involved, do n't scroll down if you haven't watched it involves spoilers, don't scroll down if you haven't watched it
involve spoilers, don't scroll down if you haven't watched the
following are my comments after watching the movie:
1. If you haven't watched it in its entirety Please don't watch the show because you will be disappointed.
The surprising details of this show are all based on the "you are a fan" setting, which is a spin-off movie.
If you haven't watched it, you'll think it's a time-travel drama. The characters are not fully featured, the male protagonist has a long face, the second male is very old, and there are no beautiful women in the whole play. The lens scheduling and interspersed confusion, the reasoning is too weak and basic test. It's obviously a Christmas special, but it looks like a ghost movie.
I have to say, based on the perspective of an unwatched viewer. This movie sucks.
【It can't exist as an independent film at all】
2. What about people who have seen it?
[There are disappointments, satisfaction, and surprises]
I belong to the category of satisfaction. In fact, I still don't understand some details after reading it, but I am basically satisfied. The reasons are roughly as follows:
(1) This movie answered the biggest suspense
audience Q in the third season: Is Moriarty dead?
Magic A: Dead.
(2) The overall level of completion is comparable to that of the usual episodes, with familiar shots, adequate costumes, and lots of details.
(3) There are ups and downs in viewing emotions, and there is a sense of "sudden realization". From the beginning of "what the fxck did I go to the wrong set?" to "what the hell is so messy" to "what a surprise!"
(4) joined the hot topic of feminism (seeing someone saying "no" Deliberately emphasizing women's rights is the real equality" I agree, but the women's rights in the film are in the context of the Victorian era, just like now you say that Syria should emphasize women's rights?)
3. I will sort out the plot based on memory, and I will try again tomorrow. Check it out:
(1) Sherlock was exiled, but the plane just took off. His opponent Moriarty presumptuously announced on TV that "I'm alive hahaha, miss me?". So Sherlock's brother immediately called Sherlock and told him to end the exile that lasted only a few minutes (this is all at the end of the third season, it is shown in the film but it is only a memory function, I can't understand it just by looking at it)
( 2) Sherlock was very anxious, watching the dead come back to life. So he started to take drugs violently, and entered the hall of thinking (or is already on drugs and stumbled to answer the phone).
(3) He found a similar case of the resurrection of the dead in the Hall of Thought, which took place in the Victorian period. So he started thinking about the case without any reason, and at the same time brought the characters around him into the hall of thinking (just like when we dream of familiar people, we sometimes change our identities). In fact, the movie didn't really shoot the original story, it just deliberately chose the same era for the audience to substitute.
(4) Sherlock assumes the entire case to get answers that can bring the dead back to life, question-oriented.
The bride was deceived by her husband. The
bride was seriously ill and was about to die. The bride united with the "Women's Federation
" and decided to teach the stinky man a lesson
. The bride created the illusion of death in public . In order to create a psychological shadow on men. The whole process is Sherlock's obscenity. There is no evidence, no evidence, no evidence, let alone reasoning. [Because he just wanted to find a possibility] (5) During the process, Moriarty kept running out to disrupt the situation: disguised as a bride in the middle, and finally played with Sherlock on the edge of the cliff. In fact, it is the "virus" in Sherlock's thinking.
Moriarty's appearance at the crime scene at first meant that Sherlock's brain received a message that "Moriarty" had been resurrected; later, Moriarty hung on the edge of a cliff again. It was Sherlock who obtained the firm scientific materialist concept of "the dead cannot be resurrected" by speculating on the revenge bride case. Sherlock denied the possibility of Moriarty's resurrection, so he killed Moriarty in his mind. .
(6) Regain sobriety while drawing conclusions. Moriarty was dead. get off a plane.
4. I have to say, the screenwriter is lazy. Because it is a hall of thinking (dreamland), many unreasonable things become excusable.
[Character is a mapping rather than reality]
Sherlock's brother became a big fat man (actually I don't understand why it is such a mapping, please advise); the
forensic sister needs to disguise herself as a man (female forensic doctors were not allowed in the Victorian period?); at the door of
the house The little boy (a role added by herself?);
it can be seen that the female characters in Sherlock's mind are all looking for a sense of presence: the landlady's aunt and the maid ask why they are not written in the book; Mrs. Watson blames her husband's lack of company. In fact, Sherlock had already come up with the answer to the revenge bride case at this time.
[The case lacks logic and evidence]
The bride's second autopsy at night did not reveal that she was just dead;
Sherlock went to dig a grave (I don't know why);
[The scene and dialogue are inexplicable]
There would be no Chinese entertainment in Victorian times Place;
Victorian period Sherlock's brother even said "hard disk" and "virus";
(there are many more to be added tomorrow)
5. Therefore, this is not a reasoning movie. This is just instilling materialism in fans with a case - "the dead don't come back to life". The biggest suspense is explained.
6. Irresponsible speculation, the fourth season is about how the dead Moriarty planned a battle of wits with Sherlock before he died. Every step of Sherlock is played by the "dead man" to set off his intelligence. If the plot is different, there will be more surprises!
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