seperis: (Default)
seperis ([personal profile] seperis) wrote2012-10-06 12:11 am

ep: elementary 1.02

Honest to God, Lucy Liu is freaking amazing and she and Johnnie Miller are magic together.



For me, a very solid episode, and to shake things up, covering the awesome of Watson first, and also because this was very much a Watson-centered ep.

Watson as Investigator

Watson's presence at the first murder scene starts being awesome before she gets there, when she's about to leave and Sherlock gets a call to check a crime, which literally brings her to a dead stop on the sidewalk, her newly developed detective intuition going off like whoa. As Sherlock wanders around being--well, Sherlock and leaping letters of the alphabet without entirely explaining how they connect, Watson proves the art of dramatic timing is a personality trait by confirming Sherlock's conclusion about a missing armoire. Again, with a picture, which I can't tell if that's significant in some very specific way or just a really cool coincidence or possibly just to link it back to the first ep immediately to show Watson is getting into this investigating thing.

One of the neat things about this ep among many neat things was the utilization of Watson's medical skills; instead of stabbing a coma patient in the softest part of the thigh, Watson does a less criminally assault-like manual test and explains the purpose of it.

Also, and this ep confirmed it for me; Watson is brilliant. I'm going to say that while she and Sherlock are different types of brilliant, it's fairly obvious she's able to follow along more and more easily as she gets familiar with Sherlock and even more tellingly, knows how to frame questions correctly so she can get answers she can use. That's not something I'm used to seeing demonstrated like this.

While it makes sense that Sherlock would find it hard to break down why he comes to the conclusions he does because that probably is very dependent on the very different way he thinks, it's a lot less common for there to be a character acting as audience who, due to the role they're playing, doesn't eventually come across as the less bright. Watson, on the other hand, obviously can see the shape of what he's doing--and again, she's dealing with someone who thinks very differently than she does--so she's not asking because she doesn't get it and it's not that she's taking it on faith because omg genius; she's asking because she wants to know how he got there and since she knows how to frame her questions, she gets the answers she needs.

Watson and Sherlock

Full disclosure: I ship them like I haven't shipped a het couple since Tom and B'Elanna on Voyagee, so with that in mind.

I am deeply, deeply attracted in all ways to partnerships that are based on both mild mutual antagonism combined with a sense of resigned connection. Watson's is slightly less obvious than Holmes', but hilarious to watch in that she knows, knows that Sherlock is the kind of person dollar store ceramics were invented for (so you can buy many and break them against the wall without breaking your checking account), and yet, here she is.

Relationship negotiation continues, and on several levels, as a professional companion and client being the titular position being fought out combined with the fact that they are almost painfully similar and they are really aware of that.

Let's talk about Watson and limits. I love, and I do mean this, love mildly competitive/antagonistic friendships. I also love that Watson, being familiar with Sherlock, is dropping the hammer on him immediately every time he treads over the line from acceptable to dick, and I love beyond words the text is supporting her when she does it. Honest to God, if the show keeps this up, I could have found my OTP of snarky relationships without the cringe factor. Not only are they a work in progress, Watson is damn well progressing them at speed, and I like both how she does it, and how Sherlock responds to her blunt drawing of lines.

They aren't friends yet, and Sherlock throwing that out makes that clear; what's also clear is that generally, you don't need to state what your relationship isn't unless you're uncomfortably aware that you may be forgetting that and need the reminder even more than you need to remind them. Which was kind of adorable, as they quickly began negotiations to work on their trust skills while experiencing mutual appalled horror that friendship might be sneaking up on them--as friendship does, all shadowy and deceitful like that.

Watson As Watson

The meeting with former boyfriend Tai, who is ridic tall btw, gives us two interesting bits of information; it seems to imply that Watson gave up medicine willingly rather than being ripped away from it, and that her current job is a conscious choice that allows her the opportunity to combine punishing herself with helping people. I'm kind of impressed that she managed to find a job that she can be good at while hating it passionately, and therefore avoid any danger of taking any kind of pleasure in being instrumental in helping people rebuild their lives.

And I really want to know so much more.

Sherlock the Recovering Addict

I honestly wasn't sure how the show planned to deal with Sherlock the recovering junkie, whether they'd stunt it when needed for plot purposes, token it in and forget it entirely, or well, make it part of the storyline, the character development, and the daily life of Sherlock. My biggest worry--and I will continue to worry--is that it would be minimized quickly as Sherlock Is Over That Phase and Bootstraps Willpower, but second ep, interesting.

Sherlock hating group sessions, yes. Watson, being a professional, requires his attendance, yes. Sherlock mentally if not physically completely blowing it off, yes. The implication that Sherlock is Over This Phase? No. The show is supporting the premise that Sherlock is a junkie and hey, he's just out of rehab, and he's still not over it and may never be over it. And that he knows this is obvious--that it pisses him off like a lot? Also really obvious. And that he resents Watson as a visible reminder of what he perceives as his own failure and weakness? Yes, and yes, and yes.

Sherlock and personal do not do well together right now. His panicked response to the idea that Gregson might find out about his drug use was both extremely personal as well as professional; he wants access to crime scenes, to continue to help, but God above, he can't stand the thought of Gregson thinking less of him. His reaction to Watson and the violin is gorgeously consistent with poor impulse control (which might either be a factor that caused his original problems with addiction or was exacerbated during his period of addiction) and his insta!reaction to anything personal.

Two of the most interesting moments:
1.) while speaking to Gregon's friend who he calls on his meth addiction, after getting his agreement to help them, he pauses, then adds a sincere recommendation of where he went to rehab if the guy wants to get help. It was funny, yes, but it was funny because Sherlock was being genuinely helpful post-threat.
2.) Refusing to go out for drinks with Gregson and Bell not only because Sherlock is still avoiding non-professional social contact, but because he's a recovering addict.

Sherlock Being...Well, Sherlock

I really like this different take more and more, and like I said in my earlier review of Sherlock, what's really working for me most is they aren't going either with coldly!analytical!genius (to avoid any sign of emotion) or crazy!genius (to excuse emotion). He's volatile, yes, but not at psuedo-bipolar levels, and he can be coolly analytical, but not hitting chillingly serial killer vibes. It's also fairly clear that when he's focused, he kind of tunes out how to get along well with others, he's not oblivious to it, or unable to correct himself. I'm not sure if the show is going for this on purpose or I am just in a state of breathless hope, but I'm seriously wondering if his abrasiveness is something he is both aware of and maybe does actually want to correct it, he just is not sure how to go about it.

Granted, a lot of this I'm reading through Watson, but still. There's something attractive about a character whose a dick, knows it, and just maybe wants to be less of one.

Sherlock and Watson

The ep covered a lot of both professional and personal development, but it also showed that despite Sherlock's denial of BFF with Watson, he can and does compromise with her and it's not entirely motivated by their professional relationship. This is possibly because practically speaking, giving Watson what she needs to do her job, that being personal information about himself, is creating a situation that is probably incredibly dissonant; the more he tells her about himself and the more time he has to spend with her, the more he likes her, and the more he likes her, the less he wants her to know about his less than sterling behavior. I'm hoping that this is addressed in the show, mostly because I'm not sure he's even aware of it yet.

My Affection For This Show Has No Words

The show continues to prioritize Sherlock and Watson's relationship as well as developing Watson both in relation to the mystery of the week, and my favorite part, the mystery of the week is the vehicle they progress with.

Note: this may be corrected and better organized later when I am less squeeful. It's just, the squee is so very strong right now.
hradzka: Crixus, from SPARTACUS: BLOOD AND SAND, labeled "Hello, my name is Crixus. I'm your woobie." (crixus woobie)

[personal profile] hradzka 2012-10-06 07:13 am (UTC)(link)
I think I'm going to wind up being the official harsher of squee for ELEMENTARY: Liu's giving as well as taking is solid -- maybe the most solid thing the show has done to date --but I can't go into the squee because I find myself really disliking the show. It's got that kind of weird TV-stagey vibe that I really dislike but associate with a lot of network TV and big-budget production, where they hit one tone and don't vary it even though the story would be much better served by their doing so. The last scene with the sister in ep 2 is a great example: the medically-induced coma gimmick was really dumb, but Holmes's asking, "Why was she still in her coma?" is a really great bit. Because it *turns* the scene, changes it from obligatory "I still love her" to chilling. Except the tone of the scene doesn't change at all, so it really falls flat. There are a lot of other things that bug me -- the characters don't feel like Holmes and Watson to me; there are bits where Miller comes off as more Holmesish, but very few where Liu, though I like her, really comes off as Watsonian. The sober-companion gimmick may be part of this, but even though they're starting to play up Liu's interest in cases, they're not showing her joy enough. And that's one of the things that's great about ACD's Watson, to me, one of the things that absolutely makes the character: Watson *loves* seeing Holmes do what Holmes does. He really enjoys it, tries his hand at it on occasion. But I don't get that sense from Liu's Watson yet.

Also: the low quality of Holmes's deductions are really, *really* painful to me. To be fair, it is extremely difficult to write very smart characters, and it is *extremely* hard to write good clues and deductions for Sherlock Holmes, and to come up with good cases for him, but the writers of ELEMENTARY are just going for the desperately basic in terms of deduction. They're trying to go for a weird mix of fairly convoluted cases and third-grade clues, and it doesn't pan out a lot of the time.

One positive thought: possibly my favorite character moment for Holmes and Watson is at the beginning of THE SIGN OF THE FOUR, with the pocket watch. I wonder if Watson's elder brother is going to figure in ELEMENTARY as a motivation for her becoming a sober companion. Consider his canonical fate, as deduced by Sherlock Holmes: "He was a man of untidy habits,--very untidy and careless. He was left with good prospects, but he threw away his chances, lived for some time in poverty with occasional short intervals of prosperity, and finally, taking to drink, he died." Watson's discomfort around corpses is, as lampshaded in episode two, a really dumb character trait for a surgeon, even one who lost a patient. So here is some fanon that fans of ELEMENTARY might find plausible: she's not upset over having lost a patient after all. The reason that Watson walked away from a highly technical specialty to focus on addicts is that her brother was an addict. He threw away his chances, lived for some time in poverty, and, caught up in his addiction, he died. The reason that Watson does not like corpses has nothing to do with actual corpses as such, but because she got sick of dealing with her brother's crap, looked down at her parents for still caring about him, performed occasional wellness checks very begrudgingly, and then *she was the one to find her brother's body,* and every time she sees a corpse it brings the guilt and horror of that moment back.