Ottawa Citizen

Sherlock picks up where it left off

- JILL LAWLESS

There’s something rotten in Baker Street.

It may just be the diaper of baby Rosamund Watson, whose arrival at the start of the fourth season of Sherlock disrupts the relationsh­ip between brilliant, demanding detective Sherlock Holmes and his long-suffering friend Dr. John Watson.

The offspring of John and his enigmatic wife Mary — with Sherlock as a somewhat skeptical godfather — is one of the few things program-makers are willing to reveal before the first of three new episodes airs Jan. 1 on PBS.

“The unofficial alternativ­e title for episode one is The Three Watsons, because the baby changes the dynamic,” said Mark Gatiss, the show’s co-creator. But, he stresses: “Not in a cutesy way.”

Fears of domestic coziness are quickly banished in the opening episode, officially titled The Six Thatchers. Its central whodunit involves half a dozen plaster busts of former prime minister Margaret (Iron Lady) Thatcher.

That’s just the starting point for 90 minutes of virtuosic puzzlesolv­ing, prickly friendship and the spectacula­r return of ghosts from one character’s past.

The new episodes pick up where the previous season left off almost three years ago. Since then, fans have had to make do with a onetime special last year that took the characters back to their Victorian roots.

The show’s success means Benedict Cumberbatc­h, who plays Holmes, and his Watson, Martin Freeman, are in huge demand, and Sherlock must fit around their other projects. Cumberbatc­h jumped back into Holmes’ deerstalke­r hat right after finishing work on the Marvel adventure Doctor Strange.

Everyone involved in Sherlock is sworn to spoiler-free secrecy about the plot, although Cumberbatc­h offers that it finds the great detective “at the top of his game, at the very bottom of his soul.”

He says viewers will see more of Sherlock’s vulnerabil­ities as he faces crises both personal and profession­al.

“It would be very dull if he was permanentl­y a kind of impregnabl­e hero who was always right,” Cumberbatc­h said during a break from filming. “There’s some spectacula­r own-goals, misses and mistakes in this series.”

Cumberbatc­h said over the four seasons, he’s tried to probe what makes Sherlock tick — “What’s his Achilles heel?”

“It’s been interestin­g how that person locked in a bit of glacial ice has slowly been thawed into someone we can actually relate to and understand,” Cumberbatc­h said. “And there’s a lot more of that in this series.”

There is also a pivotal role for Mary, played by Amanda Abbington, whose secret past as a highly trained assassin was revealed in season three. There has been intense speculatio­n about what will happen to her, inspired in part by the character’s fate in Arthur Conan Doyle’s original stories.

“I like the idea of her not being there forever,” said Abbington, who recently split from real-life partner Freeman after a 16-year relationsh­ip. “She wasn’t (there forever) in the books, so I don’t think she should be in this. It’s about Sherlock and John, and it should be about them.

Co-creators Moffat and Gatiss still sound slightly bemused at the volcanic success of their modernday take on the cerebral sleuth. During the first series, Cumberbatc­h and Freeman could film in London’s teeming Trafalgar Square without drawing much attention. Now, crowds gather outside the building that plays 221B Baker St. on every shooting day there.

Gatiss says there’s no formula for the show’s success. “It’s like bottled lightning,” he said. “It’ll never happen again. We’ve all had hits, but this is just a phenomenon.” The Associated Press

 ??  ?? Benedict Cumberbatc­h
Benedict Cumberbatc­h

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