Sunday, October 28, 2012

Sherlock vs. Elementary: Why CBS Isn't Getting It Right - Part 1




  


On July 25th of 2010, the first episode of the BBC drama, Sherlock, was aired. A Study in Pink it was titled, a nod to the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle story and the original Sherlock Holmes' first adventure with Dr. Watson,  A Study in Scarlet. Pink was followed by two more episodes, The Blind Banker and The Great Game.  The first season of Sherlock received much attention from both the U.K. and the U.S. Not long after, the go-ahead was given for a second season to be aired in 2012. Season Two consisted of A Scandal in Belgravia, The Hounds of Baskerville, and finally The Reichenbach Fall. With an enormous cliff-hanger in the season finale, fans are left waiting until summer of 2013 for a resolution.
   Then, September 27th of 2012, the world was introduced the CBS crime-drama, Elementary. Sherlock fans everywhere groaned collectively. So far, six episodes of the show have been aired, with more to come. So far, Elementary has received relatively positive critical reviews, with Metacritic giving the show a 73% based on 29 "generally favorable" popular reviews. ^ "Elementary: Season 1". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. http://www.metacritic.com/tv/elementary/critic-reviews.
But its number of U.S. viewers has been declining episodically, with an initial 13.41 million viewers for the pilot, and eventually retiring down from 11.13 to 10.91 to 10.31 million for the fourth and most recent episode, Rat Race. The fifth episode will air on November 1st.

Finally, a poll by entertainmentwise.com shows that 6.16% prefer Elementary over Sherlock, while 93.84% voted vice versa, placing Sherlock far above Elementary.

   Allow me to explain why I have presented you with the facts I have. I am, if you haven't yet figured it out, a Sherlock Holmes fanatic. Not just of the BBC show, but also of the Robert Downey, Jr. film adaptation and, most of all, the original works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I like to think that I know Sherlock Holmes very, very well. I've been a fan for many years now, beginning with my first reading of the Complete Works of Sherlock Holmes, which I have since reread twice. Then, I saw Robert Downey, Jr. and Jude Law take on the role of the Victorian-era consulting detective and his loyal biographer. RDJ added more of an action-adventurer feel to it, a popular ingredient in today's films. RDJ's Holmes, however, still retained every bit of the classic Bohemian's arrogance, intelligence, and unfailing loyalty. Then, only a few months ago, I came across BBC's Sherlock series on Netflix. In three short nights I had devoured all three, 90-minute episodes. Very much impressed, I quickly jetted over to iTunes in order to purchase the full second season in HD. Only a week later, I had watched the full series on my iPad. I have since watched them a second time. Then, mere weeks later, Elementary was introduced to the airwaves. I, for weeks before it was shown, had been denouncing Elementary with everything I had. As far as I was concerned, no adaptation of my favorite book, film, and television character could be successful with such mangling as was given to Elementary.
"Watson is a girl?!" I cried. "Blasphemy!"
Not to mention New York. Spider-man stops crime in New York. The Avengers take down criminals in New York. The NYPD put men behind bars. Not Sherlock Holmes. He belongs in London, on Baker Street, pacing 221B, in a dressing gown, smoking a pipe, bemoaning the idiocy of those around him, and pondering the sheer intelligence of Professor James Moriarty, the Napoleon of Crime.
But my arguments against the appeal of Elementary were lacking. I could only base them off a thirty-second TV spot. However, the second I found the pilot episode to be free on iTunes, I quickly downloaded it. That night, I sat down, grinning mischieveiously to myself, anxious to begin denouncing every place CBS got it wrong. How surprised I was when I was able to watch through the first ten-minutes of the episode with nothing to scoff at, besides the obvious Dr. Joan Watson. But I still had 35 minutes of material left. Believe me when I say, I was scrutinizing every word Johnny Lee Miller said, cross-referencing it against every bit of Holmesian knowledge I had at my disposal. I wasn't wasting my time. As the credits began rolling, I sat back, thinking hard and analyzing every second of the show. Suffice it to say, I was disappointed. I had been desperately wanting to be proven wrong; I was begging CBS to give me something Sherlock to whet my appetite until Benedict Cumberbatch of BBC's adaptation returned. But they let me down; big time. Thus, the reason for this blog post. But, as it is unraveling to be much longer than I had anticipated, it will now become a two-part argument. This will become the introduction. Tomorrow's post will be the main piece. In part two, I will break down both shows and compare the pros and cons of each.

Until then,
~Ian James~

4 comments:

  1. Not much I can say about this, since I haven't seen either show. I'll just put... I'm sorry the show wasn't good and something to have you watch till your beloved one comes back on. Hang in there Ian!

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  2. I absolutely hate it when people think they can just change things and that others will like it. Sherlock Holmes is a great universe with well thought out characters with complicated relationships, they didn't need changing. To turn Watson into a woman is an insult to the author and a great turn off to any series that portrays this. Sherlock is quintessentially British! He is not American, and I dislike the fact that America tries to take over another countries popular character, and to claim that he is theirs. In my opinion Sherlock Holmes and Sherlock are far better and truer than Elementary will ever be.

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  3. Thanknyoumcery much for your thoughts, Sarah! I very much agree.

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  4. I love the ANYTHING Sherlock Holmes as a child I started watching a show called "Sherlock Holmes In the 24th century" (I think it was 24th) and it wasn't like the best show ever but as a kid it made me start loving anything having to do with Sherlock and Dr Watson even the young Sherlock Holmes even read the books and when I saw the BBC Sherlock series I thought it was gonna be bad since it was in modern times (but since I loved a show of Sherlock set in the far distant future I gave it a shot) I was BLOWN AWAY my absolute favorite bar none and was actually exited for elementary but then... I watched it and it was kinda sad and upsetting that they would not only ruin the duo I'd grow up loving but it seemed so unfitting for John... My bad Joan to be so different and Sherlock also very differ and then to top it off... New York and not London granted Sherlock isn't confined to a city but the main setting is England and having be set in New York just for a sub plot differential was kinda sad. Like watching a apocryphal twisted story of close friends just to be repackaged to a American audience. Gladly many if not the vast overwhelming majority know better. Both can coexist but for me it's not Sherlock Holmes without Dr. "John" Watson.

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