Radical Dreamer (post: 1312985) wrote:Not being a fan of Robert Downey Jr., the movie looks pretty promising if it doesn't have as much most-likely-unnecessary sex as the trailer implies. XD It could be interesting!
minakichan (post: 1313010) wrote: THAT is the only thing that peeves me. That's about as disappointing as if they had homoerotic subtext. Holmes is CLEARLY asexual, even misogynistic.
KumaruRockz (post: 1313011) wrote:It makes him human. No man can live life without feeling SOME attraction towards women.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1312985) wrote:Not being a fan of Robert Downey Jr., the movie looks pretty promising if it doesn't have as much most-likely-unnecessary sex as the trailer implies. XD It could be interesting!
ShiroiHikari (post: 1313057) wrote:For some reason, your post makes absolutely no sense to me. Maybe it's because you said you're not a fan of Robert Downey Jr. XD
Anyway, yeah, this movie does sound interesting. I like Jude Law and RDJ was fricking awesome as Tony Stark, so...might be fun.
Sherlock Holmes is probably the most reliably written deus ex machina known to man, always only as knowledgeable as the story requires him to be, which frequently meant a lot of bizarre trivia no rational human being would ever need. Tattoos of the East China Sea shipping industry? Really Mr. Holmes?Cognitive Gear (post: 1313094) wrote:For those that aren't familiar with Guy Ritchie's past films, you should definitely expect this to be a different Holmes than you are accustomed to. If this is in line with his past ventures (which it appears to be) we can expect a tons of action, quick witty banter, and more than a few eccentric characters. I wouldn't expect too much investigative genius.
Kkun (post: 1313609) wrote:They're all missing out.
As far as the movie goes, though, it looks like a decent film and a Sherlock Holmes adventure in name only. I'll give it a shot when it comes out, though. I like RDJ.
Bobtheduck (post: 1313618) wrote:I think when classics are adapted, there will always be problems with those trying to update them. It's why I'm against loose adaptations. I think, at the very least, 2 options should be open. The broad audience friendly option and the faithful option.
You confuse people who do not explicitly display any kind of sexual behavior owing to their commitment to some type of cause with those to whom sexuality has no bearing on their psychology whatsoever. In these individuals, it can be difficult to figure out the exact nature of their sexuality, although you can find little hints here and there that it is being sublimated through their work. Is it really to much to assume of men of science like Newton and Tesla who have a deep lifelong passion for exploring nature and her mysteries that they embody Platonic eros, the indwelling longing for truth? And while discussions about Jesus' sexuality are always prone to raise a few eyebrows, and while we don't have much to go on owing to his lifelong rabbinical celibacy, the New Testament's insistence that he took on the full extent of the human condition and was tempted by everything that tempts us makes it highly unlikely they believed Jesus was asexual. Now, in the case of Sherlock Holmes in particular, I argued the following at Theology Web.minakichan (post: 1313031) wrote:No.
No no no.
Asexuals make up 1-2% of the population. These are people who do not feel romantic attraction to ANYONE of either gender. It is ABSOLUTELY possible. Newton was asexual, Tesla was asexual, heck, Jesus and many other Biblical figures were probably asexual.
Secondly, there are homosexuals, although Holmes is not one.
GhostontheNet wrote:You confuse 'no overt sexual behavior in the story' with 'no sense of sexuality at all.' The problem with this approach is that like everyone, Holmes is a gendered being who has a sex drive. So even if he remained completely celibate throughout his entire lifespan in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories, sexuality would still play a factor in his psychology even if it was sublimated into something else (like detective work). After all, is it too much to assume that a man who goes about adventuring and sluething has at least a bit of testosterone going, or does it matter that he is a man at all? Could Sherlock Holmes be a woman and do the exact same things, or would this create fundamental differences in his or her sense of identity?
Fish and Chips wrote: Frankly, the Holmes I'm accustomed to couldn't be played by anything less than an eccentric. I just might have to expand my horizons for this one, though I wish they didn't just call it Sherlock Holmes. Give it the pulp-ish title it deserves like in the magazine serials.
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1313717) wrote:Also, did anyone else totally get a "Wild Wild West" vibe off of it?
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
As a strong believer in the rational order of nature, Sherlock Holmes has always invited stories that communicate with the genre of Gothic horror, in which a supernatural menace of seeming irrationality plays havok upon us mortals. Of course, for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, these stories always ended with the verdict that anything that seemed to be supernatural was, in the final analysis, directly attributable to natural causes. Even so, as a spiritualist, Doyle rejected this hyper-rationalism of his creation, and really did believe in ghosts. For future authors, however, the precedence was clearly set to place real supernatural beings in his way to see what happens and how he reacts to it. It is not, then, as strange as it might seem.KumaruRockz wrote:A Sherlock Holmes movie about witchcraft? xD
If you ask me, the problem with Sherlock Holmes as a subject for films has been that the series The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes was so well done that it is a very difficult act to follow. Since then, any film that attempts a relatively straightforward approach to the Sherlock Holmes myth is almost instantly doomed to look pale in comparison. In this respect, taking the character of Sherlock Holmes and applying the same sense of steampunk adventure found in movies like Wild Wild West and Van Helsing that both reaffirm and subvert their source material is a good approach for making a new movie.Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1313746) wrote:It was less the steampunk aspect and more that they've taken an existing franchise which has fallen out of the public eye for being "stodgy" or something like that and turned it in to a fresh new thing, with wild and zany stars and most importantly a "sexier" coat of paint.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1313751) wrote:This is perhaps the wrong thread to say this in, but I think the new Land of the Lost makes a good comparison to Wild Wild West in that they're both trying to make old TV shows "hip". We saw what happened with Wild Wild West, and from the previews, it looks like pretty much the same thing happened to Land of the Lost.
Anyway, I'm interested in this film solely because of the actors. If it turns out to be clever, well, that's even better. I won't be getting my hopes up though.
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