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    • High Level Overviews
    • Meeting Sherlock Holmes: Roommate Interview
    • Relationship with Information
    • Temperament and Interpersonal Skills
    • Relationship with Watson

    It’s always useful to look at each character from a high level perspective. I’m going to do that here in the form of a bulleted list, calling out any major similarities or differences that I noticed between each Sherlock Holmes and what it might mean for their personality types. I’ll start into more nuanced comparisons in later sections. 1. The BBC...

    Since RDJ’s Sherlock already had a well-established relationship with Watson at the start of the movie, this section will focus on the BBC and book versions. As someone who saw the BBC show first, the stark difference in the book version of this scene struck me. In the BBC version, Sherlock Holmes initially presents as brusque, condescending, and d...

    Here, there is a clear distinction to be made between RDJ’s version of Sherlock and the other two. See, the book version of Sherlock Holmes relates a man’s brain to a small attic. I could explain it, but I think I’ll actually copy in the full quote below and go from there. That very last sentence demonstrates the basic, over simplified idea. Origin...

    The BBC and RDJ versions are narcissistic. It’s a shame, really, because the book version of Sherlock is not this way. He’s polite and socially competent, albeit candid in regards to his opinions and deductions. He will fake politeness, and present himself as friendly and amiable to get what he wants. When he’s blunt, it’s usually a byproduct of st...

    Book Sherlock’s relationship with Watson is friendly in nature and not at all overbearing. He doesn’t typically drag Watson into cases, or make demands of him. (He enjoys Watson’s companionship, and thus invites him to come along.) This Sherlock is fully autonomous, and often keeps to himself. Watson describes him like this:“Holmes was certainly no...

  1. Sherlock Holmes: Character Analysis. Sherlock Holmes is a fictional detective in Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories. Famous for his deduction skills, he is an esoteric character, this making him more entertaining as the readers try to guess what his next steps will be.

  2. Personality and habits. Knowledge and skills. Reception. Legacy. Adaptations and derived works. Works. See also. Notes. Sherlock Holmes story references. Citations. Further reading. External links. Sherlock Holmes ( / ˈʃɜːrlɒk ˈhoʊmz /) is a fictional detective created by British author Arthur Conan Doyle.

  3. 1 Identity. 1.1 Physical appearance. 1.2 His clothing. 1.3 Smoking habits. 1.4 Physical condition. 1.5 His personality. 1.5.1 Taste for unusual. 1.5.2 Sociability & Friends. 1.5.3 Attitude. 1.5.4 Habits. 1.5.5 Emotions. 1.6 Convictions. 1.6.1 Philosophy. 1.6.2 Religion. 2 His Profession. 2.1 Motivation. 2.2 Methods. 2.2.1 Observation.

  4. Sherlock Holmes is an extraordinary personality and the first real modern hero. The appearance of Holmes. Regarding his energy Holmes is similar to a giant feline – a black panther, for example. He is taller than six feet (around 183 cms). He is lean, his gait is easy and energetic. He is very athletic and has exceptional brawn.

  5. Sherlock Holmes is brilliantly clever, sharply intellectual, and captivatingly mysterious, and he is an object of fascination in his fictional London and the real world. Read on to discover what we know about the Great Detective—or at least, what we think we know.