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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

@teaformrholmes / teaformrholmes.tumblr.com

-- TAGS UNDER COSTRUCTION -- This blog exists to celebrate the immortal detective Sherlock Holmes and his friend and colleague Doctor Watson. You will find posts about the original works by Doyle, various tv series and movies. We tag everything!
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The Devil’s Pet Baits: Granada Holmes, “The Blue Carbuncle”

Did I say that if you only watch one episode from the Brett/Burke era it should be “The Speckled Band?” That was MADNESS. You should NOT watch only one episode from this era, you should and you must watch BOTH “The Speckled Band” and “The Blue Carbuncle,” which may perhaps be Granada’s greatest gift to the fandom. I know it’s almost Easter; but honestly, any time you watch “The Blue Carbuncle,” it’s Christmas. The production values are generally pretty good: Victoriana is everywhere, all the guest stars seem to be bringing their A game, there are more extras running around in this episode than all of the earlier ones combined, and all in all it reminds me pleasantly of another vintage 1980s Christmas special, the George C. Scott A Christmas Carol. But the best thing about this episode is that we get to watch Holmes and Watson have Christmas together in 221B. All y’all who Johnlock and are constantly pining after cozy domestic scenes of the two of them making tea and wearing jumpers together, I just want you to know that “The Blue Carbuncle” has ALL of that, and it is as warm and beautiful and delicious as a slice of plum pudding isn’t.

(In the late 1980s my family moved to London and I had my first traditional English Christmas dinner, and I never got over the disappointment. But I digress.)

Moffat and Gatiss never did an episode based on this one, though they did incorporate Henry Baker’s hat into “The Empty Hearse.” There’s so much more they could have done with it, and which I, in my modest way, tried to do. But maybe they were afraid they couldn’t do it as well as Granada did.

Brett and Burke’s teamwork in this episode is outstanding, and that is probably what I’m going to spend most of my time talking about. But there are some very odd things about “The Blue Carbuncle” as a story that this adaptation doesn’t iron out—most of them relating directly to the blue carbuncle itself.

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finalproblem

Sherlockian Wednesday Watchalongs: 🎅 HoHoHolmes

🎶🎄 Deck the halls with all the Sherlocks, fa la la la la, la la la la! 🎄🎶

  • Wednesday, December 6 Sherlock Holmes: The Blue Carbuncle (1968 TV episode) Peter Cushing finishes out his run on this series with a mystery found inside a Christmas goose.
  • Wednesday, December 13 The Blue Carbuncle (1979 movie) Just when you thought you'd seen all the Soviet-era musical comedy Holmes adaptations, you find out about The Other One.
  • Wednesday, December 20 Tales from Dickens: A Christmas Carol (1956 TV episode) You know Basil Rathbone from his portrayal of one of the most famous characters in British literature, but now you'll see him… do that. Except with Scrooge this time.
  • December 24–26: 🎁 Bonus Holmes for the Holidays watchalong marathon! 🎁
  • Wednesday, December 27 The Great Mouse Detective (1986 movie) It's time for our annual visit with Basil of Baker Street.

Here’s the deal: Like Sherlock Holmes? You’re welcome to join us in The Giant Chat of Sumatras #giantchat text channel to watch and discuss with us. Just find a copy of the episode or movie we’re watching, and come make some goofy internet friends.

Keep an eye on my #the giant chat of sumatra tag and the calendar for updates on future chat events. We'll be having more special bonus events at the end of the year!

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“I had called upon my friend Sherlock Holmes upon the second morning after Christmas, with the intention of wishing him the compliments of the season. He was lounging upon the sofa in a purple dressing-gown, a pipe-rack within his reach upon the right, and a pile of crumpled morning papers, evidently newly studied, near at hand.”

— John Watson, “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle” (via teaformrholmes)

this is cute but does it also mean holmes spent the christmas alone…

We could not resist the implicit plea to answer this question! By Victorian standards, no! The period between Christmas and Twelfth Night (January 6) was filled with parties, and especially the week between Christmas and New Year was observed as a festive time. You’ll often find Christmas and New Year linked, for instance, on those wonderfully weird Victorian Christmas cards.

So Watson, having presumably spent December 25 with Mary Morstan (to whom he’s canonically married at this point), is going around to Baker Street on the 27th to visit his somewhat antisocial best friend, and thus bring Christmas festivity to him. Since SCAN tells us that Holmes “loathed society with his whole Bohemian soul,” and since SIGN shows his initial reaction to the Watson-Morstan marriage as less than cordial, I think it’s a very safe inference to draw that, in canon, Watson (on his own and Mary’s behalf) invited Holmes for Christmas dinner, and got vague bohemian noises of demurral.

Adaptations have, as far as I am aware, universally ignored this. In canon reception more generally, gleefully ignoring Conan Doyle’s timeline (such as it is,) Holmes and Watson are eternally imagined as sharing lodgings in Baker Street. Vincent Starrett’s sonnet 221B, where it is always 1895, probably has a good deal to do with this. So do the demands of screen narrative, though. The sometimes convoluted and sometimes vague ways in which ACD contrives to get them together for a case after Watson has moved out are frequently, cheerfully simplified out of existence by keeping Watson at Baker Street. And perhaps nowhere is this more marked than in BLUE, where the Holmes and Watson of television share domesticity and exchange presents.

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plaidadder

The Devil’s Pet Baits: Granada Holmes, “The Blue Carbuncle”

Did I say that if you only watch one episode from the Brett/Burke era it should be “The Speckled Band?” That was MADNESS. You should NOT watch only one episode from this era, you should and you must watch BOTH “The Speckled Band” and “The Blue Carbuncle,” which may perhaps be Granada’s greatest gift to the fandom. I know it’s almost Easter; but honestly, any time you watch “The Blue Carbuncle,” it’s Christmas. The production values are generally pretty good: Victoriana is everywhere, all the guest stars seem to be bringing their A game, there are more extras running around in this episode than all of the earlier ones combined, and all in all it reminds me pleasantly of another vintage 1980s Christmas special, the George C. Scott A Christmas Carol. But the best thing about this episode is that we get to watch Holmes and Watson have Christmas together in 221B. All y’all who Johnlock and are constantly pining after cozy domestic scenes of the two of them making tea and wearing jumpers together, I just want you to know that “The Blue Carbuncle” has ALL of that, and it is as warm and beautiful and delicious as a slice of plum pudding isn’t.

(In the late 1980s my family moved to London and I had my first traditional English Christmas dinner, and I never got over the disappointment. But I digress.)

Moffat and Gatiss never did an episode based on this one, though they did incorporate Henry Baker’s hat into “The Empty Hearse.” There’s so much more they could have done with it, and which I, in my modest way, tried to do. But maybe they were afraid they couldn’t do it as well as Granada did.

Brett and Burke’s teamwork in this episode is outstanding, and that is probably what I’m going to spend most of my time talking about. But there are some very odd things about “The Blue Carbuncle” as a story that this adaptation doesn’t iron out—most of them relating directly to the blue carbuncle itself.

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