Sherlock Finale

Monday, January 16th, 2012 04:08 pm
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Yesterday evening over on FarceBørk I mentioned that I thought I’d worked out the sleight of hand in the final scenes of Sherlock. Ms [personal profile] kathbad expressed an interest, but I thought it would be a bit naughty to plant spoilers (even if I am completely wrong, it will give stuff away) where I couldn’t use a cut.

So here is the Caddyman explanation of how the finale was staged, recorded for posterity so that you can flag it up, dispute it, tear it to pieces and/or point mockingly back at it when the entirely different reveal is broadcast when series three airs sometime in the future.



Before he went to meet Moriarty, Sherlock spoke to Molly, the woman in the hospital morgue at St Bart’s who has a crush on him. He told her he'd been wrong and that she was important. He also said he thought he was going to die, suggesting he'd worked out what Moriarty was up to. She then asked him what he needed, after he'd asked her if she was still willing to help him if he wasn't the person she thought he was.

We already know from earlier episodes that he uses tramps and bag men/women in a way similar to the original Baker St Irregulars.

When he had got rid of Watson, he had already clearly prepared a plan because he had had time to spin a yarn to Mrs Hudson that he had sorted a problem out with the police. That was when Watson got huffy and caught the taxi back to the hospital.

On the roof where Sherlock was talking to Moriarty, they kept showing Sherlock’s hands in close up. He was either counting time, or palming something (phone perhaps, so that someone could overhear the conversation?). Anyway, he was up to something, while getting a confession (“How I done it”) out of Moriarty. When the time came to jump, he looked over the edge; there was a truck parked full of bin bags or something similar and someone sitting on the bench, wearing a long coat. Everyone else was walking by. Moriarty noticed and said 'at least you'll have an audience'.

After Moriarty killed himself, Sherlock still had to be seen to jump otherwise Watson, Mrs Hudson and Lestrade would have been killed by Moriarty’s hired gang and to get the anonymity he needed from the media spotlight, he needed Watson to believe he was dead, too.

So...

When Watson got back to the area and called him on the mobile, Sherlock ordered him to walk back to where he couldn't see the street directly below where Sherlock was standing and insisted that he kept his eyes on him while he delivered his telephone "suicide note".

While all this is happening, we see Sherlock briefly look over his shoulder at Moriarty's body and shortly afterward he seems to look to one side and acknowledge someone out of shot with a nod. He keeps Watson talking and then when it's time to jump, we see him jump and it clearly looks like him falling, not Moriarty. The camera angle switches and we see him land, but not what he lands on. We are meant to assume it's the street, but I think it may have been either that, with rubbish bags placed by the mysterious man in a coat for him to land on, or maybe (less likely) even the lorry that Watson couldn't see from his perspective.

Anyway, when Watson legs it to go to where Sherlock fell, a cyclist appears out of nowhere and knocks Watson down. It's not clear how long Watson is dazed for, but it gives them enough time to tidy up the pavement Sherlock has fallen on and make it look as though he hit it directly, or if he jumped onto the truck, it gives them time to get him onto the pavement to stage the ‘corpse’. All out of eye shot of Watson (and presumably anyone tailing Watson). When a dazed Watson gets there, there is a crowd of people clustered over the body so he doesn't get a close look until it's all arranged properly, at which point he sees a "dead Sherlock".

We saw a woman's hand with a very fancy bracelet; I wonder whether that was either Molly or (at a stretch), Irene Adler – it was a very fancy bracelet after all, helping out - either way given that Watson is a medical doctor, I suspect that Sherlock was given a tranquiliser or similar to make him appear dead even when he had his pulse taken.

Then everyone was bundled away and that was that.

Sherlock had even said before hand, when he was talking to Watson on the phone prior to his jump, that it (his entire act) was all a "magic trick". I think in this case it was a trick of David Blain proportions, complete with misdirection and set ups!

And thus is Sherlock dead to the world but very much alive.


Phew!

We’ll see.

Feel free to chip in.

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-16 05:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] literaryrose.livejournal.com
I hadn't picked up on his hand movements being a signal to anyone - I'm going to have to rewatch the ending I think!

Another option is that the cyclist managed to drug Watson with the gas from the previous episode (where it makes you see what you want to see), meaning that by the time he got to the body, he saw what he wanted to see - dead Sherlock.

Also, I don't think that the body on the pavement was Sherlock pretending to be dead. I think that was a cadaver (perhaps provided by Molly or by Mycroft, who we know can get hold of lots of dead bodies - i.e. the aircraft) either made to look like Sherlock or wearing some kind of Sherlock mask - we know that the abducted kids were terrified of Sherlock, which means that perhaps the kidnapper wore some kind of Sherlock mask? But it was definitely a live body that fell - the arms were pinwheeling, whereas a cadaver would just drop motionless. So I think it was swapped over by the paid crowd before Watson got there.

There's a massive debate going on at the Guardian website with lots of interesting ideas too...

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-16 05:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] literaryrose.livejournal.com
Oh also I don't think Moriarty was discovered dead on the rooftop, as he would have been mentioned on the cover of the newspaper aswell as Sherlock, so I think he was buried in Holmes' grave and his disappearance husged up.

And Mycroft was definitely in on it - he wouldn't have sold out on his brother that easily, and also he wasn't wearing a black tie and I think if he had lost his brother, he would be in all black...

Oh another theory, Jim Moriarty wasn't the true mastermind - he really was an actor hired by the true Napoleon of Crime to act like Moriarty...

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-16 05:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caddyman.livejournal.com
I would love it if 'Rick Brook' really was an actor, though why he would top himself any more than the real Moriarty might..?

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-18 12:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] captainweasel.livejournal.com
Richard Brook is real http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2255795/
and Rick Brook is apparently an adult film star...
Edited Date: 2012-01-18 12:35 am (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-16 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caddyman.livejournal.com
For anyone who's read this far, here is a link to the debate on the Guardian website, mentioned by [livejournal.com profile] belle_fille1982:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/shortcuts/2012/jan/16/sherlocks-death-your-theories

And having read a bunch of them since Tracy put me onto the link, here's my favourite (though probably not accurate!):

• Holmes is incredibly well-read and had recently completed 'Angels and Demons' by Dan Brown (Kindle version). Holmes was, therefore, aware that it had been proven in a CERN laboratory that "one square yard of drag will slow a falling body almost 20%." He calculated that he needed approximately four square yards of drag to effect his survival from the roof of St Barts. When he asked Molly for a favour he did, in fact, ask to borrow her underwear, knowing full well that she could not be a 'thong type of girl'. Molly's under-crackers created slightly less than the required drag, only the equivalent of 3.25 yards, owing to the fact that he had marginally misjudged her dress size (she is a ten, not a twelve). Holmes was able to mitigate against this miscalculation by adopting the advice on a website he had fortunately visited when researching the likelihood of Dan Brown's survival theory: "Could I Survive A Fall From An Airplane".
Rule 4 - Land Feet First Landing on the head, or even side isn't going to work. Try and land on your feet and execute a roll or slide to take some of the energy out the the impact.
A little known fact is that Sherlock Holmes had a double knee replacement in his early twenties due to a congenital defect worsened by three years spent as an apprentice plumber. Holmes was are that the synthetic knee joints were capable of withstanding a knee roll if he was able to cross his legs at the moment of impact. Observant viewers will have noticed the body suspended in 221b Baker Street. In addition to borrowing Molly's panties, Homes asked Molly to nip back to the flat, carry out a double knee replacement, tie the ankles together in a crossed position and then lob the body out of the window and observe the consequences. Molly was able to text Holmes during his descent to say she had tried it three times and a knee angle of 37.5 degrees would enable him to survive a fall if her under-garments provided between 3 - 3.5 square yards of drag.
Sadly, on landing Holmes hit his head on a sachet of KFC ketchup and was momentarily confused. The ketchup provided sufficient and immediate fake blood for him to lie prone until Molly arrived to pronounce him dead.
Simples
Edited Date: 2012-01-16 05:51 pm (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-17 12:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrtonylee.livejournal.com
1) Mycroft was totally involved. He is in the books, and Moffat and Gatiss love the canon :-)

2) Moriarty wouldn't be left on the roof as that would be the main headline of the SUN - SHERLOCK HOLMES KILLS ACTOR THEN JUMPS rather then SHERLOCK HOLMES JUMPS, and the police would have gone to the roof. So, Moriarty was either taken downstairs or thrown off the roof.

3) Sherlock's face - well, Watson was concussed and could believe it was him as he expected it to be him, or we have the 'Act One Gun' of a possible Sherlock Mask in Moriarty's possession that could easily be placed on the body.

4) Laundry truck. Nuff said.

5) Paramedics immediately on scene. Never happens, even outside a hospital.

6) Mycroft can do anything as seen, so I reckon every bystander there was one of his or a BSI, Moriarty's body was the 'Sherlock' and he landed in the laundry van, already arranged for the 'jump', as he knew before he even went up there that this was the only way to end.

Molly probably had a backup body just in case, though.

(no subject)

Date: 2012-01-17 10:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nortysarah.livejournal.com
The body was definitely that of the crim that had kidnapped the children. Moriaty had managed to find a SH twin who had sadly perished - Mycroft? I'm not entirely sure how Moriaty is going to get up though and he will!

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