Three men in the 19th century became one man and two women in the 21st century. It has to be said that this reflects the changing times.
Although the scene of three men in one play may be increasingly difficult to see, the role of female Watson in this play can be called a successful adaptation. The image of Watson written by Conan Doyle was indeed very classic in that era, but it would be very old-fashioned to continue playing it now, and it may be in an embarrassing situation because of its insignificant role in daily cases. In this play, Watson was changed to a female Watson who helped Sherlock Holmes detoxify, which not only enriched the role of Watson, but also added a lot of interest to the slightly mediocre daily cases (this In fact, it is also the point that supported me in the front).
While I think the new Watson character on the show is quite successful, Moriarty is too bad to say the least. This character controls an extremely large organization according to the setting in this play. When Sherlock Holmes destroyed several of her plans, she chose to go to bed with Sherlock Holmes to get to know him, and then fell in love with him, and then pretended to be killed and destroyed. I came back to him after I heard that he was well, and wanted to run your own dark empire with him? ? ? The character's behavior is a true reflection of a popular saying: women become stupid when they are in love. Is the question really so? I would like to ask if the professional women are so emotional these days? Moriarty, who mastered the Dark Empire, should be the top of the strong woman, right? Her subordinates all know to kill Sherlock Holmes. She not only killed her own people, but also gave herself away, so she still has the face to accuse her subordinates that they should not be exposed? Besides, the only thing Sherlock Holmes does in the play is to fight criminals. What kind of brain does a criminal who just caused the death of three people have to think that Holmes can go with her in her criminal career? Seriously, don't write a female character and feel like you have to give her an emotional entanglement to make her entangled and make the character appear mentally retarded.
However, this is also a drama from 8 years ago, mainly because Moriarty is too mentally handicapped and very dissatisfied. In the penultimate episode, I was also surprised and delighted that Ellie was Moriarty (after all, there is a place for surprise), and it turned out to be such a nonsense ending. . . .
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