- Joined
- Mar 17, 2003
- Messages
- 15,472
- Reaction score
- 9,852
- Points
- 103
I'm not sure where people are getting this gay subtext thing, unless you take it as others have said, and that it's being played as a joke. I wouldn't say it was implied they were gay at all. It was like others have said, more of an "Odd Couple" relationship.
I could maybe see it with Holmes, given how jealous he is of Watson's fiance, but if it is there it is definitely one-sided. More likely there are just heterosexual partners and Holmes is just so cut off from society that he is terrified of losing the one human being on earth that he actually has a personal relationship with.
That ridiculous. When you go into a mystery with the attitude of "I'm sure the bad guy did it, but I dont care how" then what is the point of the mystery? The purpose of mystery fiction is for the reader/viwer to be intrigued and attempt to figure it out. You are saying that none of details mattered, and that all that mattered was the "why" of the crime. You admit that you didn't figure that out, and you admit that you didn't figure out any of the other things that Sherlock figured out...so why do you think it was too easy to figure out???
What I mean is that Blackwood used a chemical or chemical compound to perform his magic is important, the name is not. The writers could have named it anything. What is important is what it is and what it does, and that much can be determined from the film. You don't need to have a Masters degree in chemistry to understand how Blackwood is accomplishing his feats.
Last edited: