Previously: Elementary 1x02: While You Were Sleeping.
The opening scene of this episode was so dire that I was straight-up boggling at the screen. A twelve-year-old gets into a car with a strange man, who then leaves "THANK YOU" balloons behind as a taunting gift for the kid's parents? WHAT. First of all, this is cheesy as hell, but also it doesn't make sense once we know that the boy has the emotional intelligence to begin manipulating his captor almost immediately, and within two years is masterminding his own crimes. Our society is so riddled with paranoia about child abduction and paedophiles that the "get into my van" narrative is something that children are warned about from a very young age, making this episode's opening scene rather difficult to believe. I realise that putting it this way does sound somewhat like victim-blaming, like smart kids "shouldn't" get kidnapped, but considering the characters involved I feel like it's a fair point.
It would have made more sense if the writers had implied that Adam had shown signs of psychopathy even as a child, and that he might have "allowed" himself to be abducted out of curiosity. There was already some hint of that in the form of Adam saying he enjoyed seeing his grieving parents on TV, but it was never really followed through. Either you can have a manipulative teenage genius serial-killer who forces an adult man to be his accomplice, or can you have a character who at the age of twelve is naiive enough to get into the car of a complete stranger in a scene that seemed like it was lifted directly from a PSA video. I just don't think that they can plausibly be the same person, even allowing for the effects of trauma.
The crime stories in the first two episodes of Elementary were kind of so-so, but 1x03 made me think that there's a real Dr Jekyll/Mr Hyde thing going on when it comes to the writing in this show. On the one hand we have the witty, thoughtful writer who deal with all the Holmes/Watson scenes and drops e e cummings references into the dialogue, and on the other we have the cliche-dependent moron who writes the crime subplots using some kind of CBS-affiliated Random Crime Generator.
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Costume-wise, this episode brings sweet, sweet validation to my theory that Holmes doesn't give two shits about what he looks like. Not only do we hear him state that showering is a low priority (a stark contrast to the BBC's eternally well-coiffed Sherlock), there's a scene where he literally did not notice whether he was wearing a shirt or not. Which was actually kind of impressive considering the fact that it seems to be autumn in New York. In the first couple of episodes it was cold enough that everyone was bundled up in sweaters and scarves, but maybe the heating in Holmes' apartment is just really good?
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Miscellany
- Disappointed by the lack of BEES.
- Disappointed by the lack of VIOLIN.
- Angus the phrenology skull is a prop from House's office in House, MD. Head writer/producer Peter Blake (co-writer of this episode of Elementary) stole it from the set when the show was wrapping up.
- "From a drop of water a logician could infer the possibility of an Atlantic or a Niagara without having seen or heard of one or the other." -- I loved this ACD quote, just dropped casually into dialogue. Happily, JLM's Holmes has the correct voice and inflection for this to work as something he'd actually say.
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