A bit of Holmesian history that may have caught up with us

welovethebeekeeper:

With us delving deeper into the ‘narrator’ issue and fourth wall break, plus who is the ‘author’/ACD in all this mess of TFP. I want to bring up a Holmesian secret society game. It’s not the Great Game, the one people know about where-by the players [readers] think the characters are real. If this was a video game today, the first level would be the Great Game/characters are real, and the next level down would be the one that was a fraternal Holmesian Society game. Neither game really has a goal, or a finishing point, they just continue, much like our fan fictions and metas, more a way to engage as a group and delight others with insights and things picked up from the stories. Anyway, my Dads use to play this secret game back in the 1960s, but it gets dark, so they quit. It’s how I know about it.

In this game all the characters EXCEPT Sherlock, know that they are characters in a fiction. Sherlock has no idea, he thinks it’s real life. The narrator/controller/author god will continue the story until Sherlock becomes self aware of the fact that he is a character in a story. The author/authors repeats the stories with subtle variations trying to get Sherlock to realise his truth. All the other characters are forbidden to tell Sherlock within the text and are doomed to their fates once each story starts unless Sherlock can become self aware. Nobody can die. They get reincarnated in the next story, or even in the next chapter. So you can see how this game perpetuates itself in the pastiche. The game players use ALL pastiche as the game board. Remember that Sherlock cannot be told of his status, he has to discover it. The players are really the authors of any Sherlock Holmes story, but readers can play too by looking to see subtle clues that Sherlock is moving towards enlightenment. This is mostly done by reading works where it is apparent that the author does not know about the game and thus will stumble into giving Sherlock clues without realising they are doing so. 

It’s a metafiction game. The whole aim is to break the fourth wall and have Sherlock realise he is locked into the fictional world. 

There is nothing written about the game, like the secrets of the Masons, this was/is a fraternal game done in societies. A few years back I told LSiT and skully about it, and they couldn’t find any info on it at all on the web. The only thing we had was that about 4 years ago, a game player had a Tumblr, and was trying to play this game on here, leading people through it with questions about the show. They deleted. Back in 2012 I asked Mark Gatiss if he and Steven knew about it or were playing it, [at the Criterion afternoon event and at a Crimefest Bristol appearance] and they refused to answer. I think they did know about it, and looking back after viewing s4, I think they may be playing it. 

Moriarty, Irene, Sherlock never really die in BBC Sherlock, I doubt Mary is dead. Or if they do die they reincarnate, no questions asked. @isitandwonder you brought this up in your meta this weekend, Sherlock actually died in TRF, yet he resurrected and was at his own gravesite. [I think Eurus could be a vehicle to help Sherlock discover his truth, but I am not sure] The ending of TFP was very ‘game’ like. It disavowed the previous work, reset the game back to the canon parameters, and left the board with the two protagonists unchanged. And I think Mark and Steven used the character of Mary to attempt to enlighten Sherlock, that to my knowledge had not been done before. It makes sense of her weird about face in the redemption arc and also the ghost Mary and DVDs. Especially her luring Sherlock to his death in order to save John. 

I hate the fucking game. So I won’t go on about it but I wanted you to know that it is a ‘thing’, has been since the 1930′s. It leads into the Wold Newton Family Tree [now there is a rabbit hole] and Baring Gould’s crapola. As someone who wants John and Sherlock to be happy, out and representing a marginalised group, this game detracts from that, it’s boys playing secret societies. Plus the game players get mean. Sound like anyone we know?

tagging @mollydobby @darlingtonsubstitution @isitandwonder @1895itsallfine @gloriascott93 @delurkingdetective @chocolate-nogged @may-shepard @bug-catcher-in-viridian-forest @jenna221b @heimishtheidealhusband @green-violin-bow @k-s-morgan @marcespot @byebyefrost  who I think may find this of interest

Eurus is Sherlock

gosherlocked:

I know this idea has come up more than once. In this post I will try to collect as much evidence, mostly from TFP, as possible – visual, textual, and narrational. 

Visual

In this first scene together their hands seem to melt into each other. Sherlock does not expect to be able to touch his sister, and then their fingers interlace just like that. In the second picture both have become one. Sherlock is shining through Eurus’s reflection, her hear roughly being place where his heart is (head/brain and heart becoming one). 

Additional note: If we assume that this is her real hair as opposed to the wigs she wore in TST and TLD, they both have dark curly hair. 

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Narrational

  • Sherlock and Eurus are very close in age. True, it’s never twins. But at least Irish twins, it seems. (Or just one person after all?)
  • Sherlock has been deemed a genius from the beginning. Eurus “was described as an era-defining genius, beyond Newton.”
  • Both play the violin. Eurus even plays a Stradivarius as does Holmes in ACD Canon. 
  • Sherlock had no friends before John. “I had no one.” 
  • Both love to be dramatic.
  • Both are prone to violence: Sherlock torturing the cabbie / throwing a man out the window / shooting Magnussen. / Eurus’s violent behaviour in TLD and TFP. 
  • Both are seen in a cell of some kind: the padded cell in Sherlock’s HLV mind palace / the Sherrinford cell (All places from the HLV mind palace have real counterparts – so what about the cell? And how probable is it that two siblings both have been inmates of a cell in a mental hospital/prison at some time?)
  • Both are in a way attracted to Moriarty and are willing to play games with him.
  • Sherlock experiments on John in ThoB. Eurus experiments on Sherlock in TFP.
  • Both are very focussed on knowledge: “I don’t like not knowing.” / “She knew things she should never have known …”
  • Both are disguising themselves / hiding in plain sight.
  • Both are being used by Mycroft for matters of state security and intelligence.
  • Both are believed to be dead for years. Both times Mycroft is involved in the plots to fake their deaths. 

Textual

  • “She was different from the beginning.”/”Because he attacks people who are different and preys on their secrets.” (Why Sherlock hates Magnussen)
  • “Listen. This is my hard drive and it only makes sense to put things in there that are useful.” / “I remember everything; every single thing. You just need a big enough hard drive.
  • Sherlock being involved in the flight of the dead/saving Irene from terrorists/revealing the terrorist plot in TEH /  “She predicted the exact dates of the last three terrorist attacks on the British mainland after an hour on Twitter.” 
  • “In any event, there is no prison in which we could incarcerate Sherlock without causing a riot on a daily basis.” / “The depth of Eurus’s psychosis and the extent of her abilities couldn’t hope to be contained in any ordinary institution.“ 
  • “That in your case, solitary confinement is locking you up with your worst enemy.” This can also be applied to Eurus’s imprisonment in Sherrinford.

Conclusion

These are a lot of similarities. Too much for coincidence, if you ask me. To me, Eurus is an exaggerated, overdramatic version of Sherlock himself. What he could have become without John’s friendship and Mycroft’s support, without the friends he has found quite late in life.

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“But then all the stories started coming true…”

jenna221b:

blackberryblueberrykimberry:

jenna221b:

teaandqueerbaiting:

jenna221b:

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(x)

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More: “You’ve been reading John’s blog…” The Final Problem Nightmare

Drugged by Ninjas?? Like Ninjas with Secret Tattoos????

😱👀 Re: the ninja thing, we have that deleted HLV deduction in the final shooting script where Sherlock makes a “secret gymnast” deduction when looking for “Lady Smallwood” in CAM’s office but then he dismisses that as “stupid”! Sherlock! 🙃 TD12 is the devils foot= drug of the devil= Mary’s drug! http://jenna221b.tumblr.com/post/156910936655/its-only-going-to-upset-you-mary-took-johns

“Dressed up in the same fabric as the chair…”

Like the son in the power ranger car?!

oh my god! that level of foreshadowing is Extreme!

(More on Charlie in the car here)

“You’ve been reading John’s blog…” The Final Problem Nightmare

jenna221b:

jenna221b:

jenna221b:

Is this Sherlock still reading John’s blog posts on the plane in The Abominable Bride? (The Final Problem: Oh, Sherlock. You’re Dreaming. Again.The Final Problem= the puzzle to save Sherlock)   Or is it John seeing his life flash before his eyes after being shot? ( “The Bullet is still inside me.” –with links to more). 50-50 chance. 😉 Either way, John’s blog posts are on Someone’s mind:

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The Inexplicable Matchbox

The Poison Giant

Tilly Briggs Cruise of Terror

And I forgot to mention the elephant in the room 😉 

The Elephant in the Room

(With credit to @confirmedjohnlock for the pic x)

@badsnowfo said: This would make sense of why there is a six Thatchers case in the blog and again this season…

RIGHT?! I’m going to kick myself if the reason the blog “has gone downhill a bit” is because there’s nothing to update it with because we’re still in Dream World aaaaaah 😉

marcespot:

afishlearningpoetry:

How Our Current Understanding of Sherlock and TJLC Have Evolved to Now, A Month After TFP Aired.

Including their intentions and plans with the show, Mark’s love of TPLoSH, the 2009 BBC LGBT report, How They Lie ConstantlyThe Five-Act Shakespearean Structure, M-Theory with Moriarty and Mycroft, Extra-Narrative and Meta-narrative elements, Moriarty’s Post-TFP message, The Lost Special, The Show Being Reichenbach’d, The Geek Interpreter, The State of the ARG and the BBC Pure Drama Ad, #Sherlock Live, and how in the end we know that something is coming, and soon.

See Also: How TAB foreshadowed and can be used to decode Series 4.

Aww thank you for putting a lot of work and love into this post! ❤

Do you recall the filming clap board that had the backward sigma symbol on it, and 00 (300), with looked like a gun exploding? Found this on Chris’s blog when he talks about Richard Brook: “@#()$8389A92´ˆ∑hdi” The image looked like TAB John, and made me think of the meta about his eye being shot out.

221bloodnun:

teapotsubtext:

emilyteapot:

sdfkhgfkls;akfghdls john’s fucking EYE better be a reD HERRING !!!!

i do remember the sigma thing, here’s the tweet:

yeah looks like watson getting fucken shot in the eye, please let this just be some kind of extra narrative clue, jesus christ

did mary ever wear a hat shaped like that in tab

That’s the one @teapotsubtext Regarding Mary, her only similar hat was flat on the top, with a wider brim. Hard to tell if Watson or Mary though, in marker.

Here is Chris’s blog entry (his next to last), with the sigma. http://cmastergeek.tumblr.com/post/25185265752/rich-brooks-paper-trail

Sherlock plays the violin for an unconscious John

johnlockeverlasting:

marcespot:

I was thinking, what’s the point of having Eurus become unresponsive after she opened up to Sherlock and everything’s okay? What does that add to the plot? Ansolutely nothing. Not it you don’t add emotional context to it. Now, we know John is most probably hospitalized while dreaming up this story and that Eurus is John’s mirror (watch this if you didn’t already know all that). This is all in his head, mixed with his perception of what’s really happening around him. So, if we apply emotional context and change imaginary Eurus for the real John, we get this exchange about the condition he’s in at the end:

MYCROFT: There’s no possibility he’ll ever be able to leave the hospital.
MR. HOLMES: When can we see him?
MYCROFT: There’s no point.
MRS. HOLMES: How dare you say that?!
MYCROFT: He won’t talk. He won’t communicate with anyone in any way. He’s passed beyond our view. There are no words that can reach him now.
MRS. HOLMES: Sherlock?
[Montage of Sherlock taking his violin with him to hospital every single day, to play a special piece he composed for a comatose John, always hoping he can hear him, and that he’d eventually wake up.]

The shots and their order also drive home this idea. As soon as Eurus responds to Sherlock’s playing, she stands looking like a hospitalized patient

–white gown and all–

next to that bed, from which she grabs her own violin. Then they cut to John talking to Sherlock over the phone, asking him to come to where he is, to reach him, while literally looking at the words “Miss You”. And immediately after, we get a shot of Eurus, eyes closed, repeating the same melody Sherlock is playing; because John’s actually learned it by heart and re-playing it in his head. He’s in that hospital bed missing Sherlock and wishing he’d return soon to see him and play for him again.

He even imagines Sherlock’s parents and Mycroft giving him a visit, because of course they would support Sherlock in a time like this! And I do think Harry went as well–but they couldn’t possibly have shown us such a spoiler. Enough was with the “tell my sister I’m here” message in the sand!

I just think his interpretation is the only one that adds a logical, poignant meaning to this scene and the story. ‘No words can reach him now’ becomes a statement on the power of ‘words unspoken’ between Sherlock and John. And of course, not only means Sherlock can actually reach John’s ears–unlike what he may be told–, but that he could always reach John’s heart. 

John eagerly waits for Sherlock’s visits, everyday.

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Welp, I cried.

John’s just lost his left eye.

marcespot:

waitedforgarridebs:

inevitably-johnlocked:

marcespot:

Did you see how both TAB and TFP began with a close-up shot of John’s and little Eurus’ (Mirror-John’s) left eye, respectively? They’re letting us appreciate that precious thing from up close, because we’re not gonna be able to see it anymore. Yes, you can start mourning it.

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Remember how we thought Sherlock was gonna be the one going blind thanks to Skully’s brilliant theory? Well, I guess we got many of the hints at ‘blindness’ happening at some point, only that it wasn’t Sherlock’s, but John’s in one eye.

I ENLISTED ALL THE CLUES UNDER THE CUT:

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Yes! I speculated this in another post that  cannot find at the moment, but I agree, especially with how often the focus on John’s eyes is brought to light. You CAN survive a gunshot to the head – in fact I watch a documentary recently about a man who was shot in the face and recovered for many months but lost one of his eyes – And a parallel to Sherlock coming back to life for John, John may will himself back to life for Sherlock, realizing how much Sherlock loves him.

Why DID they have all the dark allusions? Nothing in the episodes really were that dark (aside from a few poignant scenes in TLD). Those allusions are WHY the blind theory came up in the first place.

I think we may be right on this one, y’all.

Gives a whole new meaning to this one… (x)

Also, as @mollydobby just reminded me, CAM was flicking John’s eye in HLV :)))))))

@alwaysanoriginal​ added: I HATE THIS. I SAW JANE EYRE IN 221B ON GOOGLE MAPS AND TOOK NOTE OF IT AT THE TIME.

@sherlockfeels added: 

Also this.

@humaneyre added: 

Okay, the Jane Eyre connection. I thought from Day One that the child being named Rosemonde was so interesting. This is the name of St. John’s love in Jane Eyre, the one that he gives up so that he can be a missionary. Was the child’s name an allusion to this character? The point of Jane Eyre, of course, being a repudiation of St. John’s renunciation of love. In the same way, Sherlock is a repudiation of the renunciation of love that took place in the original Canon.

@kaleb221 added: 

Ooh this is brilliant. Plus Mofftiss kept saying we were missing something that was “blindingly obvious” or something like that, as I recall.

Brilliant additions, everyone! And don’t even get me started with Jane Eyre because it’s too trmojas. Seriously read that classic if you haven’t yet. The parallels between Edward/Jane and John/Sherlock are outstanding even in the smallest of details.

And omg yes, Mark did try to call our attention to something ‘blindingly obvious’ last September for Radio Times:

“There are things that come to fruition in this series which we’ve been planning for years. But people also find things that aren’t there. Which is my favourite. And then miss the blindingly obvious things that are there. People read an awful lot into it.”

marathecactupus:

Okay but even after watching this episode multiple times and seeing Mary disappear in and out of shots (and acknowledging that she’s definitely in his head in some bits), I have to admit that this first scene still reads to me like Mary is pressuring John into pretending that she’s dead.

“John, you’ve got to remember, it’s important.”

“I am dead.”

“John, look at me.”

“I’m not here.”

BBC SHERLOCK AND THE GAINAX ENDING

isitandwonder:

isitandwonder:

roadswewalk:

multivariate-madness:

multivariate-madness:

Sitting around the living room with my son, the writer. We were discussing storytelling, tropes and possibly buying the DVD for Neon  Genesis Evangelion. He reminded me it had a Gainax ending. 

Famous films with Gainax endings are 2001:A Space Odyssey, The Shining the Matrix and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, to name a few.  In TV we have Buffy, Lost, the Sopranos, Dr. Who. More than I could list. After much discussion, I started to relate this trope to BBCs Sherlock. Because all roads lead back to Sherlock for me. 

The article below is completely lifted from All the tropes WIKI

“”I wanted controversy, arguments, fights, discussions, people in anger waving fists in my face saying, ‘how dare you?’“.—Patrick McGoohan on the ending of The Prisoner

What do you mean, “The END”??

A Gainax Ending is an ending that doesn’t make any sense. This is usually a deliberate form of Mind Screw or intended as a Sequel Hook to a sequel that was never made. For whatever reason, after watching a Gainax Ending, you won’t have any idea what happened. After rewatching it, rewatching the entire series, discussing it with other fans, looking up the meaning of the symbolism, and subjecting the entire thing to a comprehensive literary analysis, you still might not have any idea what happened. If you’re lucky, then there will be some kind of emotional or symbolic resolution even if it doesn’t actually explain what happened to the characters, and you’ll be left with the sense that the series as a whole was more deeply thought out than it seemed before. If you’re unlucky, then you’ll be left with more questions than when you started with, and the sense that the series as a whole has been voided of the meaning you once read in it.

A Gainax Ending frequently involves bizarre and nonsensical Genre Shifts, Fauxlosophic Narration, and/or Faux Symbolism, and may very well cause Ending Aversion. For an aborted Sequel Hook, you might encounter a Diabolus Ex Vacuus (where a new villain appears from nowhere, does something villainous, and then disappears again) or No Ending in the form of an ambiguous Cliff Hanger. Either way, it would have been addressed in the sequel… had there been one.

The Trope Namer is Studio Gainax, who became associated with this trope after the infamous ending of Neon Genesis Evangelion.

Compare No Ending, which shares the lack of resolution, and Trippy Finale Syndrome, which has similar imagery but actually makes sense (it’s explicitly a Dream Sequence, a Battle in the Center of the Mind, takes place in Another Dimension, etc). For when the ending does make sense and ends up changing the entire scenario, see The Ending Changes Everything not to be confused with Gainaxing.””

OK Sherlock was pretty straight forward until TAB, where we had Mind Screw, Genre Shifts, and ?Faux Symbolism as well as a dead villain reappearing, being villainous and then disappearing again. Lots of  the reports from S4 setlock indicate that the MP vs extended dream sequence scenes will continue for awhile. It’s never twins, ghosts aren’t real and we lie all the time. 

I just wanted to bring this up, because it looks like we are in for lots more of this before—Sherlock wakes up from his ?coma and we can get back to reality? and the ?facts of the story. Right now I can’t find the quote, but I read somewhere Mark Gatiss joking maybe the whole show could be a dream of the Victorian Sherlock. AAGGHH!!!

I really feel that there is still lots to cover and we all should be cautious that the shows very creative, experienced Dr. Who writers may drag us all much longer through the mind palace in order to resolve all the threads of this convoluted story. 

All thoughts appreciated.

From July 11, 2016. @tendergingergirl @yan-yae @monikakrasnorada @iamjustreading @shawleyleres @bcdthomp

Tagging a few people. If you don’t want to be tagged, PLS let me know, thanks!!

”I wanted controversy, arguments, fights, discussions, people in anger waving fists in my face saying, ‘how dare you?’“

Wow.  Good call, OP!  The question remains… why tho?

How does it feel to be clairvoyant, @multivariate-madness? This is so Spot in. And at sherlocked, moffat even talked about The Prisoner.

@roadswewalk I’m wrecking my brain to remember his exact words. Just found this in an old post by @mollydobby about The Prisoner:

Moffat just mentioned The Prisoner on the Panel Sherlocked) I think as an exampel of setting a whole Episode in a different place or time. There it was a Western.

*shrugs* Fot what it’s worth…