1
00:00:01,168 --> 00:00:02,784
MAN: And mark it.
2
00:00:36,620 --> 00:00:37,610
B marker.
3
00:00:37,704 --> 00:00:40,537
We're just excited to be back.
Genuinely, properly,
4
00:00:40,582 --> 00:00:43,700
thinking, "Well, look, everybody loves
it, we know that everybody loves it."
5
00:00:43,794 --> 00:00:45,410
And it's a different feeling,
6
00:00:45,462 --> 00:00:48,079
because the first time we did it,
nobody cared or knew about us.
7
00:00:48,173 --> 00:00:50,540
It was a surprise,
the level of response,
8
00:00:50,634 --> 00:00:54,093
the positive response we got
was a real wonderful surprise,
9
00:00:54,179 --> 00:00:56,967
and just utter confirmation
that the hard work had paid off.
10
00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:58,843
And, yeah, it's been a thrill.
11
00:00:58,934 --> 00:01:01,892
The amount of millions of people
in this country who watched it
12
00:01:01,979 --> 00:01:04,596
and who raved about it, and the amount
of critics who raved about it,
13
00:01:04,690 --> 00:01:06,977
and then internationally
how well it did.
14
00:01:07,067 --> 00:01:09,354
This has become such an enormous
international hit
15
00:01:09,444 --> 00:01:11,026
it's sort of preposterous.
16
00:01:11,113 --> 00:01:15,402
It's our vanity project, it's our hobby,
and everybody's joined in.
17
00:01:15,492 --> 00:01:17,904
It's certainly changed from this series
from the last series.
18
00:01:17,995 --> 00:01:20,453
Last series, nobody really knew
who Benedict was,
19
00:01:20,539 --> 00:01:21,654
he wasn't a household name.
20
00:01:21,748 --> 00:01:23,955
It's a very different world this time.
21
00:01:24,042 --> 00:01:27,160
You know, if we're outside 221,
22
00:01:27,254 --> 00:01:30,463
there's a whole row of people
just standing there.
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00:01:30,549 --> 00:01:34,543
Now that I look at Benedict and Martin
capering around on set,
24
00:01:34,636 --> 00:01:37,048
I think, "Those are famous images.
25
00:01:37,139 --> 00:01:40,427
"This room that we're in,
221 B Baker Street, is incredibly famous,
26
00:01:40,517 --> 00:01:44,306
"those two men are now so famous
throughout the world in those roles."
27
00:01:44,396 --> 00:01:46,979
It's a very sudden, very big change.
28
00:01:47,065 --> 00:01:50,808
It's nerve-wracking, when you're a hit,
to keep the quality going,
29
00:01:50,861 --> 00:01:54,570
but I think you therefore try even
harder and push it even further.
30
00:01:54,656 --> 00:01:57,318
CUMBERBATCH: We're tackling
the three biggest stories in the canon,
31
00:01:57,409 --> 00:01:59,116
well, the ones that have
the most amount of resonance
32
00:01:59,202 --> 00:02:00,692
when people mention Sherlock Holmes.
33
00:02:00,787 --> 00:02:02,824
Let's do the three big things,
34
00:02:02,914 --> 00:02:06,999
and the three big things are the Hound,
the Woman and the Professor.
35
00:02:07,085 --> 00:02:09,247
CUMBERBATCH:
It's love, horror and thriller.
36
00:02:17,429 --> 00:02:21,138
In episode one, A Scandal in Belgrav/a,
37
00:02:21,183 --> 00:02:24,767
we have to finish the swimming pool
scene, obviously.
38
00:02:24,853 --> 00:02:28,596
The last season ended on a cliffhanger,
so nobody knew.
39
00:02:28,690 --> 00:02:30,476
Hopefully what we've achieved
is that you're just like, "Oh, my God,"
40
00:02:30,567 --> 00:02:32,023
and then the story moves on
quite quickly.
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00:02:32,110 --> 00:02:33,896
Say that again!
42
00:02:35,572 --> 00:02:36,733
Say that again
43
00:02:36,782 --> 00:02:38,819
and know that if you're lying to me,
44
00:02:38,909 --> 00:02:43,369
I will find you and I will skin you.
45
00:02:44,623 --> 00:02:48,742
What they want is to have the threat
of Moriarty to remain
46
00:02:48,835 --> 00:02:51,793
for the rest of the series.
47
00:02:51,880 --> 00:02:53,837
(SIREN WAILS)
48
00:02:55,550 --> 00:02:59,418
In A Scandal in Belgrav/a, which is
based on A Scandal in Bohemia,
49
00:02:59,513 --> 00:03:03,256
he encounters the only woman
in the original stories
50
00:03:03,350 --> 00:03:05,842
that he really pays
any attention to at all.
51
00:03:05,936 --> 00:03:10,055
Holmes faces one of his deadliest
enemies in the shape of love,
52
00:03:10,148 --> 00:03:12,640
and it comes in the form of Irene Adler,
53
00:03:12,734 --> 00:03:16,102
who's this extraordinary dominatrix,
54
00:03:16,196 --> 00:03:18,813
this incredibly daring
professional woman
55
00:03:18,907 --> 00:03:21,774
who's utterly independent,
fiercely smart
56
00:03:21,868 --> 00:03:23,575
and very resourceful.
57
00:03:23,620 --> 00:03:25,702
Oh, you're rather good.
58
00:03:25,789 --> 00:03:26,950
You're not so bad.
59
00:03:27,708 --> 00:03:31,952
Him meeting a sort of
version of himself
60
00:03:32,045 --> 00:03:34,662
or someone who is his equal.
61
00:03:34,756 --> 00:03:38,044
Steve immediately had this idea
that she should be a dominatrix.
62
00:03:40,137 --> 00:03:41,878
And so that's interesting, doing that,
63
00:03:41,972 --> 00:03:45,636
'cause again you didn't want to
do this cliché of a dominatrix,
64
00:03:45,726 --> 00:03:49,720
didn't want it to be like a sort of Ann
Summers party gone wrong or something.
65
00:03:49,813 --> 00:03:53,556
So we tried our best
to keep it classy and fun.
66
00:03:53,650 --> 00:03:56,893
Well, now, have you been wicked,
Your Highness?
67
00:03:56,987 --> 00:04:00,196
It's not very often you're
standing there in next to nothing
68
00:04:00,282 --> 00:04:04,241
with a leather whip in your hand,
having a go at Benedict Cumberbatch.
69
00:04:04,327 --> 00:04:06,364
Drop it.
70
00:04:06,455 --> 00:04:08,662
I said drop it!
71
00:04:08,749 --> 00:04:12,083
I did say at every opportunity,
"Do you need me to ease off?"
72
00:04:12,169 --> 00:04:14,410
And he was like,
"No, go for it, go for it."
73
00:04:14,463 --> 00:04:17,421
My employer has a problem.
74
00:04:17,507 --> 00:04:19,965
A matter has come to light
of an extremely delicate
75
00:04:20,051 --> 00:04:22,258
and potentially criminal nature
76
00:04:22,345 --> 00:04:25,212
and in this hour of need, dear brother,
77
00:04:25,307 --> 00:04:26,638
your name has arisen.
78
00:04:26,725 --> 00:04:28,887
In the first instance, it's actually
to cover up a royal scandal,
79
00:04:28,977 --> 00:04:32,186
it's to try and put to bed,
no pun intended,
80
00:04:32,272 --> 00:04:38,063
some photographs which are salacious
and ruining in their content.
81
00:04:40,530 --> 00:04:43,272
What do you know about this woman?
82
00:04:43,366 --> 00:04:44,856
Irene Adler.
83
00:04:44,951 --> 00:04:48,069
And I assume this Adler woman
has some compromising photographs?
84
00:04:48,163 --> 00:04:51,246
- You're very quick, Mr Holmes.
- Hardly a difficult deduction.
85
00:04:51,333 --> 00:04:54,200
Generally, Sherlock knows
he's the cleverest person in the room,
86
00:04:54,294 --> 00:04:57,832
and so when he meets Irene,
he kind of...
87
00:04:57,923 --> 00:05:01,006
He might not be the cleverest person
in the room and that's upsetting.
88
00:05:01,092 --> 00:05:03,834
And they're clearly
absolutely made for each other,
89
00:05:03,929 --> 00:05:06,170
so that's a fascinating thing
to play with.
90
00:05:06,223 --> 00:05:07,463
It's a negative, in his book,
91
00:05:07,557 --> 00:05:10,640
it's something that is basically going
to undermine his ability to do hisjob,
92
00:05:10,727 --> 00:05:13,185
to concentrate and focus
and apply logic.
93
00:05:13,271 --> 00:05:16,013
I like detective stories.
And detectives.
94
00:05:17,317 --> 00:05:19,183
Brainy is the new sexy.
95
00:05:19,277 --> 00:05:20,312
(MUMBLING) Position of the car...
96
00:05:20,403 --> 00:05:22,440
Uh, the position of the car relative to
the hiker at the time of the backfire,
97
00:05:22,531 --> 00:05:24,192
that and the fact that the death blow
was to the back of the head,
98
00:05:24,282 --> 00:05:25,317
that's all you need to know.
99
00:05:25,408 --> 00:05:26,944
In Hound of the Baskervilleg
100
00:05:27,118 --> 00:05:29,155
or, as it has now become,
The Hounds of Baskerville,
101
00:05:29,246 --> 00:05:33,490
he comes face to face with the idea
of real, deranging terror.
102
00:05:33,583 --> 00:05:35,540
Maybe we should just look
for whoever's got a big dog.
103
00:05:35,627 --> 00:05:37,664
- Henry's right.
- What?
104
00:05:39,256 --> 00:05:40,963
I saw it, too.
105
00:05:41,049 --> 00:05:44,087
When Sherlock thinks
he has seen a gigantic hound,
106
00:05:44,177 --> 00:05:45,338
then he's really terrified,
107
00:05:45,428 --> 00:05:48,466
because he knows that he can't trust
the evidence of his own eyes.
108
00:05:48,557 --> 00:05:55,304
He is not above that, he's not incapable
of experiencing absolute terror,
109
00:05:55,397 --> 00:05:57,308
and he tries to rationalise it away.
110
00:05:57,399 --> 00:06:01,734
But he goes out on that moor and he
sees the Hound, and he's frightened.
111
00:06:01,820 --> 00:06:04,187
- What?
- I saw it, too, john.
112
00:06:04,281 --> 00:06:08,525
- Just... just a minute. You saw what?
- A hound.
113
00:06:08,618 --> 00:06:10,234
Out there in the Hollow.
114
00:06:11,788 --> 00:06:14,246
A gigantic hound.
115
00:06:14,332 --> 00:06:17,666
It's the most filmed, it's the one that
everyone knows I think the best
116
00:06:17,752 --> 00:06:22,497
and therefore I felt more of
an obligation to include certain things.
117
00:06:22,591 --> 00:06:25,379
There are so many huge, iconic moments
that people expect.
118
00:06:25,468 --> 00:06:28,335
There's a dog, there's fog,
there's Dartmoor,
119
00:06:28,430 --> 00:06:30,922
there's stuff you'd better deliver.
120
00:06:31,016 --> 00:06:34,429
Even the best versions, in the end,
the dog, of course, is a fake.
121
00:06:34,519 --> 00:06:36,351
And I thought,
"Well, I'm not doing that.
122
00:06:36,438 --> 00:06:38,145
"I've got to do something different."
123
00:06:38,231 --> 00:06:40,814
Trying to work that out
almost killed me.
124
00:06:40,901 --> 00:06:43,484
In fact, I took to saying
125
00:06:43,570 --> 00:06:46,312
that Houndwasn't a hound at all,
it was a bitch.
126
00:06:46,406 --> 00:06:49,273
It's based around a military
institution, a military base,
127
00:06:49,367 --> 00:06:51,449
where strange sightings are seen
128
00:06:51,536 --> 00:06:57,623
and memories of things
that didn't quite happen 30 years ago
129
00:06:57,709 --> 00:06:59,325
still kind of haunt people.
130
00:06:59,419 --> 00:07:02,912
There is a Hound. There is...
131
00:07:03,006 --> 00:07:06,590
And it's down to Sherlock to get
to the bottom of what it really is.
132
00:07:06,676 --> 00:07:08,667
And Sherlock, he saw it, too.
133
00:07:08,762 --> 00:07:10,844
No matter what he says.
134
00:07:10,931 --> 00:07:12,513
He saw it.
135
00:07:19,314 --> 00:07:22,523
In the final one,
in The Reichenbach Fall,
136
00:07:22,609 --> 00:07:26,944
it's kind of almost the moment
where he becomes a hero, really.
137
00:07:27,072 --> 00:07:31,817
Up until now he's been this disquieting,
dangerous, maybe potentially amoral man.
138
00:07:31,910 --> 00:07:33,947
This is the one where
he is faced with Moriarty.
139
00:07:34,037 --> 00:07:36,699
It's a brilliant,
very fast-paced thriller.
140
00:07:36,790 --> 00:07:41,626
ANDREW SCOTT: It starts byjim
going into the Tower of London,
141
00:07:41,711 --> 00:07:44,248
attempting to steal the Crown jewels,
142
00:07:44,339 --> 00:07:48,207
which was, I have to say, one of the
most fun days of filming I've ever had.
143
00:07:48,301 --> 00:07:50,417
(CLASSICAL MUSIC PLAYING)
144
00:07:50,512 --> 00:07:56,428
There was a sort of a soundtrack
of classical music in the background,
145
00:07:56,518 --> 00:07:59,431
which I had to sort of dance along to.
146
00:07:59,521 --> 00:08:01,933
Well, I didn't have to. I did.
147
00:08:13,410 --> 00:08:17,904
Moriarty, in a way, is what comes
to define Sherlock Holmes as a hero,
148
00:08:17,998 --> 00:08:19,784
he realises his place in the world.
149
00:08:19,874 --> 00:08:22,081
Ah, Moriarty's smart.
150
00:08:22,168 --> 00:08:24,330
You can't kill an idea, can you?
151
00:08:24,421 --> 00:08:26,332
Not once it's made a home...
152
00:08:26,381 --> 00:08:27,963
there.
153
00:08:32,220 --> 00:08:34,211
We don't think of these as episodes,
154
00:08:34,305 --> 00:08:36,467
we think of them as films,
we think of them as movies,
155
00:08:36,558 --> 00:08:38,515
'cause they're 90 minutes long
156
00:08:38,601 --> 00:08:41,468
and if you just do them
as episodes of a TV series,
157
00:08:41,563 --> 00:08:43,395
they'll seem very slow and very long.
158
00:08:43,481 --> 00:08:45,347
They have to have the size
and weight of a movie.
159
00:08:45,442 --> 00:08:48,025
You can do whatever you want
in Sherlock, there's no...
160
00:08:48,111 --> 00:08:51,149
I think we've shown the audience
that you might expect to see anything.
161
00:08:51,239 --> 00:08:53,947
Well, in this one,
it even goes further and further.
162
00:08:54,034 --> 00:08:56,571
Series 2 has still got all
the on-screen text and things like that,
163
00:08:56,661 --> 00:08:59,744
but there's just new ways
of doing things.
164
00:08:59,831 --> 00:09:02,163
- It's the title.
- What does it need a title for?
165
00:09:02,250 --> 00:09:04,332
McGUIGAN". Yeah, we had
a lot of toys in this one.
166
00:09:04,419 --> 00:09:06,410
We had Phantom cameras,
which are really high-speed cameras
167
00:09:06,504 --> 00:09:09,212
that give you that very, very slow,
slow, slow, slow motion.
168
00:09:09,299 --> 00:09:12,462
CUMBERBATCH: You can only shoot
about 17 seconds I think per go,
169
00:09:12,552 --> 00:09:15,294
then the whole thing has to be
calmed down and put in a corner
170
00:09:15,388 --> 00:09:17,880
and given a cup of tea
and then wound up again.
171
00:09:17,974 --> 00:09:21,467
And that was the sequence
where I disarm Nielson
172
00:09:21,561 --> 00:09:24,974
and clock him on the back of the head,
having opened the safe and it explodes.
173
00:09:25,065 --> 00:09:26,601
Vatican cameos.
174
00:09:29,694 --> 00:09:31,731
CUMBERBATQH".
And I had to do that incredibly quickly,
175
00:09:31,821 --> 00:09:33,232
but it's all sort of slowed down
176
00:09:33,323 --> 00:09:35,405
with this john Woo effect
and the heads going whoa-whoa.
177
00:09:35,492 --> 00:09:39,702
And I grab hold of the gun, disarm him
and clock 'em all off, all in one move.
178
00:09:39,788 --> 00:09:41,620
That was great fun to do.
179
00:09:41,706 --> 00:09:45,950
Sherlock Series 2, for me,
as a Special Effects Supervisor,
180
00:09:46,044 --> 00:09:48,035
-has kept me very busy.
-(SMOKE ALARM BEEPING)
181
00:09:48,838 --> 00:09:51,375
There's a few more bangs,
a few more bullet hits,
182
00:09:51,466 --> 00:09:55,050
a few more atmospherics,
so, yeah, this year is pretty full-on.
183
00:09:59,516 --> 00:10:01,848
- Are we here?
- Two streets away, but this'll do.
184
00:10:01,935 --> 00:10:05,098
CUMBERBATCH: I've had a great deal
of fun doing the stunts.
185
00:10:05,188 --> 00:10:08,601
FREEMAN: You know, me and Ben
know each other reasonably well now,
186
00:10:08,691 --> 00:10:11,934
so I feel comfortable
doing stuff with him,
187
00:10:12,028 --> 00:10:15,111
and so, yeah, things like
the fight stuff or physical stuff.
188
00:10:15,198 --> 00:10:16,438
Punch me in the face.
189
00:10:16,533 --> 00:10:20,322
But I had to let him punch me, that was
part of the deal this time around.
190
00:10:21,079 --> 00:10:22,069
Punch you?
191
00:10:22,163 --> 00:10:24,404
Yes, punch me in the face.
Didn't you hear me?
192
00:10:24,499 --> 00:10:26,536
I always hear "punch me in the face"
when you're speaking,
193
00:10:26,626 --> 00:10:28,993
-but it's usually subtext.
- Oh, for God's sakes.
194
00:10:29,087 --> 00:10:32,205
There was no way... I was not
going to pass up an opportunity
195
00:10:32,298 --> 00:10:35,416
to even nearly punch Benedict
in the face.
196
00:10:35,510 --> 00:10:37,968
There's no way I was
going to pass that up.
197
00:10:38,054 --> 00:10:40,341
However much the stuntman
might have wanted to get in there,
198
00:10:40,431 --> 00:10:42,468
that's my gig-
199
00:10:42,559 --> 00:10:44,550
Punch me in the face.
200
00:10:45,436 --> 00:10:47,222
Punch you?
201
00:10:47,313 --> 00:10:49,350
I said punch me in the face.
Didn't you hear me?
202
00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:51,431
I always hear "punch me in the face"
when you're speaking,
203
00:10:51,526 --> 00:10:53,312
-but it's usually subtext.
- Oh, for God's sakes.
204
00:10:57,157 --> 00:10:59,524
Ow! Ah!
205
00:10:59,617 --> 00:11:01,449
Thank you. That was...
206
00:11:01,536 --> 00:11:04,949
It's the only way that he would
get away with it otherwise.
207
00:11:05,039 --> 00:11:06,404
I think we're done now, john.
208
00:11:06,499 --> 00:11:09,662
You may not remember, Sherlock,
I was a soldier. I killed people.
209
00:11:09,752 --> 00:11:11,834
- You were a doctor!
- I had bad days!
210
00:11:11,921 --> 00:11:13,503
(BOTH GRUNTXNG)
211
00:11:13,590 --> 00:11:17,083
Doing the fall in Re/chenbach Fall
was really exciting.
212
00:11:17,177 --> 00:11:19,134
That's me. That's me up on a roof.
213
00:11:19,220 --> 00:11:20,381
That's not mejumping off the roof,
214
00:11:20,471 --> 00:11:22,838
but it's mejumping off a smaller roof
onto a lower roof,
215
00:11:22,932 --> 00:11:26,345
which is about four feet,
and then that cuts to me on a wire,
216
00:11:26,436 --> 00:11:30,304
dropping 70 feet, I think,
onto a massive inflated bag.
217
00:11:33,902 --> 00:11:34,937
Shem"
218
00:11:35,028 --> 00:11:38,441
Fast. Not terminal velocity
but there's a tiny brake on it,
219
00:11:38,531 --> 00:11:39,771
'cause they need to slow you down
before the end
220
00:11:39,866 --> 00:11:42,073
so obviously if they did that
the last bit of it would look weird,
221
00:11:42,160 --> 00:11:43,901
'cause you'd be braking like that.
222
00:11:43,995 --> 00:11:46,111
So this, it's fast,
fast, fast, fast, slow.
223
00:11:48,833 --> 00:11:50,824
But it's pretty bloody fast.
224
00:11:51,794 --> 00:11:53,626
There's a brilliant kind of montage
225
00:11:53,713 --> 00:11:56,956
where Sherlock starts to describe
a murder investigation.
226
00:11:57,050 --> 00:11:59,007
Two men, a car, nobody else.
227
00:11:59,093 --> 00:12:03,178
And basically it was so that Benedict
could take her along with him
228
00:12:03,223 --> 00:12:07,057
and they share this... I guess it's
a part of the love story, if you like.
229
00:12:07,101 --> 00:12:09,433
And the hiker's taking a moment,
looking at the sky.
230
00:12:10,230 --> 00:12:12,096
Watching the birds?
231
00:12:12,190 --> 00:12:14,602
Any moment now, something's
going to happen. What?
232
00:12:14,692 --> 00:12:15,807
The hiker's going to die.
233
00:12:15,860 --> 00:12:20,479
So, Steven had written the scene which
goes between the house and the field
234
00:12:20,573 --> 00:12:22,564
and we wanted the transitions
between the two,
235
00:12:22,659 --> 00:12:26,368
so Paul McGuigan said
to Arwel, the designer,
236
00:12:26,454 --> 00:12:29,663
"I want bits of the room in the field."
237
00:12:30,375 --> 00:12:33,288
ARWEL WYN JONES: We just replicated
the wall of the living room here
238
00:12:33,378 --> 00:12:35,790
and put it on the side of a road
next to the car, to start with,
239
00:12:35,880 --> 00:12:38,918
and then in a field,
to help with those transitions,
240
00:12:39,008 --> 00:12:41,124
and then took it away again.
241
00:12:41,219 --> 00:12:42,709
Which doesn't sound too complicated,
242
00:12:42,804 --> 00:12:44,966
until you're talking about
a house of this scale
243
00:12:45,056 --> 00:12:46,967
where the one wall is four metres high
244
00:12:47,058 --> 00:12:49,470
b y six metres wide,
with a fireplace in it.
245
00:12:49,560 --> 00:12:52,928
VERTUE: We had this huge bit of wall,
246
00:12:52,981 --> 00:12:56,349
just wandering down the road,
going into the field,
247
00:12:56,442 --> 00:13:01,187
and a hydraulic bed,
which just worked perfectly, I think.
248
00:13:01,281 --> 00:13:03,272
There's a transition from
when he's actually in bed
249
00:13:03,366 --> 00:13:06,734
and kind of starting to come out
of this dream sequence,
250
00:13:06,828 --> 00:13:10,992
and he's in the field and then
has to actually appear in bed.
251
00:13:11,082 --> 00:13:13,073
And Sherlock's getting
really, really tired,
252
00:13:13,167 --> 00:13:16,785
and then out of nowhere appears a bed.
253
00:13:16,879 --> 00:13:19,086
HARGREAVES: Paul, the director,
254
00:13:19,173 --> 00:13:21,540
talked about having a bed
flipping up into shot.
255
00:13:21,634 --> 00:13:25,923
I did exactly that and made a bed
on a pneumatic piston,
256
00:13:26,014 --> 00:13:28,551
which means it's a piston by using air,
257
00:13:28,641 --> 00:13:30,882
and I press a button
and it flipped the bed.
258
00:13:30,977 --> 00:13:33,093
(AIR HISSING)
259
00:13:39,319 --> 00:13:41,606
McGUIGAN: Then he picks up a sheet;
then he just lies there,
260
00:13:41,696 --> 00:13:43,027
and it looks like he's lying down.
261
00:13:43,114 --> 00:13:44,821
And in the next shot,
we're in Baker Street
262
00:13:44,907 --> 00:13:46,568
from the exact same shot we matched,
263
00:13:46,659 --> 00:13:48,650
and we pull up and we see
he's back in Baker Street.
264
00:13:48,703 --> 00:13:50,660
That was wonderful
because I did that moment
265
00:13:50,747 --> 00:13:53,205
and in the rehearsal
people were going, "Oh, my God!"
266
00:13:53,291 --> 00:13:55,658
They were watching, like, ten people
just getting ecstatic about it,
267
00:13:55,752 --> 00:13:57,117
which is quite a rare thing,
268
00:13:57,211 --> 00:14:00,499
to get an immediate audience response
on television.
269
00:14:01,049 --> 00:14:02,255
A lot of times,
270
00:14:02,342 --> 00:14:05,835
people will just put it down to,
"Well, they've CGI'd that. That's easy."
271
00:14:05,928 --> 00:14:09,967
Erm, yeah, I'm upstaged by a bed,
an electronic bed. I can't believe it.
272
00:14:11,434 --> 00:14:14,222
MOFFAT: One of the things
that Paul wanted to bring to it
273
00:14:14,312 --> 00:14:17,304
was the idea that Sherlock Holmes
sees the world in an extraordinary way,
274
00:14:17,398 --> 00:14:19,856
so in a way it's incumbent on us
275
00:14:19,901 --> 00:14:23,019
to visualise the world
in an extraordinary way,
276
00:14:23,112 --> 00:14:25,649
like Sherlock Holmes is
behind the camera as well.
277
00:14:29,077 --> 00:14:33,241
It's one of the best examples
of the camera helping to tell the story
278
00:14:33,331 --> 00:14:35,663
of any television I've ever seen,
actually, I think,
279
00:14:35,750 --> 00:14:39,209
'cause what happens in camera
I think is extraordinary on this show.
280
00:14:39,295 --> 00:14:41,502
McGUIGAN: You can show
the scene, a dead body lying there,
281
00:14:41,589 --> 00:14:44,297
and then suddenly you can do it
from another point of view,
282
00:14:44,384 --> 00:14:46,716
or several points of view,
and then you can dissect that,
283
00:14:46,803 --> 00:14:48,464
and you dissect it in a visual way,
284
00:14:48,554 --> 00:14:52,548
so that you're letting your audience
understand how Sherlock thinks.
285
00:14:52,642 --> 00:14:54,508
HOLMES: Maybe two ideas.
286
00:14:55,311 --> 00:14:57,518
And then we looked at
how Sherlock sees things,
287
00:14:57,605 --> 00:15:02,475
so we use the 5D with the stills images
to go closer into things.
288
00:15:02,568 --> 00:15:03,854
And then we'll shoot the same scene
289
00:15:03,945 --> 00:15:06,357
but we'll shoot it from a different
point of view for Sherlock,
290
00:15:06,447 --> 00:15:09,565
so if he does walk in the room,
we shoot it from his point of view.
291
00:15:09,659 --> 00:15:12,651
So that the first time
you see the scene, you'd never notice
292
00:15:12,745 --> 00:15:15,077
that Sherlock's actually
scanning the whole place or looking.
293
00:15:15,164 --> 00:15:17,030
I know exactly where I'm going.
294
00:15:17,125 --> 00:15:19,366
Because I didn't want him to be going,
you know,
295
00:15:19,460 --> 00:15:22,669
having, like, Six Million Dollar Man
vision or something.
296
00:15:22,755 --> 00:15:26,168
So we just wanted it to feel
very natural to this character,
297
00:15:26,259 --> 00:15:28,671
and then explain a little bit
about how he does it.
298
00:15:28,761 --> 00:15:31,503
And also, you know,
Benedict is fantastic
299
00:15:31,597 --> 00:15:34,134
atjust reeling off
these incredible words
300
00:15:34,225 --> 00:15:36,216
that Steven and Mark have given him.
301
00:15:36,310 --> 00:15:38,677
- Can I have a box of matches?
- I'm sorry?
302
00:15:38,771 --> 00:15:40,432
Or your cigarette lighter,
either will do.
303
00:15:40,523 --> 00:15:41,934
- I don't smoke.
- No, I know you don't,
304
00:15:42,024 --> 00:15:43,640
but your employer does.
305
00:15:43,734 --> 00:15:45,725
CUMBERBATCH:
The deductions are... They're fantastic,
306
00:15:45,820 --> 00:15:48,278
they're sort of show-stoppy pieces.
307
00:15:48,364 --> 00:15:52,323
They are hell to do because you...
However well you learn them,
308
00:15:52,410 --> 00:15:55,118
you have to deliver them
faster than you can think.
309
00:15:55,204 --> 00:15:56,820
- How?
- The same way that I know
310
00:15:56,914 --> 00:15:59,201
the victim was an excellent sportsman,
recently returned from foreign travel
311
00:15:59,292 --> 00:16:01,454
and that the photographs I'm looking for
are in this room.
312
00:16:01,544 --> 00:16:04,627
Everything just comes out
as one linear thought
313
00:16:04,714 --> 00:16:06,751
and it's a stream of consciousness,
almost.
314
00:16:08,092 --> 00:16:09,082
Hmm.
315
00:16:09,177 --> 00:16:10,793
It's very, very, very hard to deliver,
316
00:16:10,887 --> 00:16:13,720
and your mind knows the minute
it's used a wrong preposition
317
00:16:13,806 --> 00:16:15,843
or an incorrect pronoun
318
00:16:15,933 --> 00:16:20,427
or an utterly wrong name, which has
happened on a couple of occasions.
319
00:16:20,521 --> 00:16:22,558
Heaviest oil deposit is always
on the first key used,
320
00:16:22,648 --> 00:16:23,638
that's quite clearly a three,
321
00:16:23,733 --> 00:16:25,895
but after that the sequence
is almost impossible to read.
322
00:16:25,985 --> 00:16:27,942
I'd say from the make
that it's a six-digit code.
323
00:16:28,029 --> 00:16:31,272
Can't be your birthday, no disrespect,
but clearly you were born in the '80s.
324
00:16:31,365 --> 00:16:35,279
There's a huge deduction
Sherlock has by the fireside,
325
00:16:35,369 --> 00:16:39,112
and I just put brackets,
"Sorry, Benedict."
326
00:16:39,207 --> 00:16:42,120
Because, you know, they're monstrous.
327
00:16:43,085 --> 00:16:44,996
You want me to prove it, yes?
328
00:16:45,087 --> 00:16:47,044
We've done some scenes on this episode
329
00:16:47,131 --> 00:16:49,293
where I just point the camera
at Benedict and I say,
330
00:16:49,342 --> 00:16:51,379
"OK, there's no pressure,
331
00:16:51,469 --> 00:16:55,087
"but this six-page monologue,
I want you to do it without any cuts."
332
00:16:55,181 --> 00:16:57,138
We're looking for a dog, yes? A great
big dog. That's your brilliant theory.
333
00:16:57,225 --> 00:17:00,468
Cherc/rez [e ch/'en! Good. Excellent. Yes!
Where shall we start?
334
00:17:00,561 --> 00:17:01,551
How about them?
335
00:17:01,646 --> 00:17:03,262
He thinks and talks in those moments
336
00:17:03,356 --> 00:17:06,769
faster than I can talk at my fastest
talking moments, which is quite fast.
337
00:17:06,859 --> 00:17:08,315
Look at the jumper he's wearing,
hardly worn.
338
00:17:08,402 --> 00:17:10,518
Clearly he's uncomfortable in it.
Maybe it's because of the material,
339
00:17:10,613 --> 00:17:11,728
more likely the hideous pattern.
340
00:17:11,781 --> 00:17:13,237
Suggests it's a present.
Probably Christmas.
341
00:17:13,324 --> 00:17:16,487
Partly because we've committed
this huge heresy of updating it,
342
00:17:16,577 --> 00:17:19,535
we sort of want to say to everyone
who knows the originals,
343
00:17:19,580 --> 00:17:22,242
"Look, everything else
is incredibly authentic."
344
00:17:22,333 --> 00:17:24,745
In fact, you'll never see a more
obsessively authentic version
345
00:17:24,835 --> 00:17:26,417
of Sherlock Holmes than this one
346
00:17:26,462 --> 00:17:28,453
because it is being motored
by a couple of geeks.
347
00:17:28,548 --> 00:17:32,792
There's lots and lots of nods in there
that Steven and Mark wanted,
348
00:17:32,885 --> 00:17:35,047
and they just get so excited
when they walk around the set
349
00:17:35,137 --> 00:17:37,674
and they see all these things. "Oh,
look, there's so-and-so, so-and-so."
350
00:17:37,765 --> 00:17:40,223
And it's like kids with toys,
it's lovely.
351
00:17:40,309 --> 00:17:42,050
Have you got the bartitsu?
352
00:17:42,144 --> 00:17:45,387
Erm, yes, now, you really
stitched me up on that one.
353
00:17:45,481 --> 00:17:47,313
Well, Conan Doyle made it up.
354
00:17:47,400 --> 00:17:49,391
FREEMAN: When you meet
people like Steven and Mark,
355
00:17:49,485 --> 00:17:52,978
who kind of know it probably better
than they know their own family,
356
00:17:53,072 --> 00:17:57,441
that's a whole other level of knowledge
about a writer and their work.
357
00:17:57,535 --> 00:18:00,573
This is a man who can
straighten a bent poker.
358
00:18:00,621 --> 00:18:03,454
GATISS: The scale of the stories
means that we are...
359
00:18:03,541 --> 00:18:06,659
We've got to the death of
Sherlock Holmes within six episodes,
360
00:18:06,752 --> 00:18:11,713
they're big stories, and the big themes
of love and fear and death.
361
00:18:11,799 --> 00:18:15,963
We want to see them
going through the fire together.
362
00:18:16,053 --> 00:18:18,090
Let me come through, please.
No, he's my friend.
363
00:18:18,180 --> 00:18:21,172
GATES: And that doesn't mean
that by the end of this
364
00:18:21,267 --> 00:18:23,258
they've reached the end
of their possibilities.
365
00:18:23,352 --> 00:18:25,468
MOFFAT: These are still the formative
years of Sherlock Holmes.
366
00:18:25,563 --> 00:18:28,396
The most important thing about
this series is not that it's updated,
367
00:18:28,482 --> 00:18:30,519
it's the fact that those two men
are still young
368
00:18:30,610 --> 00:18:33,648
and they're still at the beginning
of what they don't yet know
369
00:18:33,738 --> 00:18:36,446
is going to be a lifelong partnership.