans to save him? Cannot see that - if he does, it's a secret thing, something Sherlock wouldn't know - because Sherlock wouldn't agree to any plan Mycroft suggests, would he.
I do think the confusion, the shock, the crying on the rooftop are all honest on Sherlocks part. I know it doesn't seem very likely, but in the pool scene, Sherlock is shocked that Moriarty got his hands on John. And in Hounds of Baskerville, he is actually afraid. So the possibility of real emotion is there