Sherlock horror bride ending meaning

Kasey 2022-04-23 07:03:51

One bride falls, thousands of brides stand up! It's not that the bride is resurrected, it's that people like her will do the same thing in her name
Moriarty dies, thousands "Moria" Tee" was about to be "resurrected" and news of the resurrection had spread

about what the last scene meant, some thought it was a test of the waters to see if everything that came before could be interpreted as a nineteenth-century Sherlock Holmes imagination, going back and filming the nineteenth The story of the century, I don't think this kind of idea is credible, so I give away my selling points.

My understanding is this: the
last scene is the only reality, the initial point in time, and the place where it ends. , the whole story (including the so-called waking up and returning to reality) is a palace of thought, which happens here and now, and only this scene is real. The

whole story is divided into three
layers of dreams. "The
second layer of the case "dream", pseudo-reality (memory)
The third layer of "dream", Reichenbach Falls

The whole story is everything before Sherlock sorts out: (1) Sherlock explores whether Moriarty is dead through the simulated bride case--- ---(2) Moriarty wakes him up into pseudo-reality-----(1) Falls into a dream and finds out the truth------(2) Wakes up into pseudo-reality-----(3 ) Moriarty pulls him into the triple dream ----- (2) After defeating Moriarty, he returns to the second dream---- (1) After getting off the plane and getting on the car, he enters the first dream again ------- (Reality) Finally The scene that returned to the scene he was sorting out

was originally a reappearance of memory. The scene of the second dream was a fact that really happened, and it was Sherlock's memory, but the whole story was Sherlock's mind palace, so the double dream was an imagination even if it was reality. He mixes memory and imagination, making people unable to distinguish memory and reality, just like Zhuang Zhou Mengdie, whether it was the nineteenth century Sherlock who imagined the twentieth century, or the twentieth century Sherlock who imagined it. Nineteenth Century from the Internet













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Extended Reading

The Abominable Bride quotes

  • Sherlock Holmes: You may, however, rest assured there are no ghosts in this world... save those we make for ourselves.

  • Sherlock Holmes: Your wife can see worlds where no one else can see anything of value whatsoever.

    Sir Eustace Carmichael: Can she really? And how do you "deduce" that, Mr. Holmes?

    Sherlock Holmes: She married you. I assume she was capable of finding a reason.