karadinart (
karadinart) wrote2012-01-10 09:22 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Speculation on Reichenbach
since the obvious fear is Sherlock's literal death, and since we can infer that Moriarty is out to discredit Sherlock, taking in account Benedict's words 'may find it difficult to come back' I'm gonna guess that Sherlock's Fall is his inability to serve any longer as a consulting detective, which would certainly burn the heart out of him. In some ways, death would be kinder.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I have so many speculative questions, none of which are really possible to answer until the episode airs. Like: is the fall literal or figurative? Or maybe Moriarty wants to permanently disable Sherlock in some way but not kill him? Or maybe capture him and make him insane, pushing him over the edge in that way?
I can't help but wonder if Moriarty will get away, too. I definitely like him as a main antagonist who is mainly in the shadows, and I don't want anything bad to happen to either of them...I'm so curious as to which direction the writers will take it.
no subject
Ah, it's nail chewing time isn't it?
no subject
Oh, man. My poor fingernails. I find if I can paint over them with anything it helps me resist the urge. :D
I really enjoy the idea of having an evil mastermind in the shadows behind many, if not all, of Sherlock's cases, so I don't want to trade that in. So I find myself rooting for nobody being killed or seriously put out of commission...
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Sherlock and John are now internet celebs, and you know how fast elements of fandom can turn on the things they love, I wouldn't be surprised if we maybe see some of their fans featured on the blogs turn against them.
no subject
I see. That makes a lot more sense. Sherlock just basically has to be himself to get people to seriously dislike him or pull up charges on him.
no subject