“The extreme of Eurus, who has no connection to anything, is just pure brain. Not understanding anything about what it is to be human makes (Sherlock) realize that (the fact that he has) worked towards everything that he has tried to step away from and deny, is what makes him the stronger one. He isn’t as smart as Eurus or Mycroft, he’s just always going to win against them because he is better and stronger and that is him becoming the Sherlock Holmes of Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett… The wise old man of Baker Street we’re used to who’s still terrifying and cold but has a heart that we never doubt.” The crowd at the BFI heartily applauded that sentiment on Thursday.


Promos have shown Sherlock uttering what might seem an unthinkable phrase coming from his lips: “I love you.” The words are said during a tense stand-off created by sister Eurus in “The Final Problem,” and are directed at pathologist Molly. But the scene almost didn’t happen. Said Moffat, “There was a completely different scene there, and two people liked it. That was me and Mark. Everyone else hated it. On the very last day we spent writing this episode, we started looking at it and said, ‘You know what? Everybody thinks this is shit. Let’s just go to our office and think of something else.’ So we did and it became ‘That’s the best scene in the episode.’ That’s the value of getting really negative feedback.”
Added Gatis, “The emotional turmoil is much stronger especially in the scene with Molly… There’s a ticking clock and she has to say something she can’t bring herself to say and he can’t bring himself to say. It’s really very powerful.”
As for Scott, whose re-entrance had the BFI audience hooting and hollering last week, he said he’s been asked the question of whether he is still part of the Sherlock universe, “every day” since “The Reichenbach Fall” aired.
The Moriarty scenes actually date from five years prior in the narrative, so no, he’s not still alive. Moffat exclaimed, “Can we point something out? In total fairness, we didn’t lie, he’s really dead, gone.”