http://spacemutineer.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] spacemutineer.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] sherlock602013-09-21 11:11 pm
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Granada Discussion Post: The Three Gables

Let's talk telly in the discussion post for Granada's TV adaptation of The Three Gables. If you haven't seen this episode yet, you can find it at YouTube and on DVD. Follow me behind the jump for my random thoughts and impressions. Please add your own in the comments!

Canon discussion for The Three Gables is available in this week's canon discussion post.


- Oddly, this episode is like a distorted parallel version of the Illustrious Client from a few weeks ago, with one of our heroes injured in a losing fight, the case pivots on an attempt to stop a ill-begotten marriage. Isadora is described here as a "destroyer of men" and Baron Gruner is nothing if not a destroyer of women.

- Thank heavens for Granada filtering out the ugly racism in the canon! Hooray! Although, honestly, it's not as if they could keep the original text in this case.

- Mrs. Hudson is just awesome at the beginning of this episode, fearless and funny. "You were responsible for this mess," she scolds Steve Dixie, before she physically throws him out of the house, hitting and shoving the man until he's out the door. Fantastic. Holmes loves it too.

- Much appreciation for Holmes actually taking this case seriously in this adaptation and leaves Watson as Mrs. Maberley's guard for the night. Too bad Watson disobeys every instruction he is given and goes to sleep upstairs and away from his charge. By the time he knows what is happening, elderly Mrs. Maberley is on the ground, telling him to leave her and go after the thieves. She's tough in this version too.

- Watson takes a pretty serious beating here that isn't in the original story. Jeremy Brett's Holmes is rather casual about the whole thing. He doesn't even help Watson down the stairs when he only makes it halfway. The best we get out of him is an observation that Watson needs to redress his hand injury. Disappointing. In Bending the Willow, the book about the Granada series, Brett discussed his thoughts on the relationship between Holmes and Watson. He didn't seem to believe Holmes and Watson were particularly close friends or even all that fond of each other really, which is so strange to a canon reader. There is a lot of praise to be given to Jeremy Brett for the accuracy of his portrayal of Holmes, but it is hard not to wish he had understood better and delved deeper into the real friendship that drives the partnership of Holmes and Watson.

[identity profile] mundungus42.livejournal.com 2013-09-26 11:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I saw this episode fairly recently, so when I went back to read the original story, I was struck by the changes made for film, particularly that Holmes in ACD doesn't connect the beating Isadora's thugs give Douglas with his untimely death.

I also found it interesting that instead of having Douglas die abroad, we get to see him at his grandmother's house writing passionately through his pain out in the gazebo. While this certainly makes it clear that Isadora is directly responsible for his death, it makes the timing of the Dixie's attempted intimidation and the subsequent break-in messier, since the manuscript is always at the house and not recently-arrived with his personal affects.

While I like that the directors were focused on making Holmes see what he doesn't in ACD (because what film/TV version of Sherlock Holmes isn't obsessed with making Holmes seem superhuman?), it's true, his relationship with Watson suffers for it. Thanks for the perspective!