I’ve been thinking a lot about Mark Gatiss, whose gay identity was forged in the 80s-early 90s. I’m a lawyer now but my first career was in the men’s fashion industry. And for many years I have lived in a well-known LGBT resort community (the annual White Party is our biggest event). During the late 80s and early 90s I worked for a gay men’s fashion catalog and store. I was one of only three women working there. The other 100 plus employees were gay men, young to older. I have personally experienced the unfortunate fact that gay men can and very often do have misogynistic attitudes toward women that are in some ways different from het men’s attitudes– but not entirely. In fashion, for example, the majority of celebrated designers of women’s fashion are gay men. They are clearly designing from a viewpoint of the clothes being suitable only for a young man’s body, not a woman’s body.: tall, long, lean, no hips or breasts. This is seen over and over. To the extent that some gay men model their version of “feminine” behavior, it is a very distinctive version that bears little to no resemblance to actual women’s behavior (drag, camp, femme), and is arguably misogynistic. Working in the business with so many gay men, I heard them mock “fag hags” too many times to count, it was a staple of daily humor. “Fag hags” were seen as tiresome females who obsessively fetishized gay men. I do think that is part of the dynamic happening between Mofftiss and the primarily female fandom. Far be it from me to take away means of expression for gay men that break free of heteronormative toxic masculinity, but what we see in Sherlock is part of the divide in the LGBT community that has been brewing and debated for decades and really has never resolved: Gay men, especially those of of a certain generation really are only standing up for gay men. It’s just another kind of male privilege. There is a lot of denial, dismissal, and even contempt for bisexuality, especially bixsexual men, and for lesbians and transgender persons. In the LGBT community, gay men have the privilege that het men have in larger society. And while that may be changing in the younger generation, for the gay men that came up as young men in the 80s and early 90s, the ideas of embracing and allowing full representation for bisexuals, lesbians, and transgender persons was simply not a thing. To attempt to be fair, they saw themselves as having their own fight to fight, and during those years the big fights were coming out, and HIV/AIDS. Taking all of this into account, it is rather easy to see why there has not been any desire to fulfill the wishes of a primarily queer female fanbase for a romantic johnlock narrative (i.e. Using shorthand, The Princess Bride narrative). But I can see the appeal for Gatiss in making the story of Sherlock and Eurus about finding family, making one’s own family, and healing family. Gatiss has spoken about his own difficulties in coming out to his family and the lack of acceptance that he experienced for a long time (I believe that is substantially healed now according to Gatiss). Like many queer people he has undoubtedly had to make his own family outside his blood family and this is a very important narrative for many queer people. Sherlock completes that journey throughout the show. One could also see Eurus as standing in for a closeted queer family member, who can only be free from the closet (prison) by adopting specific disguises/false selves that appeal to each of their friends/family members. Seen in that light, Eurus’s ultimate acceptance by the Holmes family is touching. (Since in the world of Sherlock she is still the ultimate evil, though, she has to stay in the closet/prison forever). So I come from a place of frustrated understanding and sympathy for a man of Gatiss’ generation wanting to tell a sort of coming out story, both for Sherlock and for Eurus. But I so want the creators to stop holding female fandom and “female” narratives (i.e., fulfilled gay love stories) in contempt. But that’s not the story they wanted to tell. We have to tell our own.
Stepping back here like you do with such a judicious assessment of the generational context and such a perceptive reading of the narrative goes a long way to unknotting a very fraught, messy situation from the gatiss side of the equation.
And yes to this:
But I so want the creators to stop holding female fandom and “female” narratives (i.e., fulfilled gay love stories) in contempt. But that’s not the story they wanted to tell. We have to tell our own.
Well said, and something I hadn’t considered before.
Mofftiss sold their stories & their integrity for $$$ due to “data” Explains S4 a LOT actually.
Just like ACD sold his stories and integrity for £££ (for literal decades) ~ give the public what they want! That’s all! Interesting parallel @devoursjohnlock
Love how this fulfills so many of the same parts of the myth of the uncaring creator (ACD), which Moftiss have worked so hard to recreate:
Author who only wants the £££
Author led by public appetite
Author who therefore doesn’t care about consistency of tone/character
Unwilling author drawn back in to the project by powers (publisher/BBC/Big Data + £££) beyond their control
I think the big difference here is that, YES ACD decided to continue writing the stories due to demand and because the money was good. I don’t think anyone is arguing that he continued writing due to his love of the material.
The difference here is that he did not butcher his characters and completely change the direction of stories to do so. Sure he kept writing, but he didn’t go “oh some people like horror, I’m going to add a secret xman sister and a murder maze.” He didn’t turn John into a rage monster or suddenly make Mary the narrator of the story.
I don’t believe for one second that this is all faked so they can pull some real life Reichenbach of the series. And from ratings and reviews, S4 was a long ways away from “what the people want.”
I do believe they wanted to make BBC Sherlock a brand, and have done so. You too can go solve a mystery with Sherlock Holmes in their escape room if you pay enough money.
Sherlock Season 4 : a story of a man with special abilities, an annoying powerful brother and a super powered psychotic murder sister who their parents kept secret.
Thor Ragnarock : a story of man with special abilities, an annoying powerful brother and a super
powered psychotic murder sister who their parents kept secret.
Both featuring Benedict Cumberbatch, and only one of which is now believable.
But that may be more related to the Sherlock Fanfiction…
It is what it is
bees and violins
^ Yes. Bees and violins and trenchcoats. Sheet music. And the number 1895.
Oh and weddings in general.
French waiters
Words that end with -lock
elephants
purple shirts
high-functioning sociopaths
“Sherlock Holmes” and “Dr John Watson”
We found love by Rihanna, purple light, being allowed to eat chips, oatmeal jumpers, tea, short men, tall men, cherry tomatoes, text alerts, graduated cylinders, Vitruvian man, astronomy, the Thames, meretricious, umbrellas, black cars, pink suitcases, plaid afghans, phones scratched around the plug-in, police tape, museums, ancient tea pots, lucky cat, the doorknobs of Chinese restaurants, London A to Z, red lipstick, graffiti, swimming pools, the moors, big dogs, I put sugar in it, bunnies, learning to dance for a wedding, wedding photographers, the Tube, train sets, peruvian bobble hats, Operation, Cluedo, Gingernuts, aquariums, sharks, disappearing babies, slickers, dog bowls, shock blankets, bare feet
Cable knit sweaters. There’s not a winter that goes by where I see a cream cable knot sweater and immediately say “oh, a John Watson sweater”.
John Locke
Putting up shelves.
X-MEN fanfic, any belief in Mofftiss being good at their jobs, Escape Rooms
This thread has for sure added many years to my life. (Psst. Why X-Men fanfic though? @nobu-akuma )