damn right.
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— Richard Castle, Always. (via alittlebirdytoldmethat)
I am proud to be part of a species where a subset of it’s members willingly put their lives at risk to push the boundaries of our existence.
- Neil deGrasse Tyson
(via darcystarbuck)
M: Casting John Watson was a longer process because we needed to find a fit to Benedict. You think, there’s two alpha males there. That’s not gonna work. Or somebody would come in whose energy was a bit too submissive and it wouldn’t be a match of equals. They needed to be a sort of commanding officer and a slightly junior officer but they’re still officers. And they respect and love each other, really. But Martin came in and it was just instant.
S: It wasn’t just what he did. It was the effect he had on Benedict. Benedict suddenly became even more like Sherlock Holmes if Martin was in the room. It was slam dunk! We couldn’t contemplate anybody else for Watson the moment we saw Martin and Benedict together.And in line with my previous post, it also warms my heart to know that the reason why Martin Freeman was chosen to play the ever-loyal Dr. John Watson was similar and entirely parallel to the reason why Dr. Watson had carved a permanent place in Sherlock Holmes’ life, as his partner, his friend. Because even though Benedict was already brilliant in himself, it was Martin who brought out the best in him and made his character truly come to life.
And I love — really, truly, especially love — the way their dynamic on-screen is a true reflection of the nature of Sherlock Holmes’ and John Watson’s relationship: you can see that Martin, like Watson, watches Benedict’s every acting nuance and movement and takes his cues from there, knowing how to act by reacting to everything Benedict was doing. And Benedict, like Holmes, is constantly spurred on by the steady but not overpowering presence of Martin, and his theatrics and dramatics are necessarily reigned in by the subtlety and restrained humor of Martin’s acting.
This is what makes a perfect on-screen partnership: when the actors are truly the characters which they play.
(via darcystarbuck)
S: Benedict’s got the looks of a Sherlock Holmes. He’s got that leading man sort of a thing. That Byronic thing. Given that we wanted Sherlock Holmes at the start of his career, when he has to be about thirty, he’s one of the very few actors about that age who’s got the gravitas and the imperiousness that will sell Sherlock Holmes to you. He has to be able to lord over proper police people. Walk into a room and do that.
M: Benedict was the only person we saw and it just clicks right away.I love how parallel the casting of Benedict Cumberbatch was with the way Sherlock Holmes’ character was originally conceived. The way Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss describe their choice of Benedict as the only actor they could ever think of to play the titular role was parallel to how I think Sir Arthur Conan Doyle would’ve conceived the character of Sherlock Holmes (and, to an extent, how he perceived Dr. Joseph Bell): that this man is truly the only one of his kind, the only one in the world.
That’s what I most love about Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss as creators — they didn’t choose to create the “Sherlock” series primarily because of financial and political reasons (although of course that had some bearing), but because they were, first and foremost, fans of Sherlock Holmes. And I think that part of the reason why this series became so successful was because of what most creators fail to incorporate into their creations: the love they have for both the characters and the story.
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— “A ship like this, be with you ‘til the day you die.” (Mal)
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— Kate Beckett, Castle
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— Arthur C. Clarke
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