Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2

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'The Sign of Three'
Sherlock episode
Episode no.Series 3
Episode 2
Directed byColm McCarthy
Written by
Produced by
  • Sue Vertue (series producer)
Featured music
Cinematography bySteve Lawes
Editing byMark Davis
Original air date5 January 2014
Running time86 minutes
Guest appearance(s)
  • Yasmine Akram as Janine
  • Lara Pulver as Irene Adler
  • Alistair Petrie as James Sholto
  • Alfred Enoch as Bainbridge
  • Alice Lowe as Tessa
  • Jalaal Hartley as Mayfly Man/Photographer/Jonathan Small
  • Oliver Hansley as David
  • Ed Birch as Tom
Episode chronology
Previous
'The Empty Hearse'
Next
'His Last Vow'
List of Sherlock episodes

'The Sign of Three' is the second episode of the third series of the BBC television series Sherlock. It was written by Stephen Thompson, Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat[1] and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Dr John Watson. The episode's title is inspired by The Sign of the Four by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.[2] It is set six months after the series opener 'The Empty Hearse'[3] and is primarily centred on the day of Watson's wedding to Mary Morstan.[4] It garnered a viewership of 11.37[5] million, and received mostly positive reviews.

Sherlock, Season 3, episode 2 transcript: The Sign of Three, part 1 Episode written by Mark Gatiss, Steven Moffat and Steve Thompson. Transcript by Ariane DeVere aka Callie Sullivan.

Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2
  • 2Production

Plot[edit]

In the opening scene, DI Lestrade (Rupert Graves) and Sergeant Donovan (Vinette Robinson) are on the verge of arresting the criminal Waters family that has evaded the police several times. However, when Lestrade receives a text for help from Sherlock, he abandons the case and races to Baker Street, assuming the worst and calling for maximum backup – only to discover that Sherlock is simply struggling to write a best man speech for John's upcoming wedding to Mary Morstan (Amanda Abbington).

On the morning of the wedding, Mrs. Hudson (Una Stubbs) reminds Sherlock that marriage changes people. At the reception, John is delighted to see Major James Sholto (Alistair Petrie), his former Army CO. Sholto (the name is a reference to a character in The Sign of Four) lives in seclusion, having received death threats and media scrutiny after losing a unit of new soldiers in Afghanistan. Sherlock calls Mycroft (Mark Gatiss), who repeats Mrs Hudson's suggestion that John and Mary's marriage will change his life.

Sherlock rises to give the best man speech, but he initially hesitates. After reading from the wedding telegrams, Sherlock expresses his deep respect for John and launches into a rambling narrative, describing John's role in an attempted murder case, 'the Bloody Guardsman'; a Guardsman named Bainbridge (Alfred Enoch) contacted Sherlock, fearing he was being stalked. By the time Sherlock and Watson got into the Guards' quarters, Bainbridge was presumed dead in a shower room from a stab wound, but no weapon and escape route were found. When questioned by Lestrade, Sherlock reluctantly admits the case wasn't solved, but cites it as an example of John's compassion; instead of trying to solve the murder as Sherlock did, John examined Bainbridge's body and discovered he still had a pulse, thus requesting an ambulance and saving his life.

Sherlock's narrative drifts to another case, 'the Mayfly Man'; several days after going to a man's apartment for dinner, Tessa (Alice Lowe), a woman who worked as a private nurse, found the apartment was vacated, and the man died weeks ago. Sherlock and John, still inebriated from John's stag night, attempted to search for clues, but were arrested for their drunken antics. The next morning, an amused Lestrade secured their release from jail. Sherlock chatted to other London women with a similar experience, but failed to find any significant connection between them. With John's help, he concluded the perpetrator was a man bored with marriage, who disguised himself as recently deceased single men and used their unoccupied homes to meet the women.

While moving to the toast, Sherlock suddenly freezes, recalling Tessa knew John's middle name (Hamish). Aware that John hates and never uses it, he deduces Tessa saw it in a wedding invitation. Sherlock concludes all the women worked for Sholto in various capacities and were bound by confidentiality. The Mayfly Man courted them to find and attack Sholto, and the wedding is his chance. Sherlock slips a note to Sholto, who returns to his hotel room and gets his pistol to defend himself. Sherlock, John, and Mary race to the room to try and save him, but he refuses to open the door until the case is solved. Sherlock deduces the Bloody Guardsman case is linked to Sholto's, and pinpoints the military uniform both wore as the common link; since Bainbridge collapsed in the shower, he must have been stabbed with a stiletto-type blade beforehand, but with his military waist belt firmly holding the flesh together, the damage would not take effect until the belt loosened and the victim would not feel it until then. Upon hearing this explanation, Sholto contemplates suicide by loosening his belt and bleeding to death. Sherlock persuades him not to, primarily by insisting that it would be cruel to do at John's wedding. Sholto then opens the door and requests medical assistance.

That evening, Sherlock apprehends the wedding photographer (Jalaal Hartley) and identifies him to Lestrade as Jonathan Small, the Mayfly Man, deducing he was the only person who could have stabbed Sholto. He points out the photographer's brother was one of the men killed under Sholto's command, and concludes that he stabbed Bainbridge as practice for this murder. After Sherlock plays the violin for John and Mary's first dance, he quietly reveals to them that he has observed in Mary 'increased appetite, change in taste perception, and sickness in the morning, the signs of three', revealing she is pregnant. Sherlock calms them by explaining that they will make great parents, since they've had plenty of practice with him. Despite the happy revelation, the episode ends on a bitter-sweet note, with Sherlock sombrely leaving the reception alone, upon realizing that his relationship with John will never be the same again.

Production[edit]

The episode was directed by Colm McCarthy, who had previously worked with Moffat on the Doctor Who episode, 'The Bells of Saint John'. The Radio Times reported that McCarthy was recruited 'following the departure of director Paul McGuigan, who is credited with having set the distinctive visual template for the programme'.[6] According to some sources, such as the Radio Times,[6] 'The Sign of Three' was written by Steve Thompson, who had previously authored the Sherlock episodes 'The Blind Banker' and 'The Reichenbach Fall'. However, in a departure from the show's usual style, all three writers received a 'written by' credit in this episode's opening titles. Steven Moffat told a BBC Q&A that he wrote a lot of Sherlock's best man speech.[7]

Filming[edit]

The Orangery at Goldney Hall, scene of Mary and John's wedding reception

The wedding reception scenes were filmed in the orangery at Goldney Hall, Bristol.[8] Other scenes filmed across Bristol include the 'court steps' in the opening scenes are the Victoria Rooms,[9] the bank robbery took place in a former Bank of England building next to Castle Park[9] and John and Mary's wedding scenes were filmed at St Mary's church in Sneyd Park.[9]

Broadcast and reception[edit]

The episode was first broadcast on 5 January 2014, on BBC One and BBC One HD at 8:30pm.[10] It attracted 8.8 million viewers, a 31.9% share, which was down from 9.2 million (33.8%) for 'The Empty Hearse'.[11]

The episode received critical acclaim. The Independent's Neela Debnath commented, 'While it is not the strongest story of the Sherlock saga, the writing is just as sharp and fresh, with the mind palace element toned down a few notches. The Sign of Three was packed to the rafters with wit and comedy. There was plenty to leave viewers howling with laughter, mainly thanks to Sherlock's general apathy towards humankind.'[12]

Caroline Frost of The Huffington Post commented on the episode's 'Conan Doyle-esque recounting of some of their strangest cases', writing, '[t]his combination of montage and memory lane made for an unusual show, somewhere between a Christmas one-off, a Comic Relief-inspired parody and one of these special dream-sequence sitcom episodes.'[13] Similarly, Oliver Jia of The Punk Effect stated it as 'no doubt the odd duck of the entire Sherlock canon,' but proceeded to call the episode '...a clever, hilarious, and moving piece of fine television.'[14]

Former Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, responded to allusions made to him within the fictional newspaper articles about the 'Water Gang' which appeared on screen during the episode's opening moments. The lower portion of the front page of a mocked-up newspaper described an unnamed London Mayor as 'dithering, incoherent, and self-interested', listing 'bizarre' policies including a 'recently-mocked concept of putting an airport in the middle of the estuary', which The Telegraph say is 'a clear reference to Boris Island.'[15] Johnson argued that the jokes, which The Telegraph report were 'visible for just a matter of second[s]',[15] reflected his perception that the BBC has a left-wing bias.[16] A spokesperson for the BBC said: 'Sherlock is a fictional drama series. Both the newspaper and mayor featured in the episode were entirely fictional and were not named or politically affiliated.'[16]

IGN's Daniel Krupa had a more negative review, praising Benedict Cumberbatch's acting and some heartfelt, tender moments, but he was critical of the pacing, stating that 'the rhythm was just erratic, never allowing you to really ease into the plot', and criticised the further exploration of the character's lives, rather than the adventures.[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^'The Sign of Three, Series 3 Episode 2'. bbc.co.uk. BBC. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  2. ^'Love interest for John Watson in new Sherlock episode The Sign of Three?'. metro.co.uk. Metro. 10 April 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  3. ^'10 teasers for series 3, episode 2 'The Sign of Three''. digitalspy.co.uk. Digital Spy. 2 January 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  4. ^'Sherlock series 3 episode 2 The Sign of Three programme guide'. radiotimes.com. Radio Times. 1 January 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  5. ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 18 July 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)?
  6. ^ abJones, Paul (15 April 2013). 'Sherlock series 3: Doctor Who and Ripper Street director Colm McCarthy to helm The Sign of Three'. Radio Times. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  7. ^Moffat, Steven; Gatiss, Mark (13 January 2014). 'Live Q&A with Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss'. BBC. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  8. ^'See Goldney Hall on Sherlock tonight'. bristol.tab.co.uk. The Tab. 5 January 2014. Archived from the original on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  9. ^ abc'Sherlock series 3 The Sign of Three filmed across Bristol'. bristol-culture.com. Bristol Culture. 6 January 2014. Archived from the original on 23 February 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  10. ^'Sherlock series 3: episode 2 trailer'. telegraph.co.uk. The Telegraph. 2 January 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  11. ^Plunkett, John (6 January 2014). 'Sherlock tracks down nearly 9 million as Dancing on Ice takes a tumble'. The Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  12. ^Debnath, Neela (5 January 2014). 'Sherlock 'The Sign of Three' TV review: Bromance is in the air'. The Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  13. ^Frost, Caroline (5 January 2014). ''Sherlock: The Sign Of Three' Review Finds Dr Watson's Wedding ALMOST Upstaged By His Best Man's Antics'. The Huffington Post. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  14. ^Jia, Oliver. 'Foxhounder Films: Sherlock Season 3: 'The Sign of Three' Review'. The Punk Effect. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  15. ^ abDixon, Hayley; Hooper, Andy (6 January 2014). 'BBC's Sherlock attacks Boris Johnson as 'dithering' and 'self-interested''. The Telegraph. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
  16. ^ abStaff and agencies (7 January 2014). 'Boris Johnson: Sherlock's mockery of me is 'perfectly legitimate''. The Guardian. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
  17. ^Krupa, Daniel. 'Sherlock: 'The Sign of Three' Review'. IGN. Retrieved 12 January 2014.

External links[edit]

  • 'The Sign of Three' on IMDb
Season
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Sign_of_Three&oldid=918638480'

Sherlock is a television crime drama that presents a contemporary adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes detective stories. Created by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss, it stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson. The first series of three episodes aired in 2010, while series two aired in 2012, and a third series aired in the first quarter of 2014. The third series has become the UK's most watched drama series since 2001.[1] A single episode aired in 2016, as a Victorian-era special. Sherlock has been sold to over 200 territories.[2]

Sherlock depicts 'consulting detective' Holmes, assisting the Metropolitan Police Service, primarily Detective Inspector Greg Lestrade (Rupert Graves), in solving various crimes. Holmes is assisted by his flatmate, Dr John Watson, who has returned from military service in Afghanistan. Although the series depicts a variety of crimes and perpetrators, Holmes' conflict with his archenemyJim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) is a recurring feature. Molly Hooper (Louise Brealey), a pathologist at Bart's Hospital occasionally assists Holmes in his cases. Other recurring roles include Una Stubbs as Mrs Hudson, Holmes and Watson's landlady; and co-creator Mark Gatiss as Sherlock's brother, Mycroft Holmes. In January 2014, Moffat confirmed that the series would have a fourth series, and that a fifth series had been plotted.[3] As of 15 January 2017, 13 episodes of Sherlock have aired, including one special, concluding the fourth series. As to the future of the series, Gatiss stated that due to the conflicting schedules of Cumberbatch and Freeman, a potential fifth season is still up in the air.[4]

  • 2Episodes

Series overview[edit]

SeriesEpisodesOriginally airedAverage ratings (millions)
First airedLast airedUKUS
1325 July 20108 August 20108.37[5]N/A
231 January 201215 January 201210.23[5]4.4[6]
331 January 201412 January 201411.82[7]6.6[6]
Special1 January 201611.64[8]3.4[9]
431 January 201715 January 201710.00[10]N/A
Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2

Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2 Summary

Episodes[edit]

Series 1 (2010)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
11'A Study in Pink'Paul McGuiganSteven Moffat25 July 2010(UK)
24 October 2010 (US)
8.70 (UK)[8]

The police investigate a series of deaths related to people who all appear to have committed suicide by taking a poisonous pill. They turn to their unofficial consultant, Sherlock Holmes, who deduces various elements pointing to a serial killer. Meanwhile, Holmes is introduced to John Watson, a former soldier who served in Afghanistan, and the pair immediately move into a flat in Baker Street. John Watson slowly gets to know and trust Sherlock despite police officer Sally Donovan (Vinette Robinson) warning him that Holmes is a psychopath and will one day be responsible for murder. Sherlock's brother Mycroft (Mark Gatiss), at first not revealing his identity, arranges a meeting with Watson and asks whether he will spy on Sherlock for money, but John refuses. After a series of incidents, the person responsible for the deaths, a taxicab driver (Phil Davis), reveals that his victims took their own lives by playing a game of Russian roulette with two pills: one fatally poisonous, the other safe. Before Sherlock can play the cabbie's game, John shoots the cabbie from an opposite building. Before he dies, the taxicab driver reveals that 'Moriarty' was his sponsor.

Loosely based on the first Sherlock Holmes novel, A Study in Scarlet.[11]
22'The Blind Banker'Euros LynStephen Thompson1 August 2010(UK)
31 October 2010 (US)
7.74 (UK)[8]

Sherlock is hired by an old friend to investigate a mysterious break-in at a bank in the City. He discovers that symbols spray-painted onto an office wall are a coded message intended for an employee of the bank, who is later discovered dead in his flat. The next day, a journalist is killed and the same symbols are found nearby. Sherlock and John follow a trail of clues that link the two dead men to a Chinese smuggling ring, who are trying to retrieve a valuable item that one of the dead men stole. Sherlock eventually cracks the coded message based on Suzhou numerals and a book cipher, but not before John and his date, Sarah, are kidnapped by the criminals, who believe that John is Sherlock. Sherlock rescues them, but the leader of the gang escapes. Later, the leader of the gang is in communication with her superior, who is identified by the initial 'M'. She is then shot by a sniper.

Loosely based on the short story 'The Adventure of the Dancing Men',[12] the storyline also incorporates elements from other Sherlock Holmes stories; the concept of coded messages, the markings on the feet of the Black Lotus members and the plot of escaping a secret society, then being tracked to and killed in England all feature in The Valley of Fear. A murder victim being found inside a locked room, accessible only by climbing, alludes to The Sign of the Four.[12]
33'The Great Game'Paul McGuiganMark Gatiss8 August 2010(UK)
7 November 2010 (US)
8.66 (UK)[8]

Sherlock is commissioned by Mycroft to investigate the suspicious death of a government employee, who was working on a top-secret defence project: the Bruce-Partington Project.[13] After rejecting the case and handing it over to John, Sherlock begins to be taunted by a criminal who puts his victims into explosive vests and sets Sherlock deadlines to solve the apparently unrelated cases, which include a twenty-year-old cold case involving the shoes of a drowned boy, the disappearance of a businessman, the death of a TV personality, and the assassination of a museum security guard by the 'Golem'. As Sherlock solves the cases, he finds links between them. After clearing up the original case regarding the government employee, Sherlock tries to force his unseen adversary to reveal himself. Near the end of the episode, Sherlock and 'Jim Moriarty' (Andrew Scott) reach a standoff, where Jim reveals that he is responsible for the crimes. In the final seconds, Sherlock Holmes points his gun at a bomb on the floor that had been strapped to John.

The episode's storyline is somewhat derived from 'The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans' and makes references to 'The Five Orange Pips' at various points (as per the five bomb victims and electronic beeps on the phone) in addition to other works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Series 2 (2012)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
41'A Scandal in Belgravia'Paul McGuiganSteven Moffat1 January 2012(UK)
6 May 2012 (US)
10.66 (UK)[8]
3.2 (US)[14]

Mycroft hires Sherlock and John to retrieve compromising photos of a minor royal, which are held on the camera phone of Irene Adler (Lara Pulver), a ruthless and brilliant dominatrix who also trades in classified information extracted from her rich and powerful clients. Sherlock obtains Adler's phone, but discovers it is booby-trapped and requires a code to disarm it. When Adler discovers that the CIA are on her trail, she disappears and is then apparently killed, only to reappear to ask John to get her camera phone back from Sherlock. Weeks later when the coast is clear, Adler tricks Sherlock into deciphering a coded message on her phone which she obtained from another well-connected client. She sends the message to Moriarty, who in turn uses it to foil a British counter-terror operation. She almost succeeds in blackmailing Mycroft, but Sherlock finally cracks the password for the phone, leaving Adler without the protection she needs to survive. The episode concludes as Mycroft tells John that she has been killed by a terrorist group in Pakistan, while in fact she was secretly rescued by Sherlock.

Based on the short story 'A Scandal in Bohemia'.
52'The Hounds of Baskerville'Paul McGuiganMark Gatiss8 January 2012(UK)
13 May 2012 (US)
10.27 (UK)[8]

Sherlock and John are contacted by Henry Knight (Russell Tovey), a man traumatised by the death of his father by a monstrous hound on Dartmoor years before. Investigating Dewer's Hollow, a local spot where the beast was allegedly seen, as well as the nearby Ministry of Defence testing site Baskerville, Sherlock and John uncover a conspiracy wherein one of the Baskerville scientists, Dr. Frankland (Clive Mantle), is continuing the work of H.O.U.N.D., an aborted project to create a hallucinogenic gas for military use. Sherlock and John discover that the legendary hound is an ordinary dog used for publicity that the hallucinogenic gas makes appear as a demonic monster. The 'hound' that killed Henry's father was actually Frankland wearing a red-lensed gas mask and a T-shirt bearing the logo of the H.O.U.N.D. group. Confronting both the dog and Frankland at Dewer's Hollow, John and Lestrade shoot the dog. Frankland attempts to flee, but dies when he runs into a minefield. In the final scene, Mycroft releases a confined Jim Moriarty.

Based on the novel The Hound of the Baskervilles.
63'The Reichenbach Fall'Toby HaynesStephen Thompson15 January 2012(UK)
20 May 2012 (US)
9.78 (UK)[8]

Moriarty launches a simultaneous heist on the Tower of London, Bank of England, and Pentonville Prison, crimes for which he allows himself to be captured and put on trial. He secures not-guilty by intimidating the jury and visits Sherlock, explaining he still intends to 'burn' him, taunting him with a 'final problem' for him to solve. He also tries to destroy Sherlock's reputation. The two meet on the roof of a hospital, where Moriarty explains that assassins will kill John, Mrs. Hudson, and Lestrade if Sherlock does not commit suicide; he wants Sherlock to do this to cement his story after explaining that his 'god code' was a myth. Moriarty kills himself to force Sherlock to do the same. Sherlock calls John, confesses to being a fraud, states his final 'goodbye' and then steps off the roof.

Inspired by the short story 'The Final Problem'. The title alludes to the Reichenbach Falls, where Holmes and Moriarty supposedly fall to their deaths in the original story.

Series 3 (2014)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
'Many Happy Returns'Jeremy Lovering[17]Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat24 December 2013N/A

Anderson believes that Sherlock is still alive after the Reichenbach fall. He confides in Lestrade and tells him his theory for his existence. Anderson believes a string of events ranging from Tibet to India to Germany involve Sherlock's assistance, and this is due to Sherlock not being able to stop investigating. Lestrade tells Anderson that Sherlock is definitely dead and goes to visit John, who has moved out of Baker Street following Sherlock's death. Lestrade gives John some of Sherlock's old items, including a video message from John's birthday. In the message Sherlock states that he will see John very soon and tells him to have a good birthday without him as he is 'busy'.

Broadcast online only, this mini-episode serves as a prequel to the third series and was made available on BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button service and the BBC's YouTube channel.[15][16] It is not based on any particular story by Arthur Conan Doyle.
71'The Empty Hearse'Jeremy LoveringMark Gatiss1 January 2014(UK)
19 January 2014 (US)
12.72 (UK)[8]
4.0 (US)[14]

Two years after his reported Reichenbach Fall demise, Sherlock, who has been cleared of all fraud charges against him, returns with Mycroft's help to a London under threat of terrorist attack. He tries to convince John—who has moved on and now has a girlfriend, Mary Morstan (Amanda Abbington)—to help; however, John is angry that Sherlock did not tell him he was alive. Instead, Sherlock enlists Molly to assist him, but when John is kidnapped by unknown assailants and is rescued by Sherlock and Mary, John returns to help find the terrorists and an underground plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament during an all-night sitting on Guy Fawkes Night.

Based on the short story 'The Adventure of the Empty House',[18] and 'The Lost Special' with numerous references to other works by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and other adaptations of the original stories.
82'The Sign of Three'Colm McCarthyStephen Thompson, Steven Moffat & Mark Gatiss5 January 2014(UK)
26 January 2014 (US)
11.38 (UK)[8]
2.9 (US)[19]

It is John and Mary's wedding day and Sherlock is daunted by the task of delivering a Best Man's speech. As part of the speech, he recounts cases they have worked on including a soldier being stalked and somehow stabbed in a locked shower, a ghost dating women he dubs 'The Mayfly Man', the last being part of John's disastrous stag night, among others. Before his speech ends, he realises that a murderer is present among the guests intent on killing John's old friend, Major Sholto. Sherlock saves the targeted guest, and then informs John and Mary of the meaning of the sign of three; namely that Mary is pregnant.

The title is based on the Holmes novel The Sign of the Four.
93'His Last Vow'Nick HurranSteven Moffat12 January 2014(UK)
2 February 2014 (US)
11.38 (UK)[8]
3.0 (US)[20]

Stolen letters lead Sherlock into conflict with Charles Augustus Magnussen, 'the Napoleon of blackmail' who knows the personal weakness of every person of importance in the Western world. During the investigation Sherlock is shot and nearly killed by Mary, who is being blackmailed by Magnussen. After waking up from near-death, Sherlock escapes the hospital and lures Mary to an abandoned building, where he tricks her into revealing her false identity and attempted murder while John is listening nearby. Months later, Sherlock drugs everyone at the Holmes family Christmas party and steals Mycroft's laptop full of state secrets, and he and John take the laptop to Magnussen to trade for all of the files on 'Mary Morstan'. It is revealed that Magnussen keeps no files; it is all in his near-perfect 'mind palace'. To protect John, Mary, and their forthcoming child, Holmes kills Magnussen in front of Mycroft and several other witnesses, and as a result is sent off on a suicidal assignment overseas. However, he is brought back almost immediately because of a video being broadcast all over England with Jim Moriarty's face asking 'Did you miss me?'

The title is based on Doyle's short story 'His Last Bow', whereas the plot contains elements of two other short stories, 'The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton' and 'The Man with the Twisted Lip'.

Special (2016)[edit]

No.
overall
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
10'The Abominable Bride'Douglas MackinnonSteven Moffat and Mark Gatiss1 January 201611.64 (UK)[8]
3.4 (US)[9]

Sherlock, under the influence of drugs, enters his mind palace to solve a case from Victorian times about a bride shooting herself in the head and rising from the grave to kill her husband. If he can solve the murder it might lead him to how Moriarty has risen from the grave after similarly shooting himself in the head. He solves the case, and concludes that Moriarty is indeed dead, but 'is back'.

A Victorian-themed episode, the title of which is based on the quote ('Ricoletti of the club foot and his abominable wife') from 'The Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual', which refers to a case mentioned by Sherlock Holmes.[21] The episode also alludes to 'The Five Orange Pips' and mentions 'The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle', both from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.[22]

Series 4 (2017)[edit]

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
111'The Six Thatchers'Rachel TalalayMark Gatiss1 January 201711.33 (UK)[8]
3.7 (US)[24]

Sherlock is asked to investigate the mysterious death of a young man, which he solves quickly but he is led into another mystery when a bust of Margaret Thatcher owned by the dead man's father is smashed. Further busts are smashed and Sherlock discovers that the mystery is linked to Mary and her past as a government agent. A figure from her past is bent on revenge in the belief that Mary betrayed him, but it is discovered that the traitor was the secretary of a British Parliamentary member. Mary is killed by the secretary when jumping in front of a bullet meant for Sherlock. John blames Sherlock for Mary's death, and their relationship is fractured.

The title is loosely based on the Doyle short story 'The Adventure of the Six Napoleons'. The plot contains elements of other short stories, 'The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb' and 'The Adventure of the Yellow Face'.[23]
122'The Lying Detective'Nick HurranSteven Moffat8 January 20179.53 (UK)[8]

Sherlock is contacted by the daughter of entrepreneur Culverton Smith, who she claims has confessed to a murder, but she does not know who the victim was as her father has used a drug on her that inhibits memory. Sherlock deduces that her father is a serial killer and sets out to expose him, but he has returned to narcotics use since Mary's death and unable to clearly distinguish his own thoughts from reality. He confronts and attacks Smith, and John is forced to subdue him. While recovering in the hospital, Smith appears in Sherlock's room, confesses and then tries to kill him. John bursts in just in time to save Sherlock, who reveals that his behavior up to that point was not just an elaborate ploy to expose Smith, but also fulfilling Mary's last wish for him to 'Save John'. Later John's therapist reveals that she is actually Sherlock's secret sister, Eurus, and has been using disguises to manipulate both Sherlock and Watson. The episode ends with Eurus firing a shot at John.

Title and plot elements based loosely on the Doyle short story 'The Adventure of the Dying Detective'.[23]
133'The Final Problem'Benjamin CaronMark Gatiss and Steven Moffat15 January 20179.06 (UK)[8]

Sherlock and Watson – who had been shot with a tranquilizer by Eurus – trick Mycroft into acknowledging her existence. Eurus steps up her attacks on Sherlock, culminating in the bombing of his Baker Street apartment. Sherlock, Watson and Mycroft venture forth to Sherrinford, a maximum-security psychiatric facility where Eurus is housed. Although Mycroft is skeptical at the suggestion that she has escaped, the trio discover that Eurus has compromised the staff and controls the entire Sherrinford asylum. She subjects the trio to a series of ordeals, testing their morals by forcing them to choose which of her victims live and die and ultimately forcing Sherlock to confront the memory of 'Redbeard', a childhood friend whose death set in motion events that saw Eurus incarcerated. Realising that she will continue to test him until someone he cares for dies, Sherlock tries to connect with her on an emotional level, offering her the love and relationship with a brother that she never had, and Eurus stands down. Sherlock and Watson return to the Baker Street apartment, where they find another message from Mary imploring them to stay together. A time lapse montage shows them rebuilding the Baker Street flat to its original lived-in form before meeting a series of unusual clients.

The title matches the Doyle short story 'The Final Problem',[25] but the plot contains elements from the short stories 'The Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual', 'The Adventure of the Three Garridebs', and 'The Adventure of the Gloria Scott'.[26]

References[edit]

Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2 Recap

  1. ^Jones, Paul (22 January 2014). 'Sherlock season 3 is most watched BBC drama series ever'. Radio Times. Archived from the original on 10 January 2017. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  2. ^BBC Worldwide Showcase (23 February 2012). Sherlock in five languages. YouTube. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  3. ^Denham, Jess (9 January 2014). 'Sherlock writers plot fourth and fifth series'. The Independent. Archived from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  4. ^Jeffery, Morgan (17 January 2017). 'Steven Moffat speaks out on Sherlock's future: 'It rather depends on our two stars''. Digital Spy. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  5. ^ ab'Sherlock Returns'. One8One. 2013. Archived from the original on 22 February 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  6. ^ ab'Sundays on PBS Remain TV's Top Destination for Drama'. PBS. 26 March 2014. Archived from the original on 28 December 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  7. ^'Sherlock Series 3 Ratings – Series Average'. Radio Times. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2015.
  8. ^ abcdefghijklmn'Weekly Top 30 Programmes'. Barb.co.uk. Retrieved 12 January 2014. (No permanent link available. Search for relevant dates.)
  9. ^ abPorter, Rick (5 January 2017). ''Sherlock' returns slightly lower on PBS'. TVByTheNumbers. Archived from the original on 7 February 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  10. ^BBC Press Office [@bbcpress] (24 January 2017). '#Sherlock consolidated series average of 10 million viewers' (Tweet). Archived from the original on 3 April 2017 – via Twitter.
  11. ^Oglethorpe, Tim (23 July 2010). 'Sherlock's got sexy! With nicotine papers instead of a pipe and taxis replacing hansom cabs, the new TV Holmes is a very 21st century hero'. Daily Mail. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  12. ^ ab'Steven Moffat: 'Cos people have asked: tonight's Sherlock ('The Blind Banker') is loosely based on The Dancing Men.''. twitter.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 6 December 2010.
  13. ^The DVD audio commentary for 'The Great Game' confirms that The Bruce-Partington Programme derives from The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans, a Conan Doyle short story about a man who was found dead on the District Railway.
  14. ^ abKissell, Rick (20 January 2014). ''Sherlock' Sees Rising Ratings in Return to PBS on Sunday'. Variety. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  15. ^'Sherlock Mini-Episode: Many Happy Returns – Sherlock Series 3 Prequel – BBC One'. BBC Youtube channel. 24 December 2013.
  16. ^'Sherlock, Series 3, Sherlock Mini Episode – Many Happy Returns'. BBC One. 2015. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  17. ^'Sherlock: Many Happy Returns (S)'. Film Affinity. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  18. ^'Sherlock series three: new details revealed'. The Daily Telegraph. 3 May 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  19. ^Hibberd, James (27 January 2014). ''Downton Abbey' ratings still huge, yet 'Sherlock' drops'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  20. ^Hibberd, James (3 February 2014). 'Weekend ratings: 'Downton,' 'Sherlock,' 'Black Sails''. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  21. ^Jones, Paul (24 October 2015). 'What does the title The Abominable Bride tell us about the Sherlock special?'. Radio Times. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  22. ^Conan Doyle, Arthur. 'The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes'(PDF). The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  23. ^ abMellor, Louisa; Leane, Rob (25 September 2016). 'Sherlock series 4: first 2 episode titles revealed'. Den of Geek. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  24. ^Hibberd, James (5 January 2017). 'Sherlock ratings dip from last season'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  25. ^Jones, Paul (12 December 2016). 'Sherlock series 4 episode 3: what happens in finale The Final Problem? Will Mary die? Will Sherlock end?'. RadioTimes. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  26. ^Jones, Paul (15 January 2017). 'What is Sherlock's Musgrave Ritual?'. Radio Times. Retrieved 15 January 2017.

Watch Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2

External links[edit]

Sherlock Season 3 Episode 2 Full

  • Sherlock on IMDb
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