Tumgik
#but it's about Sherlock
stlgeekgirl · 8 months
Text
Today on: how the hell does my brain connect two completely different things with a third completely different thing in such a way that it's going to make me do a deep dive between two shows that haven't been on the air in nearing a decade?
4 notes · View notes
yeehawpim · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
a comic about fix-it fanfics
138K notes · View notes
skipppppy · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
shoutout to gay detectives and their husbands across history
5K notes · View notes
mearchy · 7 months
Text
7K notes · View notes
contact-guy · 2 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
THE DYING DETECTIVE - part 3 - part 1 - part 2 - "to the last gasp he would always be the master" - there is at least one panel that made me laugh while drawing it so I hope it makes you laugh, too. It's the least I could do.
This will most likely be the last update for a few weeks - going to England on a trip (where Sherlock Holmes lives!!! omg!) - when I return it will be for a cozy early Christmas special, THE BLUE CARBUNCLE.
(This is in the Watsons sketchbook series!)
2K notes · View notes
cthulhum · 5 months
Text
does anyone realize how crazy it is to have the actor of a mostly headcanoned queer ship say the fans were never crazy and they were right all along after 10+ years of everyone just absolutely going nuts over the said queerbaited ship
3K notes · View notes
noodles-and-tea · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
This is what the inside of my ears look like every Tuesday :)))
4K notes · View notes
inkskinned · 2 years
Text
i think one of the reasons glass onion is so fun is that it just... loves the audience back.
so many popular movies and shows these days thrive on a sort of bitter engagement with their fans - where the fans are dismissed as being stupid, annoying, and needlessly angry. we are constantly positioned as being less intelligent as the writers.
so much of "spoiler-free" movie-making relies on writers getting away with one twist in their work, regardless of if that twist was earned. the work doesn't actually have any rewatch value or interesting writing - because they think "good writing" is about "pulling one over" on the audience. they don't focus on making interesting characters or storylines or good endings - they focus on fooling you. glass onion, meanwhile, has faith that the audience has figured the ending out, and that we'll watch anyway, because we love the characters.
so many adaptions of older works... kind of seem to hate the original work. they're done without passion. they're done almost as if checking off a box. so many of them openly mock the audience for enjoying the original, almost directly telling us that we are fools for ever having loved something.
but glass onion. loves the audience. it knows that many of the people watching are mystery-lovers. it is an homage that feels love towards the original works it references. it knows we also love those works; and instead of trying to disparage those works, it allows us to celebrate them.
one of my favorite things about it - and maybe why i found it so satisfying - is that this movie isn't trying to tell you it's the smartest, bestest, most-clever detective story. instead, it asks itself what is satisfying and exciting for the audience? and actually gives us that payoff. it's bright, colorful, and fucking fun.
just... more of this please. i'm very bored of nihilism and grittiness and "shock value" writing. put the love back in. let us love unironically. have your work say i love you too. thank you for sharing this story.
30K notes · View notes
somethingintheforest · 2 months
Text
Sherlock Holmes is a canonically queer character. He makes it abundantly clear that he has no intrest in women, he is not attracted to them, he has no intrest in marriage. He is queer.
If we take the canon texts at face value, he's aroace. But reading him as gay is also another very valid interpretation, given the time period in which the stories were written. Hell, maybe he's both.
Ultimately, I don't think it matters much. He's queer, and that makes me very very happy.
2K notes · View notes
thehobbutts · 4 months
Text
plugging my phone into the charger every night like
Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
readbythestarlight · 5 months
Text
Holmes when a crime has been committed: righteous indignation, judgement, People Are Terrible
Holmes when he’s bored: WHY is nobody committing CRIMES?!
2K notes · View notes
deadhawke · 4 months
Text
There is. Truly nothing funnier on this planet. Than listening to Aabria and Erika describe omegaverse to Brennan and Lou. I have not cry laughed this hard in years.
2K notes · View notes
heyheresathou · 6 months
Text
how do y'all not let the things you like consume your entire being
2K notes · View notes
literarycinematics · 1 year
Text
"i'm so normal about this piece of media" i say, fresh from consuming it for the 5th time this month
6K notes · View notes
contact-guy · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
MYCROFT INTERLUDE - an imagined conversation between Holmes and Mycroft in 1888, after the events of the Greek Interpreter, when Watson and Mycroft meet for the first time. I was thinking about the 1885 Labouchere Amendment and Mycroft being protective of his younger brother.
(this is a part of the Watson's Sketchbook series)
3K notes · View notes
arrtemos · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
This is what happens when you listen to the Sherlock & CO. podcast while sketching
1K notes · View notes