![]() This does not come in any of the seasons/series and I am very glad I can add it to. It looks and sounds great, is full of clever lines and the acting is as good as ever beyond its dubious overall quasi-literal/quasi-meta narrative, it's genuinely excellent stuff, possibly the best thing of this series since Season 2 ended. This is a great movie to anyone who likes the BBC Sherlock series in any way. You never believe he’s in any danger, even in the throes of an overdose or the middle of an overwhelming case. The new setting works well enough by recreating the original Sherlock Holmes setting, and the transplanting of the modern iterations of these characters into this setting works a lot better than one would expect. Cumberbatch’s Sherlock is smarter, colder, and much less desperate. It also maintains the franchise's ability to ask many questions of the audience and subvert the audience with almost every one of these (without pulling out an M-Night style BS twist that you only didn't see coming simply because it was too stupid for you to anticipate). The episode has been co-written by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss with performances by Rupert Graves, Una Stubbs, Louise Brealey and Amanda Abbington. /rebates/2fsherlock-the-abominable-bride-1883572fmovie-reviews&. ![]() I mean, yes, the episode kinda doesn't really need to exist, as it's sorta a fever dream of sorts, but it's also well-written, well-produced, well-acted and highly atmospheric. The Abominable Bride is seen as a black sheep for the Sherlock series as a whole, but I genuinely don't understand why. ![]()
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