Moffat: Also, if you read [The Adventure Of] Charles Augustus Milverton, Dr. Watson in the opening paragraph tells you that he’s about to tell you a porkie. He says, ‘I even now must be very reticent.’ I think what Doyle is hinting at is that Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson sat in Baker Street and said, ‘Right, we’re going to have to go and kill him, aren’t we? That’s the only way we can do this.’ So they break in, kill him, and then Dr. Watson writes up a version of the story that puts the murder [on someone else].

Gatiss: They’re hiding in their burglar masks behind the curtain, and this random woman comes and shoots Milverton in the face and then grinds her heel into his face. It’s odd, isn’t it? So I mean really, it’s just an extrapolation of saying, ‘Well, he probably did it, I think.’

Steven Moffat, Empire Interview

…Are you kidding me, Moffat and Gatiss? 

For those who aren’t familiar with the original ACD stories, “The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton” is one of the coolest, badass-lady-kicks-ass stories in canon. And here they’ve just decided that the only way that’s possible is that Watson was lying to us.

To recap the story: Holmes and Watson break into Milverton’s estate with the intention of removing the letters that Milverton has on their client, Lady Eva Blackwood. Upon breaking in, they pick the lock of the safe where Milverton keeps his letters for blackmail, and then hide behind a curtain when Milverton himself comes in. Milverton sits down in his chair and reads some legal papers for a while, and then a woman comes to the door, and it becomes evident that the two of them had prearranged this meeting. Milverton understands the woman is a maid who is prepared to sell letters that will incriminate her mistress.

It turns out, though, that the woman is actually one of Milverton’s victims; that he sent the letters he had on her to her husband, and it came as such a shock to the husband that he died of a broken heart. Furious and determined that Milverton will never victimize anyone else the same way again, the woman shoots Milverton and grinds her heel in his face.

At the time, Watson reports, he and Holmes have no idea what the woman’s identity is; at the end, Holmes has an epiphany and the story ends with Holmes showing Watson this:

“…a shop window filled with photographs of the celebrities and beauties of the day. Holmes’ eyes fixed themselves on one of them, and following his gaze I saw the picture of a regal and stately lady in Court dress, with a high diamond tiara upon her head. I looked at that delicately-curved nose, at the strong little chin beneath it. Then I caught my breath as I read the time-honoured title of the great nobleman and statesman whose wife she had been. My eyes met those of Holmes, and he put his finger to his lips as we turned away from the window.”

So, let me get this straight. We have Watson telling us a completely believable story where a female character has agency for once and takes care of her own problem (and everyone else’s) by getting rid of Milverton, with perfectly good reason seeing as he’s been blackmailing everyone in town. it makes total sense that he would have shitloads of enemies and that someone would stand up to him eventually, especially if they had nothing left to lose as this woman does, and somehow that’s unbelievable? The only explanation is that Watson must have been lying to us? I’m not saying he would admit it if he and Holmes did commit murder, but the fact that he provided us with an alternative that gives us a woman with agency and an interesting, mysterious backstory makes me think that’s not the case. (Also, I take issue with Moffat’s reading of Holmes as someone who would be totally okay with murder and then letting Watson publish a story about it, but that’s a different post entirely.)

Combined with the fact that Moffat took the joy of Irene Adler beating Sherlock Holmes away from us (and then added insult to injury by having him save her as a damsel in distress), I am just too furious to speak right now. The man is apparently incapable of writing a female character with agency, who steals the spotlight away from Sherlock Holmes, ever. I can’t believe people still claim the man does not have any issues with sexism and misogyny. I absolutely cannot understand it. 

(via mymomoness)

The Milverton story is one of my favorites because it is so thoroughly about justice and the rights of victims and survivors. Gatiss called the victim/survivior “some random woman”. This is such a perfect example of the monstrosity that is this kind of ‘everyday’ misogyny.

(via tvandcomplaints)

I LOVE the Milverton story too and this makes so fucking angry that they would fuck this up. Moffat literally has NO respect for the source material all he sees is what he wants to see

(via irresistible-revolution)

See, he can ignore canon whether its from this century or another…

(via mintarr)

What are the chances of the Cassablanc-esque plane scene was actually John and sherlock saying goodbye to those deeper feelings? Because if they choose to keep Mary/baby around in Series 4, they can’t riddle that with johnlock subtext nearly as much. Is it possible that the plane was the acknowledgement that those feelings were there, and now its time to say goodbye to them? Thats the feeling I’m getting.

the-hedgehogs-have-the-tardis:

xistentialangst:

loudest-subtext-in-television-d:

Standard disclaimer of “this is just my reading” here…

If the series ended there, then maybe.  But it’s got two more series.  The Casablanca parallel is set up to nod to the audience that the romantic feelings are 1) present, and 2) mutual.  Sherlock’s plane turning around signifies that isn’t where the romantic story ends, that the writers intend to do something different.  I said this earlier:  They always do what they’ve seen done before, then add a twist or subvert it, and then take it a step further.  They didn’t parallel Casablanca just to copy Casablanca, that’s not their style.

Past that, it would be incredibly bizarre to build up to romantic feelings for the entire duration of the show thus far, and then quietly bury them.  I mean, there are no rules in storytelling, but balance of probability is that’s not what they’re going for:  it wouldn’t satisfy hardly anyone, it would be a very unusual story to tell, and since practically the only thing we can be assured of is that John and Sherlock are going to spend their lives together, it’d be an odd decision that two guys who used to have feelings for each other just sexlessly live together later in life.  It would be even weirder to set up things like Mary being as selfish as she is, and the Holmes parents as the only healthy relationship on the show as a mirror for Johnlock, if we’re going to be left with John and Mary.

I’m kind of surprised so many people think writing a baby — or anything — into the show means whelp, that’s it!  It doesn’t mean anything for any story, much less Sherlock.  Guys, Moriarty blew his brains out.  That’s what storytelling is:  you set up seemingly insurmountable obstacles so your characters can overcome them.  You don’t set up obstacles to just shackle your narrative onto a narrow path.

I know we’re all used to really mediocre shows outside of Sherlock, but these writers know what they’re doing when it comes to character development and planning.  Everything we saw in series 3 was prepped for in series 2, which was prepped for in series 1.  Moftiss care a lot about their adaptation and thought about it for years, they’re not just flailing around trying to keep a show on the air indefinitely without a goal in sight.  When someone is good at crafting stories, they will absolutely tear your heart out in the middle and make you wonder how anything will ever be okay again.  If it didn’t look like John was going to end up with Mary right now, if things didn’t look hopeless, it would be a considerably shittier show.

Refer back to the signposts and you’ll see this is absolutely consistent with a narrative arc for a romance, and not consistent with much else.  It’s taking this long because we’re not building up to a slapdash relationship, but a moving one.  It hurts because it’s being done well.

Very nicely put.

Loudest-Subtext, if my hopes are dashed in the end I’m blaming you. JK. Well sort of.