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— Mary Watson A modern-day version of (2010-present), produced in ninety-minute format for for three episodes a season. Sherlock () solves crimes through sheer intellect and his, but is a (self-proclaimed) 'high-functioning sociopath' barely kept in check by his friend Dr. John Watson () as he's called upon for the more baffling cases. The series incorporates 21st-century forensics technology, computers, smartphones, and Google searches; at the same time, it's very faithful to the original tales in style and content. Reign Of Fire Ost Rarity on this page.

A aired in Britain on New Year's Day 2016, taking the characters back to the original Sherlock Holmes setting of the Victorian era. Though initially presented as an 'alternative' to the modern version,. A similar concept to, another -produced television series based around setting a classic Victorian story in the 21st century. Not to be confused with, the American Sherlock Holmes show also set in modern times but otherwise completely different in premise and episodic structure. Has an official, of all things. For tropes used in specific episodes, see the.

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For tropes relating to specific characters, see the. •: A from series 2 onwards is Sherlock always getting Lestrade's first name (Greg) wrong. It's not until 'The Final Problem' that he finally gets it right. •: • In the books, Holmes is a tall scarecrow of a man with a beak of a nose. Doyle often complained that most illustrations of Holmes at the time made him too handsome.

In the show, he's played by Benedict Cumberbatch, who has something of a female following (and indeed ). John expresses irritation that Sherlock cuts such a striking figure, what with his collar and cheekbones. • In the books, he's also described as having a high-pitched voice, while Benedict Cumberbatch possesses the mentioned below. • Also, John's played. • James Moriarty, an elderly, imposing, bookish math professor in the books, is re-imagined as a young, suave, snappy-dressing career criminal, who's about as as Cumberbatch. • Mycroft isn't exactly handsome, but is far less slovenly than generally depicted.

Because, he's shed most of the extra weight he carries in other adaptations. • And yet his is still a.

Sherlock even mocks his attempts to exercise in 'The Sign of Three', despite the fact Mycroft isn't in dire need of it anyway. • In The Abominable Bride, Victorian-era Mycroft is morbidly obese to the point of having a few years to live. •: • Moriarty strapped one of his bombs onto a little boy and forced him to count down from ten to his own demise. • And again in 'The Reichenbach Fall', where two children are kidnapped and locked in a dark factory where they will starve to death unless they eat the mercury-laced chocolates he left them. •: Sherlock and John. • And, as revealed at the end of s3, the Holmes boys: Mycroft and William.

•: CAM Global News, owned by season three antagonist Charles Augustus Magnussen. •: At the end of Series 4, which many fans and some of the show's creators are saying will be the last. — Mary Watson •: Deep water, from the pool in season one to the Reichenbach Falls in the Christmas special to the well in 'The Final Problem' (in which there are also scenes where the relevance of the arc symbol of the aforementioned examples is revealed. •: A few times, both for individual episodes and for certain seasons: • 'I am —— Locked' (Irene's password screen on her phone) for 'A Scandal in Belgravia'.

• 'Liberty In' and 'Hound' for 'The Hounds of Baskerville'. • 'I.O.U./I owe you' and 'the final problem' for 'The Reichenbach Fall'. • 'Stayin' Alive' (Moriarty's ringtone) serves as this for Series 2 in general. • 'Redbeard' (Sherlock's old dog) for Series 3. • 'AMMO' for 'The Six Thatchers'.

• One that spans across multiple seasons, starting from the end of 'His Last Vow' in Series 3 and continuing through the Special and throughout Series 4: 'Miss me?' •: The Van Buren Supernova is completely fictional. There is no supernova whose light reached the Earth in 1858 and was visible to the naked eye (at least not in this universe).

• Also, in the same episode, Sherlock and John look up at a sky that one would only see in the very best viewing conditions (like in a park on a clear night out in the middle of nowhere)—certainly not in the downtown area of modern, light-polluted London. •: Every scene where Sherlock holds a gun during the 'Great Game' episode. Though that could just be Sherlock not really giving a damn, or rattled after his meeting with Moriarty. • He displays similar traits in 'A Scandal in Belgravia'. Irene, by contrast, displays scrupulously-correct gun safety, keeping her finger off the trigger even while she's pointing the gun at someone. • Sherlock fires a handgun into his apartment wall with no hearing protection. Doing that in the real world would easily lead to a ruptured eardrum, especially after repeat shots - not to mention the risks this brings to whatever's on the other side of the wall.

•: In the pilot, Sherlock smacks a morgue cadaver with a riding crop to test the bruise patterns, claiming 'a man's alibi may depend on it'. As a detective who primarily investigates homicides, Sherlock should know that bruises don't form after death note In the original Holmes stories, where Sherlock pretty much invented forensics, he was mentioned as having beaten corpses to study how well bruises form on post-mortem injuries. This was clearly a to that.

• Bruises form from tiny blood vessels bursting and being trapped under the skin. Post-mortem bruising is entirely possible, especially recently following death; the bruises just wouldn't look quite like bruises on living people. Given the highly esoteric nature of the cases Sherlock takes, though, it's entirely possible that some minutiae of post-mortem bruising was exactly what he was investigating.

•: Sherlock and Watson would be in serious, serious trouble for keeping and carrying loaded handguns on them like that. Watson retains his Army-issued L106 pistol, which is very, very illegal for civilians and ex-military to own. This was likely overlooked simply due to how the characters carried guns in the original stories, which pre-date modern British firearms restrictions. • In 'The Lying Detective' the recording Sherlock made of Culverton Smith attempting to murder him is called 'inadmissible' and 'entrapment.' That is not how entrapment works!

Entrapment is specifically when a law enforcement officer induces another person into committing a crime when they would have been unlikely to do so. Sherlock is not a police officer, and the conversation with Smith is not enough to count as provocation. Smith made the conscious choice to attempt to murder Sherlock, and the tape proves it.

•:, the famous British magician and hypnotist, shows up at the beginning of season 3 to convince Watson that Holmes is really dead using his famous techniques. Or, at least, this is how Anderson imagines it. •: C'mon, it's Sherlock Holmes. It's practically a given. •: • Obviously, Sherlock Holmes ( his full name is revealed in 'His Last Vow' to be William Sherlock Scott Holmes), but also his actor, Benedict Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch. Just say it out loud.

• Then there's his brother, Mycroft Holmes, and, possibly, Mycroft's PA, 'Anthea', although in 'A Study In Pink' she flat-out admits that this is not her name. • Carl Powers. •: Reconstructed. Sherlock makes ridiculous and implausible leaps in logic, but only to the view of those around him — his mind just works so quickly that what seems a leap to everyone else is actually a precise series of steps undertaken with deductive reasoning.

In 'The Great Game,' he's examining a corpse and suddenly tells Lestrade 'that lost Vermeer painting’s a fake.' When John and Lestrade demand an explanation, Sherlock explains that the man's physical health as well as the type and state of his clothes led him to conclude he was a security guard, probably at a museum or gallery given the presence of ticket stubs in his pocket and an insignia of some sort torn from the clothes to prevent identification. Sherlock quickly looked up any museums reporting missing persons and found one, which has apparently come into possession of a thought-to-be-lost masterpiece and is to be selling it tonight. Sherlock thus deduces the man must have known something that would jeopardize the sale and was killed to keep it quiet; the obvious conclusion is forgery. •: Several minor ones, but the big ones take place in 'Reichenbach Fall'.

Moriarty's whole plan depended on Sherlock's tendency to always look for the most complicated, interesting solution. Sherlock's plan depended on Moriarty's need to win no matter what.

•: Well, when one's a psychopath and one's a. •: Sherlock is prone to these to get himself into places he isn't supposed to be. The absolute apex has to be 'The Hounds of Baskerville'. Sherlock gets himself and John into a top secret military base using Mycroft's government ID, but it's John who pulls rank on the Corporal and uses his military background to deflect the soldier's suspicion. •: • In the first episode, the murderer is a taxi driver. Sherlock even mentions that the killer has to be someone the victims trusted and who was in plain sight. Sherlock: All of his victims disappeared from busy streets, crowded places, but nobody saw them go.

Who do we trust, even though we don't know them? Who passes, unnoticed, wherever they go? Who hunts in the middle of a crowd? John: I dunno, who? Sherlock.I haven't the faintest. • Averted in the pilot episode (which was reshot as 'A Study in Pink'), where Sherlock instantly works out the killer's profession.

• Sherlock himself notes that Molly was this to Jim Moriarty. Moriarty didn't think to include her among the list of Sherlock's closest friends (which included John, Mrs.

Hudson, and Lestrade) whom he would threaten to kill to force him to go along with his plan, and this oversight allowed Sherlock to turn to Molly for help in faking his death. • Sherlock, himself, in 'The Empty Hearse' when he disguises himself as a waiter to reveal to John that he's not dead.

He even lampshades it afterwards, commenting on tuxedos bringing distinction to friends and anonymity to waiters. • Then done again in the very next episode, 'The Sign of Three', where the wedding photographer is the (attempted) murderer. His cover allowed him to go anywhere, not be in any pictures, and no one could describe his face since it was typically hidden by a camera. • Vivian, the villain of 'The Six Thatchers' was a secretary. As Mary puts it, receptionists know everything. • Eurus as the shrink in 'The Lying Detective'. •: • Sherlock claims to be a sociopath, but threatening his few friends will set him off spectacularly.

• Although it doesn't quite reach Berserk levels, John really dislikes people questioning his sexuality. • Never, ever, be rude to, or lay a hand on, Mrs Hudson. • • Series 1 and 2: James Moriarty He's the main one overall since he has posthumous plans too.

Also a drug-fuelled hallucination of him is the main antagonist in the special The Abominable Bride. • Series 3: Charles Augustus Magnussen, a master blackmailer who watches the trio, Sherlock, Watson and Mary and in the finale uses information about one of their pasts to black mail them. • Series 4: Sherlock's secret sister, Eurus. After escaping from Sherrinford Asylum, she uses disguises and creates mind games for the duo. She once met Moriarty briefly, cooperating for his posthumous revenge. •: • John in the climax of 'A Study in Pink'. • Sherlock in 'The Blind Banker'.

• Sherlock again in 'A Scandal in Belgravia', although this one is in an entirely mental/deductive way rather than the usual 'swoop in and save you' way. • Lestrade in 'The Hounds of Baskerville'.

• Sherlock and Mary in 'The Empty Hearse'. •: • MePhone.org.uk standing in for Apple's MobileMe service and as a pun on the iPhone. • The search engine of choice is 'Quest Search', and the news website used is the even less imaginative 'Online News'. • Surprisingly averted in 'The Hound of Baskerville' — the bartender tells the pub owner that they're out of 'WKD', which is the actual brand-name of an alcoholic beverage. •: • Season 2 begins and ends with a confrontation between Sherlock and Moriarty where the Bee Gees plays. • Season 1 opens with John speaking to his therapist just before Sherlock enters his life, and Season 2 ends with John visiting her again, eighteen months after his last appointment, after Sherlock has apparently left his life.

• The first episode of Season 1 and the last episode of Season 2 both deal with a man driving his victim to suicide after merely talking to them. Except that, in the second case, we learn that he's not quite dead, and talking to Sherlock wasn't enough—Moriarty also had to eat a bullet!

Or at least, seemingly. • Sherlock's first case involves apparent suicides with no note. His last line in Season 2 is 'This call is my note. That's what people do, right?' • The last lines of the and are 'Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson', where it is said by Mycroft and Mary Watson ( albeit posthumously in a video message).

It is immediately accompanied by a slow motion shot of the duo,,,. •: Several times do have a break-up but reunite soon after. •: One of Sherlock's minor specialties: • Sherlock does a dead-on impersonation of a metrosexual yuppie to fool a woman into thinking that he lived at a posh apartment complex and let him in. • And then again in the third episode, he abandons his usual upper-crust tones for a more cockney accent, pretending to be a grief-stricken friend of the departed, but intentionally getting things wrong.

He knows that people will automatically contradict any mistakes made by a stranger pretending to be a friend or relative, which means that she'll expose things that she wouldn't if he was actually an old friend of her husband. • In 'A Scandal in Belgravia,' he changes his accent briefly again, taking leave of his brother and other government functionaries in a more common accent and slang ('Laters!' ) and later pretending to be a priest who has just been mugged. • Toward the end of 'A Scandal in Belgravia,' Sherlock briefly adopts an American drawl to mock a CIA agent. • Moriarty seems to be putting on a generic English accent in the scene in 'The Great Game' where he meets Sherlock while pretending to be 'Jim from I.T.' , but then reverts back to the actor's natural Dublin for when he reveals himself.

• He does it again in the 'The Reichenbach Fall,' switching from his Irish accent to an American one here and there, without much reason. • 'Doncaster' in Baskerville. • Sherlock spoofs a generic French/Italian accent while attempting his big reveal with John in the restaurant scene in 'The Empty Hearse.' •: • Three 90-minute episodes equals one season. The original plan was six 60-minute stories, of which 'A Study in Pink' was filmed as the first episode. This turned into a 60-minute pilot instead, with the 90-minute version being substantially different. The unusual length of each episode makes their production more like a film than a TV series, so the production time is longer even though the total running time is shorter.

• Each 3-episode season has a two-year gap before the next one. The increasing fame of the two lead actors means that this is not going to change in the near future. • Upon the announcement that Cumberbatch and Freeman had signed contracts to keep the show going for ten more years, the common joke among the fans was 'Great, six more episodes!' •: About as close as you are ever going to get, since this is Sherlock. But upon being given a cigarette: 'Smoking indoors. Isn't there one of those. • After John tries to sacrifice his life to save Sherlock's in their confrontation with Moriarty (even though it didn't work), Sherlock is so flustered that he's reduced to this after the confrontation ends.

• When Sherlock gets drunk and performs his scan of the area all the items appear to him like this, including 'Egg? Sitty thing?' And 'Speaker high tech thing'. •: Used in several episodes to show just how quickly Sherlock's brain works - in comparison to him, everybody else thinks in slow motion. Notably in 'A Study In Pink,' when he explains to John how he knew about Afghanistan or Harry, and in 'A Scandal In Belgravia,' when he decrypts the code. The starkest use occurs in the final episode of the third season, when Sherlock is shot, and three seconds is dragged out to fifteen minutes as Sherlock analyses the attack and his injuries to improve his survival odds.

•: • All Sherlock has to do is sniff Anderson and he is able to deduce Anderson is having an affair (which people will get divorced over) with a co-worker (which many places will fire employees over). He probably has similar ammo against most of the people he knows, and yet, he's still the freak. • It works both ways, however, since he arrogantly and blithely antagonises and embarrasses them despite the fact that they are police officers with, as shown in the first episode, the authority to raid his flat looking for drugs, among other things which could probably get him sent to prison for a good long while if they investigated him for it.

This comes back to bite him in a big way in 'The Reichenbach Fall', when Moriarty finds it very easy to convince the police Sherlock is a fraud and a criminal simply because, with the exception of Lestrade, they all hate him for how he's treated them. •: • John's psychosomatic limp returns for a few seconds at the end of 'The Great Game' when the same leg buckles at the swimming pool. • And again, very slightly, affecting his stiff military bearing as he walks away from Sherlock's grave in 'The Reichenbach Fall.' • In 'A Study In Pink,' the murderer says he's able to get away with his crimes because no one ever pays attention to their cab driver.

This comes back to bite Sherlock in 'The Reichenbach Fall,' when he gets in a cab and doesn't realize his driver is Moriarty. • A more generic case occurs with the theme of never looking at people past their occupation; John fails to recognise Sherlock when the latter disguises himself as a waiter while meeting John again after 2 years. Upon dropping the disguise Sherlock even lampshades the effect a tuxedo has in an establishment full of tuxedo-wearing waiters. Eurus Holmes also takes advantage of this in 'The Lying Detective'. • In 'Scandal in Belgravia,' Sherlock proclaims that 'sex doesn't alarm [him].' Mycroft with 'how would you know?'

Later in 'The Empty Hearse,' Mycroft claims not to be lonely only for Sherlock to ask him how would he know that. • In 'Scandal in Belgravia', Mycroft, after Sherlock has been taken in by Irene, refers to her as a 'damsel in distress' and asks Sherlock if he's really that obvious. In 'His Last Vow', Magnussen points out just how far Sherlock will go to protect John and calls him Sherlock's 'damsel in distress.'

• Sherlock figures out where Irene keeps the incriminating photos in 'Scandal' when John sets off the fire alarm and notes, 'Amazing how fire exposes our priorities.' Then in 'The Empty Hearse' he immediately runs to save John from a bonfire and pulls him out of the fire with his bare hands. This is used by Magnusson to determine that John is one of Sherlock's pressure points. • Also in 'Scandal,' the from 'The Great Game' is shown to end when Moriarty gets, as Sherlock puts it, 'a better offer' for his and John's lives. Three episodes later, Sherlock reveals the sniper aiming at John during his rooftop confrontation with Moriarty also got a better offer, this time from Mycroft's people. • In 'A Study in Pink', Sherlock gets John's sister's gender wrong.

In 'The Lying Detective', Eurus Holmes says the following to John. Eurus: Did it ever occur to you - even once - that Sherlock's secret brother might just be Sherlock's secret sister? •: and Mentioned in John's blog post,, where Sherlock attends a play in which one actor was in love with his supporting actress, who played his sister, although she was dating someone else. •: • Everybody involved in the last scene in 'The Great Game'. Most notably, of course, Sherlock and Moriarty, who have quite the civilised conversation and for a while almost forget about the bomb and the gun. Though, to be fair, John is the one who has enough gumption to crack an actual joke once he's free to use his own words.

Even parroting Moriarty's, however, he does wind up with a slightly sarcastic tone of voice with 'stop his heart'. • Picked back up again at the beginning of 'A Scandal in Belgravia.' With Moriarty mouthing 'Sorry!' To Sherlock while on the phone; Sherlock, wrinkling his nose, mouths back 'It's fine!' •: • Sherlock: • 'Obviously.'

• Cases usually get one of two words: 'Fun' or 'Boring'. He only takes the fun ones, if he can help it. • 'Yep' or 'Nope,' with a distinct popping noise while enunciating the P. • 'The game is on/ The game's afoot.' Usually in joyous/boisterous tone when they're on their way to a new case. • John: • 'It's fine.

It's all fine.' • John also has a tendency to say some variation of 'I'm not gay', 'I'm not his date', or 'we're not together'. • John and Sherlock have their own exchange that varies around Sherlock saying 'Not good?'

, with John's reply being 'Bit not good, yeah.' Later on this develops into John simply saying Sherlock's name disapprovingly. • Irene Adler has two: 'I know [someone with an important job]. Or at least I know what he likes' and ' • Mrs Hudson: 'I'm your landlady, dear, not your housekeeper.' • Although we only hear it once or twice, we are given the impression that 'freak' is a typical nickname for Sherlock from Donovan/Anderson.

• Moriarty's addressed to Sherlock. •: The series is set in a 21st century where the stories were never written and never made their significant impact on popular culture. • This was actually something of a roadblock to filming the Baker Street scenes at the actual Baker Street, due to the plethora of Holmesian landmarks on the street today, leading the production to use North Gower Street to fill in instead.

• A newspaper in 'The Reichenbach Fall' reveals that exists in the Sherlock universe as a well-known writer. Presumably this means that in-universe, and are hard at work on a modern-day version of. Spock from is mentioned in the series, but in 2013 Benedict Cumberbatch had a major role in. If Star Trek exists in the Sherlock universe, someone should probably notice that the bad guy of that movie looks a lot like the famous detective. • It's quite probable that Star Trek was made in the Sherlock-verse, but the reboot movies never happened. • Not to mention Spock quotes Sherlock Holmes in one of the movies.

•: • Sherlock becomes a little more empathetic in the course of Season 1, but his character development doesn't really kick into gear until Season 2, when he becomes more caring and begins to show some real vulnerability. Witness especially his moment with Molly. Season 3 takes his development when Sherlock shows real remorse for deceiving John and does his best to ensure his relationship with Mary is happy and stable.

The Sherlock of 'A Study in Pink' is much less mature than the Sherlock of 'The Reichenbach Fall' but the Sherlock of 'The Sign of Three' is a completely different person. It continues in Season 4, where he puts himself in harm's way to rekindle his friendship with John after Mary's death, and overall, cares about his friends and family so much that flies into a destructive rage after his sister Eurus creates a fake in which Molly must confess her love for Sherlock due to Eurus having bombs in Molly's home, and in a life-or-death challenge where Sherlock must shoot either John or Mycroft, he tries to shoot himself. This dialogue from 'The Final Problem' displays this great change, meant as a to Lestrade's 'great man' quote from 'A Study In Pink'. '' Lestrade: Sherlock Holmes is a great man.

And I think one day, if we're very, very lucky, he might even be a good one. ' Lestrade: Fan, are you? Police Officer: Well, he’s a great man, sir. Lestrade: No, he’s better than that.

He’s a good one. • John becomes much more confident and functional over the course of Season 1 as he recovers from depression. By Season 2 he is capable of both holding down a day job and wrangling Sherlock during investigations, although his dating life remains a mess. Nice To Meet You Jessie J Pdf.

In Season 3 he's processing in getting over Sherlock's death and has a girlfriend he's planning to propose to. • Mycroft in 'A Scandal in Belgravia' after little more than a cameo appearance in the first series. • Molly gradually proves that her loyalty to Sherlock is more than just doormat adoration, culminating in 'The Reichenbach Fall' when she helps Sherlock fake his suicide. Hudson demonstrates she's much tougher and more resourceful than she looks in 'A Scandal in Belgravia'. •: Sherlock's homeless network. Introduced in 'The Great Game' and revealed in 'The Empty Hearse' to not only have helped in keeping eyes on the 'rats' that would lead him to the underground terrorist cell, but also revealed in the flashback at the end of the episode to have likely been responsible in helping Sherlock fake his death. •: During a scene in 'A Scandal In Belgravia', there is a Cluedo board randomly pinned to the wall with a dagger, which goes completely unacknowledged.

In the next episode, John and Sherlock have an argument about Cluedo, with John vehemently refusing to ever play the game with Sherlock again (because according to Sherlock, the only possible solution is for the victim to also be the killer and the rules are clearly wrong). John must have gotten a bit worked up last time they played. •: • John Watson's handgun, particularly in 'A Study In Pink'. • Also in 'A Study in Pink', Sergeant Donovan explains why none of the police (except Lestrade) like Sherlock: they figure one day he's going to grow tired of solving murders and start committing them.

In 'The Reichenbach Fall', this suspicion contributes directly to Sherlock's downfall. • Another one from 'A Study In Pink', John's cane. He uses it for his psychosomatic limp in this episode, then it comes back much later in 'The Lying Detective'. John leaves it in Sherlock's room when Culverton Smith confesses to the murders he committed, unaware that the cane has a recording device in it, which results in his arrest after he attempts to strangle Sherlock. • John's Hamish. John mentions it as part of a in 'A Scandal In Belgravia', and it becomes a plot point towards the end of 'The Sign Of Three' when a seemingly random woman happens to know it.

• 'The Hounds of Baskerville': The Grimpen Minefield, which is prominently introduced soon after Sherlock and John arrive on Dartmoor (like the original story's Grimpen Mire), then forgotten about until the climax, when Dr. Frankland runs into it trying to escape. There is a question as to whether he forgot it was there, or decided to take his chances, like the culprit in the original story. • 'The Great Game' is neatly bookended by an inverted literal Chekhov's gun. The episode opens with Sherlock shooting John's gun at the wall out of boredom, but ends with him pointing but not shooting it, which is fully followed through when he fails to ever shoot it during the opening to 'A Scandal in Belgravia.' • The squash ball that Sherlock randomly bounces back and forth against a wall in 'The Reichenbach Fall' is a major clue in Sherlock faking his death, as revealed in 'The Empty Hearse', where he hid that under his armpit to temporarily stop his pulse, hence the reason why John couldn't detect one and assumed he was dead.

• In 'The Lying Detective', Mrs Hudson's Aston Martin. She uses it to bring Sherlock to John early on in the episode, then John uses it at the end to get to the hospital and save Sherlock from Culverton Smith. •: • Lestrade in 'The Hounds of Baskerville.' • Moriarty himself in 'The Great Game'. Hudson's Repairman in 'The Reichenbach Fall'. • Archie in 'The Sign of Three'. • The lady on the bus from 'The Six Thatchers', and John's new therapist and 'Faith Smith' in 'The Lying Detective', all three of whom are the same person: Sherlock's and Mycroft's previously-implied secret sibling.

•: In 'The Hounds Of Baskerville', John, unsurprisingly, does this in the lab when Sherlock finds him, with John having thought. Sherlock: It's all right. John: NO, IT'S NOT! I saw it, I was wrong!

• John gets a moment of this in 'His Last Vow': 'Why is everything always. Not only due to, but also because he kicks a table at the same time. •: You know a situation is bad if Mycroft lights up. He gets concerned if Sherlock joins in. •: Sherlock's default attire is: dark suit, white shirt, black shoes, black trench coat, dark blue scarf.

Sometimes when sitting around at home he will swap the coat for a dressing gown, and he wore a tux to John's wedding, but otherwise, that's it. In 'The Empty Hearse' when Mycroft's assistant gives him these exact items after Mycroft rescues Sherlock from the Serbians. Sherlock asks for the coat specifically, and the dialogue implies that he feels incomplete without it. • In-universe, the deerstalker hat. Sherlock originally wears one as a disguise and is annoyed that it catches on; this causes to choose this as the gift Scotland Yard gives Sherlock to thank him for solving a case.

Of course, Sherlock is annoyed, but he seems to have accepted it by 'The Empty Hearse', making a face before putting it on to go outside and greet the press. •: • In 'The Great Game', Sherlock deduces that Molly's new boyfriend Jim is gay because of vague traces of make-up, subtle hints in his clothing, and slipping Sherlock his phone number. • Played with when Sherlock mentions that a prominent member of the Royal Family smokes. It's implicitly expected that he will go on a long diatribe about how he deduced the secret. Sherlock goes directly to the smoking gun by pointing out he simply noticed the ashtrays.

• It's implied he wasn't even the one to notice the ashtrays at first, but John; he steals one later in the episode with the quip, 'You see, but you do not observe.' John: I am seriously fighting the impulse to steal an ashtray. • Also in 'The Blind Banker', when Sherlock deduces that a banker he meets has circumnavigated the globe twice in the last month, an when asked how he knew that he says, 'I was taking to your secretary before. She told me.'

It turns out he really had worked this one out because he saw the date on the banker's watch was two days out, implying that he had crossed the International Date Line twice, and was just screwing around. •: • Sherlock's skull, so much so that he apparently needs a replacement for it when Mrs Hudson takes it from him. • Mycroft is very rarely without his umbrella. It's got both a hidden blade and gun. • Irene's phone is her life. •: • In 'The Great Game', Sherlock rips John's clothes off in a darkened swimming pool note okay, pulls off the Semtex-strapped jacket if you're into details, to which he responds, 'I'm glad no one saw that.

People might talk.' In 'The Reichenbach Fall', Sherlock asks John to take his hand while they're on the run. John: Now people will definitely talk. • In 'A Study in Pink,' Mycroft offers John a great deal of money to spy on Sherlock, yet he refuses. In 'A Scandal in Belgravia,' John asks whether Mycroft trusts his own Secret Service: 'Naturally not. They all spy on people for money.'

• In 'The Reichenbach Fall,' John gets a call that Mrs. Hudson has been shot. Sherlock seems unconcerned to hear this and insists he'll stay where they are to work on the case.

John, baffled, notes that Sherlock 'once half-killed a man for laying a finger on her.' (The event in question occurs in 'A Scandal in Belgravia.' ) •: Series co-creator Mark Gatiss's first appearance as Mycroft Holmes was uncredited and intended as a cameo, but the character quickly became a much more significant part of the show. •: Several of Sherlock's antagonists are leading him on a paper chase, like the from 'The Great Game', Moriarty in Season 2 and Eurus in 'The Final Problem'.

He gets in an epic one in 'The Great Game'. John: [Opens fridge innocently, sees human head, slams fridge door shut] Oh FFFFF—!

• John also, in 'The Great Game', never quite finishes his reaction of 'Aw sh-' when he realises he hasn't got his gun on him, when he and Sherlock go after the Golem. • In 'The Hound of Baskerville,' John cuts himself off before he can say 'fuck' when things get weird in the lab. • In 'The Empty Hearse,' in response to Mrs.

Hudson's question about how John responded to Sherlock, Sherlock says, 'F—' before the shot cuts to John in the surgery asking a patient to, 'Cough.'