It's rare that I find a fandom wiki as good as the ones I create (Lifetime Movies Wiki), but this one is. It's detailed, with a beautiful layout, and all around outstanding! About the only thing wrong is there's no comments section on the individual pages. You should really enable those, it draws people in, and let's fans discuss about individual episode topics. Anyway, great job!
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Hi fellow enthousiast,
I just discovered this amazing website and want to thank all of you for contributing. Really enjoy browsing the wiki page.
I've watched the whole series quite a few times and have some inconsistencies, updates on plots described on this site and other things.
What is the best way to get them reviewed and verified by you and changed on the site?
Kind regards,
Mark
With Elementary being an modern reimagination of Sherlock Holmes, I wonder what a modern take of Hercule Poirot would look like.
Feel free to tell me what you guys think.
Hello!
If anyone is interested in creating a new page for a character, please use the updated formatting on Sherlock Holmes' page for reference.
Thanks!
My adoption request for the wiki was recently approved, and so far I've updated the wiki's light/dark themes in Theme Designer and created some "branding" images for the site, such as a new site logo, community image, and favicon.
I've also edited some of the problem templates that were interfering with how this wiki is viewed on mobile. Ultimately, the goal is to get rid of such templates; however, as they are linked to pretty much every page on the wiki, it will be a while before they can be removed.
Templates affected so far:
Any future updates regarding major template and/or theme changes will be posted on my user blog.
If you have a suggestion for improvements around the wiki, feel free to share them! Thanks!
Unless I'm missing something, "Sand Trap", S6, E8, doesn't answer a basic question: how did Laura Wexler end up in the concrete shown at the beginning of the episode? Seems to me, the whodunit is resolved without a "howdunit". The dude seems good for the murder, but there's no explanation how he has access to a construction site and its concrete apparatus.
This is at least the second time, the writers seem to have become lazy with their writing for Holmes. There was an episode in an earlier year where the whodunit took center stage, but when it was resolved, no explanation as to how the actual murder was carried out (and in that instance, the dude responsible for the murder did not seem big enough to have forcefully pinned a guy to a wall through the torso).
I am rewatching the Elementary series on TV right now and really enjoying things I missed the first time around.
I have googled for days! and not been able to find any information about the black coffee mug they use with the white round spots (snowflakes?) on it. Joan uses it a lot in the episodes.
Of course on the show, It would be 'mismatched' as all their furnishings are, but considering some of the actual furniture has been identified and you can even buy some of it retail, I was hoping to find out about the mug.
Anyone? thanks in advance!
S1: E4, Sherlock said he was never shot, but in S5: E2 he said he was shot five times. One of them was shown by the series at the end of S1, but the others... And it's unlikely the Show hasn't bothered to perform the other four times.
Sooo... they( the other 4 times ) probably never exist.
Hi fellow Elementary fans! I'd like to introduce you to Elementary My Dears, a podcast about Elementary. I'm Alison, I cohost the show with my friend George. I'm a diehard Elementary fan, while George is watching the series for the first time. Each episode we're joined by a different guest, and together we recap an episode of Elementary and do little deep dives into the various topics we come across in the show. It leads to fascinating conversations, strong opinions, and a lot of laughs.
We'd love for the Elementary Wiki community to listen and reach out to us with your thoughts and feedback. Elementary My Dears is available on most podcast platforms, and we're around on social media if you'd like to follow along.
Just curious if this is the favorite episode of others.
Do you remember Captain Thomas Gregson (Aidan Quinn) talking about partners holding hands facing the world together? I've thought of that passage several times in the years since I'd heard it and would like my memory refreshed.
Any suggestions you have for finding that quote are very much appreciated!
So, nowhere really says who the main villains of each season is but having seen Seasons 1-6 and read a bit about 7, I pretty much figured it out.
If you haven't seen it, most of these will be spoilers.
...
Season 1 - Jamie Moriarty (obviously)
Season 2 - Guillaume De Soto, seeing as how the main reason Mycroft is in New York is to take him down. Tim Sherrington only took over for the last two episodes, where Le Milieu still had a presence. (I'm not sure if De Soto was returned to power after Mycroft was exposed to Le Milieu and faked his death but it sounds like he may have been killed by Sicilian mafia in Season 6?) One might count Sherrington anyway as final antagonist of the season.
Season 3 - Del Gruner, as the nemesis to Kitty, the guest star for the first half of the season. Oscar Rankin only had an impact on two episodes even if the second was the finale and he caused Sherlock's relapse, but one could count him.
Season 4 - Joshua Vikner, obviously, as the new leader of Moriarty's organization who wants Morland, guest star of the season, dead. He must've been based off the Robert Downey Jr. films' Moriarty.
Season 5 - Tyus Wilcox, the supreme leader of the gang SBK who has a presence throughout the season and with Shinwell, the guest star of the season, as the informant trying to take them down.
Season 6 - Michael Rowan, who happens to be the guest star of the season rather than the nemesis of the guest star of the season. This serial killer has more of a presence in the season than Moriarty.
Season 7 - From what I can tell, Odin Reichenbach.
Hey everyone, I'm MakeShift and I've been assigned to the Elementary Wiki as your Wiki Manager! I'm here to help you guys and act as a sort of "middleman" between the community and full-time Fandom staff, and to make sure we keep everything healthy and in great shape.
While I'm at it, I might also bring up Fandom's latest project, the Unified Community Platform, or UCP. Over the next little while, Fandom will be transitioning over to the UCP, and so I'll be here to help make that process smooth for all of you. In how the UCP affects the general user, the project will seek to make editing and getting around wikis a whole lot easier, so it's nothing but an upgrade in terms of editing and content creation, and a bonafide benefit to everyone. If you're in need of any more information surrounding that, feel free to check out the previously linked blog, or even shoot me a message!
Overall, if you need any help, don't be afraid to swing me a message, and I'll try my best to solve any problems you guys might have!
In Season 1, when Sebastian Moran leaves a note at Holmes' house, is he leaving that note for Sherlock or Morland? When Sherlock interrogates him, Sebastian says "That was your house?". Does this indicate that Moriarty was targetting Morland since Season 1?
The age of “Mina” here on the wiki is clearly incorrect.
The actual Mina is supposed to be 20yo (she will get her trust fund in a month or two, when she reaches 21). She was abducted in 2004, and the episode aired in early 2016. Rather than being 4 (as stated in this wiki) when she was abducted, she could have been no younger than 8yo, and she was probably 9.
The brownstone layout:
The basement: storage then also Joan's office. Outside access to street and access to ground floor via stairs.
Ground Floor: kitchen, Sherlock's room (once referred to as the guest room when Irene stayed with them). Outside access via back door.
First floor: Library and two other work rooms. Outside access via front-door.
Second floor: media room.
(Third floor?/) floor under the roof: a bathroom, Joan's, and briefly Kitty's, room.
Rooftop: beehives.
Some of the info and pictures are wrong too. The work rooms pictures on the third floor are actually pictures of the first floor work rooms & library.
I think that Sherlock's mother's ring was hidden behind the fireplace in his room, but I'm not certain.
S2e6 what's the relation between the man who is fanatic by Detective Gregson and the end of the storie?
Yesterday, after a long time, I see again the episode 1x21. I'd like to know how work the code that Moriarty uses to talk to Moran. Although sherlock discovers the key to reading, I could not figure out how to decipher it. Can you help me? Has anyone understood how it works?