Sherlock: the Abominable Bride (2016) [Blu-ray]
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close  Sherlock: the Abominable Bride (2016) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  TV 
Starring: Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman, Una Stubbs, Rupert Graves, Louise Brealey, Mark Gatiss.
Director: Paul McGuigan
Genre: Crime | Drama | Mystery
DVD Release Date: 01/12/2016

Season 1  |  Season 2  |  Season 3  |  Special  |  Season 4

Disc 1: The Abominable Bride (93 minutes [1:33])

Benedict Cumberbatch (The Imitation Game) and Martin Freeman (The Hobbit) return as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson in the acclaimed modern retelling of Arthur Conan Doyle's classic stories. But what if this wasn't the modern day? What if it was the late Victorian period? What if the world's most famous consulting detective and his best friend lived in a Baker Street of steam trains, hansom cabs, top hats and frock-coats? Welcome to Sherlock in 1895!

Sherlock and Watson journey to the 19th Century to solve a puzzling case of a murderer who has apparently returned from the grave.

Storyline: Imagining himself back in the 1890s, Sherlock is visited by Inspector Lestrade after newlywed Emelia Ricoletti, having apparently killed herself in public, murders her husband Thomas in front of witnesses before vanishing. Some months later Holmes is approached by Lady Carmichael, who tells him that her husband Sir Eustace has been threatened by Emelia, who then seemingly does away with him. With an intrusive Moriarty crossing him, Holmes attempts to solve the enigma, with unexpected help from Watson's wife Mary and evidence of a conspiracy involving half the population of the country. Written by don @ minifie-1

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Michael Reuben, January 14, 2016 Sherlock has now joined in the grand U.K. tradition of the holiday special, releasing a separate episode for broadcast on New Year's Day 2016 both abroad and at home. In England, an even-more-special version appeared in cinemas with behind-the-scenes footage. Now, just ten days later, BBC Home Video has released Sherlock: The Abominable Bride on Blu-ray.

U.K. holiday specials are an unpredictable breed, but they typically depart from the episodic format with which a show's fans are familiar. The Abominable Bride was preceded by months of feverish speculation, as the BBC released production stills of Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman's John Watson in Victorian garb, looking very much like characters directly out of the pages of Arthur Conan Doyle. How would series creators Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss manage to send this quintessentially 21st Century pair back in time? What turn of fate would transform them, and might it possibly involve a crossover with the creators' other hit show, Dr. Who? Would Sherlock and Watson enter the TARDIS?

To the disappointment of many, The Abominable Bride delivered nothing remarkable on the time-travel front. Without spoiling any plot elements for those who have yet to view it, let's just say that the device used to transplant our heroes to the era of horse-drawn carriages is both simple and familiar. Even though The Abominable Bride racked up impressive viewership numbers, cries of disappointment and betrayal from long-time Sherlock fans could be heard from both sides of the Atlantic even before the final credits rolled.

Having watched The Abominable Bride a second time on this superior Blu-ray presentation, I view it differently. While there is admittedly an element of bait-and-switch in the Victorian packaging, Sherlock's New Years special turns out to be about something even more interesting than time travel. To employ a word heard repeatedly during the episode, the special takes a "deep" dive into Sherlock's own psychology, exploring issues that have been lurking in the shadows of the series since it began. Perhaps that sounds cryptic, but not all Sherlock fans have yet seen The Abominable Bride, and this review will not reveal its central mechanism.

(Note, however, that events from the first three seasons of Sherlock are freely discussed. Newcomers take heed.)

Clues to what Gatiss and Moffat are up to can be gleaned from the selection of clips, spanning all of Sherlock to date, that precede The Abominable Bride. Thereafter, a single word—"Alternatively"—redirects the narrative to the late 1870s and the Second Anglo-Afghan War, from which a convalescent Dr. John Watson returns to England to restart his life. As in "A Study in Pink" from Season One, Watson encounters an old school friend, Stamford (David Nellist), who introduces him to Sherlock Holmes, and the partnership at 221B Baker Street is born.

What's especially noteworthy about this "alternate" introduction of Holmes and Watson is how easily the characters created by Cumberbatch and Freeman slip into the Victorian era, with only minor alterations (such as addressing each other by surnames). It's almost as if the creators of Sherlock want to brag about how faithful they've been to Conan Doyle. What most sharply separates these two versions of the partners' initial meeting on either side of a 125-year divide is Louise Brealey's Molly Hooper, the faithful morgue attendant who first appeared in "A Study in Pink" but has now been replaced by "Dr. Hooper", a man (albeit one whose mustachioed face should be familiar to any Sherlock fan). The difference in women's roles is a running theme throughout The Abominable Bride, further underlined with the appearance of Amanda Abbington's Mary Watson as a lonely wife pining for her husband John to spend more time at home. Even Una Stubbs's Mrs. Hudson strikes a different tone in her 19th Century incarnation, complaining to Watson how little she appears in his published accounts of Sherlock's exploits.

Some years after their introduction, Holmes and Watson are presented with a case by Inspector Lestrade (Rupert Graves, in muttonchops). A wife, Emilia Ricoletti (Natasha O'Keefe), dressed as a bride has committed a spectacularly public suicide by shooting herself in the mouth, but then some hours later the very same lady was seen murdering her husband (Thomas Kyd) in an equally public manner, having apparently risen from the grave for that purpose. Months later, after other husbands are reported murdered by this spectral avenger, Holmes is retained by Lady Carmichael (Catherine McCormack) to protect her husband, Sir Eustace (Tim McInnerny), from a death threat by the very same ghost.

The alert viewer will already have noted the similarity between Emilia Ricoletti's manner of death and that of Jim Moriarty on the roof of St. Bartholomew's in Season Two's "The Reichenbach Fall". And indeed, the Ricoletti case is rife with the kind of misdirection and false identities that are the trademark of the late Moriarty. Anyone who recalls the conclusion of "His Last Vow" in Season Three should be prompted to consider the parallels between Emilia Ricoletti's post-mortem exploits and the surprise reappearance of Jim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) on London TV. The two cases are inextricably linked. The Ricoletti case turns out to be less an investigation than a portal through which Sherlock the man descends deep (there's that word again) into the past looking for answers, and Sherlock the show probes deeply (yet again!) into the psyche of its main character.

No episode of Sherlock would be complete without an appearance by Holmes's brother, Mycroft, and The Abominable Bride obliges with a supercilious glutton (creator Gatiss in a fat suit) whose obesity recalls that of Mr. Creosote in Monty Python's The Meaning of Life. The hostility between the Holmes boys has always had an undercurrent of filial attachment, and The Abominable Bride casts new light on that relationship.

The conclusion of The Abominable Bride points us back to the riddle posed by Moriarty's reappearance in "The Final Vow", and it may be that the Bride's psychological hijinks cannot be fully understood until Season Four of Sherlock, when we discover just what the deceased mastermind's video image really means. Until then, The Abominable Bride is best enjoyed as a historical fantasia on the contemporary world of Sherlock, an opportunity to review and reflect on the twisty path that Sherlock and Watson have traversed not only in their three seasons of modern adventures but in the century and a quarter since Conan Doyle first brought them together. The Blu-ray is a superior presentation with entertaining and informative extras.

Trivia:
  • obliquity of the ecliptic - is the term used by astronomers for the inclination of Earth's equator with respect to the ecliptic, or of Earth's rotation axis to a perpendicular to the ecliptic. It is about 23.4° and is currently decreasing 0.013 degrees (47 arcseconds) per hundred years due to planetary perturbations. [See also Ecliptic (Wikipedia)] It’s tempting to conclude that this is another deliberately jarring clue that all is not as it seems, given Sherlock’s previous well-documented feelings (in both the TV series and the original text) about astronomy.
  • First episode in the series to feature the famous Sherlock Holmes line "Elementary, my dear Watson."
  • Sherlock calls John "Dr. Watson" in this episode.
  • The case of "Ricoletti of the club foot and his abominable wife" is an unrecorded case from the official Holmes canon. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle mentioned it in the short story "The Musgrave Ritual," but never wrote a full story about it.

             (Possible Spoilers) *** The trivia items below may give away important plot points. ***

  • Sir Eustace's impending death is announced with five orange pips, as in the original story by Arthur Conan Doyle, "The Five Orange Pips." Later on, the involvement of a secret society is revealed, who appear to be wearing sheets with tall pointed masks. This is because in that original story, the secret society behind the crime (and who sent the pips) was the Ku Klux Klan.
  • Sherlock Holmes and John Watson of 1895 are in a carriage to meet Mary Watson. Watson asks Holmes about his wife. When Sherlock is vague with him, Watson shouts, "Sherlock, tell me where my bloody wife is, you pompous prick, or I'll punch your lights out!" Notice during this line that Watson's moustache is gone and he is wearing his modern day clothes. It is a glitch in Sherlock's mind palace, perhaps.
  • The photograph of Irene Adler in Sherlock's locket is the same as the one that is shown in Series 2, Episode 1: "Scandal in Belgravia." The Irene Adler character is not rendered to 19th century costume as the other characters are.
  • In this episode, Moriarty calls himself "The Napoleon of Crime." In Arthur Conan Doyle's original story, "The Final Problem," Sherlock called Moriarty by this title and also did so in many other non-canonical works, including the film Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011), but this is the first time in the BBC's Sherlock (2010) series that he has been given this title. In Series 3, Episode 3: "His Last Vow," Sherlock calls Charles Augustus Magnussen "The Napoleon of Blackmail."
________

Cast Notes:
Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock Holmes),
Martin Freeman (Dr. John Watson),
Una Stubbs (Mrs. Hudson),
Rupert Graves (DI Lestrade),
Mark Gatiss (Mycroft Holmes),
Andrew Scott (Professor Moriarty),
Louise Brealey (Molly Hooper),
Amanda Abbington (Mary Watson),
Jonathan Aris (Anderson),
Yasmine Akram (Janine Donlevy),
David Nellist (Stamford),
Catherine McCormack (Lady Carmichael),
Tim McInnerny (Sir Eustace Carmichael),
Natasha O'Keeffe (Emelia Ricoletti),
Tim Barlow (Wilder).

IMDb Rating (12/04/16): 9.2/10 from 527,046 users
IMDb Rating (07/10/16): 8.2/10 from 253,050 users Top 250: #154

Additional information
Copyright:  2016,  BBC
Features:  Spoiler warning: None of these extras should be viewed before watching The Abominable Bride.
  • A Study in Sherlock (1080p; 1.78:1; 29:54): Hosted and narrated by Mark Gatiss, this feature on the making of The Abominable Bride also looks back over the first three seasons. Cumberbatch, Freeman, Stubbs and Andrew Scott (Moriarty) are among the interviewees.
  • Production Diary (1080p; 1.78:1; 5:06): Gatiss hosts a visit to the set during the filming of a key sequence.
  • Writers Interview (1080p; 1.78:1; 3:50): Gatiss and Moffat discuss the appeal of Sherlock.
  • Creating the Look (1080p; 1.78:1; 30:34): A "play all" function is included.
    • Afghanistan
    • Window smash
    • Maze
    • Food props
    • Locations
    • Victorian London
    • Costumes
    • The epiphany
  • Sherlockology Q &A (1080p; 1.78:1; 20:23): Amanda Abbington, Una Stubbs, David Nellist, producer Sue Vertue and Steven Moffat answer a variety of questions about Sherlock.
Subtitles:  English SDH
Video:  Codec: MPEG-4 AVC (25.99 Mbps)
Resolution: 1080p
 Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Atmos
Time:  1:33
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
ASIN:  B013JBJ7O6
UPC:  883929488155
Coding:  [V4.5-A]4.6 MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producers: Sue Vertue, Elaine Cameron; Writers: Steven Moffat, Mark Gatiss, Arthur Conan Doyle ; Directors: Paul McGuigan; running time of 93 minutes; Packaging: Slipcover in original pressing.

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