In the books, Sherlock Holmes was brought back after Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was pressured by fans to do so, and the same happened in the series. While season 3 of Sherlock was well received, the quality of the stories was very different to that of its predecessors, with each case coming to a solution in not-so-believable ways.
Adrienne Tyler is a features writer for Screen Rant. She is an Audiovisual Communication graduate who wanted to be a filmmaker, but life had other plans and it turned out great. She is an Audiovisual Communication graduate who wanted to be a filmmaker, but life had other plans and it turned out great.
Adrienne is very into films and she enjoys a bit of everything: from superhero films to heartbreaking dramas, to low-budget horror films. Every time she manages to commit to a TV show without getting bored, an angel gets its wings.
When she's not writing, you can find her trying to learn a new language, watching hockey go Avs! Breakfast food is life and coffee is what makes the world go round. It was great. By Adrienne Tyler Published Aug 25, Here's all you need to know In the Series three opening episode, The Empty Hearse, Sherlock presented three possible explanations for his miraculous survival.
The initial two solutions turned out to be bright red herrings. The first involved fitting a mask of Sherlock onto the corpse of Moriarty while the man himself was attached safely to a bungee cord. The second upped the ante by portraying Sherlock and Moriarty as in cahoots to fool John with a makeshift dummy before staring into each other's eyes and leaning in for a kiss. Sherlock reveals at the end of the episode the third solution that involved an inflatable crashmat, members of Sherlock's homeless network and Molly bloodying up his body and a stress ball to disguise his pulse.
After Moriarty hoodwinks the criminal underworld, Sherlock is believed to be in possession of a computer code used to bypass all security systems.
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