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Young Sherlock S01E01 (2026) [Full Movie] [Must See]Full EP - Full
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00:05That's it. That's it. Don't snap it. Take one. Top. Cast to the river.
00:14I can't even sail. I can't even sail. I can't. I can't. I can't.
00:20I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't.
00:26In the merry month of June from beyond.
00:29I can't. I can't. I can't.
00:33I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't.
00:34Get up.
00:35Play with me.
00:37Where is she?
00:40Vildivia?
00:41Vildivia!
00:43My dog!
00:45My dog!
00:46My dog!
00:47My dog!
00:49My dog!
00:58My dog!
00:59My dog!
01:00My dog!
01:16My dog!
01:19My dog!
01:21My dog!
01:21My dog!
01:26My dog!
01:27I don't know why you're getting so agitated. I just said you have a rather large cranium.
01:33Mr. Holmes.
01:36You'll have to be quicker than that, Barney.
01:40Saw that one coming a mile off.
01:42You need to hide your intent for Barney.
01:44I'm a man!
01:46I'm a man!
01:47I'm a man!
01:57Break it off!
01:59Break it off!
02:00Break it off!
02:01Break it off!
02:02That you, brother dear?
02:03Cheers, brother dear.
02:04Put him down, Barney.
02:10Nice of you to pop by.
02:12Holiday's over.
02:13Follow me, Sherlock.
02:18Really, I meant no offence, Barney.
02:21Captain, Bob, Mr. Dickey.
02:23Sherlock, your brother couldn't get us out, could he?
02:25My dog, you heard the question?
02:26I have one card to play, Sherlock. It's either you or him.
02:30Two years will fly by, Mr. Dickey.
02:33What exactly landed you in prison this time?
02:36Reading.
02:37Reading doesn't get you arrested, so what did?
02:40Oliver Twist.
02:42I rather took a shine to the Artful Dodger.
02:44Ah, so sorry, sir.
02:45A pickpocket by trade.
02:47I thought to myself, I wonder if I could do that.
02:49Allow me, sir.
02:51This fell out of your pocket.
02:53The problem is, extracting a gentleman's wallet isn't as challenging as returning it.
02:56Fake!
02:57No, no.
02:58Why would you be returning the wallet with its contents intact?
03:01It's the extraction that is the attraction.
03:04That explains the first three months for you sent down for six.
03:07I am considering transportation to Australia.
03:10I'm afraid that won't be possible, Your Honour.
03:13Excuse me?
03:141857, the Penal Servitude Act.
03:16According to precedent, a court is either bound by the decisions of the court above it
03:19or the decisions of a court of equivalent standing,
03:21thus in this case making it conspicuously impossible to send a man to Australia.
03:25Two months for contempt.
03:26As you could be in breach of the Act.
03:28Three months.
03:29In an ironic turn of fate, could subsequently find yourself stood in this very dock.
03:32Six months!
03:34I find it astonishing that the judge didn't see your point of view.
03:37My point exactly.
03:40You could have got me out sooner.
03:47Ah!
03:48There it is.
03:49I knew there was a face underneath that nest of crows.
03:53So, how was the food?
03:54The chef was often a little heavy with the weevils in the gruel,
03:57but the claret was excellent.
04:00You should try it sometime.
04:01Yes, I'm quite happy where I am.
04:03Respectable job in the civil service.
04:05Respectable.
04:06Or conventional.
04:07Secure.
04:08Predictable.
04:08Influential.
04:09Tedious.
04:09Reliable.
04:11Consistent.
04:11Stable.
04:12And responsible.
04:13You should try it sometime.
04:15And on that note, prepare yourself.
04:17I come bearing a gift.
04:20Apprehensive.
04:20I've secured you a place at Oxford.
04:23Arguably the greatest university in the world.
04:25You have, brother dear.
04:26I have, brother dear.
04:27Well, I'm surprised.
04:29Grateful.
04:32I've always been rather fascinated by a life dedicated to the pursuit of learning.
04:35And I'll be there on government business.
04:37So I'll be able to keep an eye on you.
04:39Make sure your hair is brushed, your teeth are clean, your shoes are shiny.
04:41When do we go?
04:42Imminently.
04:43I'm touched.
04:44Moved.
04:45Get dressed.
04:46We're going to pay our respects to mummy.
04:56Mr. Holmes.
04:57We've moved your mother to a bigger room.
05:12Sherlock.
05:13Hello, mother.
05:14Please don't stand.
05:15My darling.
05:17Were the three months hard, my darling?
05:20It was quite an education, really.
05:22Ooh.
05:23Does that hurt?
05:24Oh.
05:25Only when I laugh.
05:27Father wrote to me.
05:28He's in Vienna.
05:30Sounds well.
05:33They're listening to me.
05:38A whirring.
05:40All the time.
05:43They can hear everything I say.
05:45And there's a man with a bird claw.
05:49And he's coming back for me.
05:54I'm sorry I haven't been able to visit much recently, mother.
05:57It's not your fault.
05:59But I'm in Oxford now.
06:00So I'll be close by.
06:03And I can visit much more often.
06:06You have to promise me something.
06:09Anything.
06:10You must stay out of trouble.
06:13Understood.
06:14I will.
06:15No more trouble.
06:17I won't lose you too.
06:28University College was founded in 1249, making it the oldest college in Oxford.
06:32I did try to get you in there.
06:33I tried Balliol College II, 1263.
06:36Then Merton, 1264.
06:39Sadly, dear brother, none of the founding colleges would take you.
06:42So...
06:42I suppose I'll have to put up with the clumsy modernity of 1458.
06:45All right, then.
06:48Now, I got your foot in the door.
06:50Time to start taking advantage of your advantage.
06:56There's something you're not telling me, isn't there?
06:57You'll thank me for it.
06:59One day.
07:01Ah, Smudger.
07:02Mr. Holmes, sir.
07:04Sherlock Holmes.
07:05That'll be me, sir.
07:07This is yours, sir.
07:10Oh, cool.
07:13Mycroft?
07:14Yes?
07:15Why is the head porter proffering an apron?
07:17You're a smart boy.
07:18Work it out.
07:20I'm to be a porter, not a student.
07:22Oh, no.
07:23You've got to work your way up to be a porter.
07:25You're a scout.
07:26I'm a scout.
07:27And a scout does...
07:28Whatever I tell him to do.
07:32I'm here to serve and not to learn.
07:34Oh, no, no.
07:35You'll learn, all right.
07:35Go on, son.
07:37The shitters aren't going to clean themselves, are they?
07:40Mycroft.
07:42Bon appetit.
07:44Mycroft.
07:49The shitters, sir.
08:02Mr. Chen and I appreciate your government sending you to escort us from London to Oxford, but it wasn't necessary.
08:09Princess, I can assure you the honor is all mine.
08:12My government values our relationship with China very highly.
08:17We wouldn't want anything to go wrong.
08:20Is that why you've arranged an armed escort?
08:25We're all having a lovely day.
08:26I said...
08:26...
08:26...
08:26...
08:26...
08:26...
08:28...
08:29...
08:29...
08:29...
08:30...
08:31...
08:31...
08:31...
08:38...
08:41...
08:42...
08:46...
08:47...
08:50...
08:50...
08:50...
08:50...
08:50A lovely day?
08:52I said, are we all having a lovely day?
08:55Yes, yes. Good.
08:58I won't hold you up for long.
09:00I'm just here for the scrolls.
09:13Thank you darling.
09:15What about her?
09:19Our job is to take the scrolls.
09:21She's a princess.
09:22I think it's a ransom.
09:30You're coming with us princess.
09:32No!
09:34Let's go!
09:49No!
09:52No!
09:53No!
09:55No!
09:56No!
09:58No!
10:03No!
10:12No!
10:15No!
10:18No!
10:20No!
10:21No!
10:23No!
10:25No!
10:25No!
10:27No!
10:29No!
10:30No!
10:31No!
10:46Princess?
10:57What tea, Scout?
10:59Right away, Professor.
11:19What are you doing with no salient, sir?
11:23I do apologize, Professor Thompson.
11:25No good ever comes of poking your nose into business that does not concern you.
11:30I apologize, sir.
11:32Did you write this?
11:34Yes, I did. It's recently published. Rather well received, if I may say so.
11:38May I?
11:40Yes, of course.
11:44A Scout interested in mathematics?
11:47My father always instilled in me the love for reading.
11:50Thought me to be curious.
11:51Ah, curiosity.
11:52The greatest virtue.
11:54But not if you're a cat.
11:57Would you mind if I borrowed this?
12:00Not at all.
12:02Sherlock Holmes, sir.
12:03Sherlock?
12:05It's an unusual name.
12:24This is for the Chinese princess. Just arrived.
12:28Old court. Room to be.
12:30At your service, Mr. Smudger.
12:33Good lad.
12:49Scout.
12:56Your luggage, ma'am.
12:58Please, place it on the desk.
13:25The shoe maker had a dependency.
13:27Do you mean he was a drunk?
13:29That was his poison of choice, yes.
13:30Which explained your slurred delivery.
13:35Your Highness.
13:42Well, visiting my not inconsiderable business interests in this glorious empire of ours,
13:50it struck me that it was time to give back.
13:55So?
13:56It is with great delight that I announce this term, the opening of my new science building.
14:02A brilliant addition to this glittering university.
14:06Well, scholars, on your feet.
14:12I present to you, my Hodge scholars.
14:19Take a good look.
14:21These students will be generals.
14:24Prime ministers.
14:25Leaders who will guide our world into the 20th century.
14:30Enjoy your learning.
14:31Enjoy your youth.
14:33Welcome.
14:37I came up in 23 each of you, though, in Steylon.
14:43May I say so?
14:44No one has had a greater impact on expanding the British Empire than you.
14:48Everything to your satisfaction, sirs?
14:50Yes, thank you.
14:51Oh.
14:53You're quite sure?
14:54Yes, fine.
14:55Nothing else I can get you.
14:56I am, of course, at your service, at your beck and call, as you well know, sir.
14:59I said I'm fine.
15:00You know this young man.
15:01Yes, he does, sir.
15:02Very well, sir.
15:03How so?
15:04Well, I'm his lowly brother, sir.
15:06What?
15:06Brother?
15:07No.
15:08Is this true, Mycroft?
15:09It's not a very interesting story, sir.
15:11But is it true?
15:14Yes.
15:15Indeed, he is my brother.
15:16So how did he end up serving you?
15:18Redemption, sir.
15:19From what?
15:20Prison.
15:22Her Majesty's pleasure.
15:23How could you say this wasn't interesting, Mycroft?
15:25Do you carry on, young man?
15:26Well, my magnanimous brother here took pity on the black sheep of the family for which I am eternally grateful.
15:33More wine, your Lordship.
15:35So, tell me, do you have the same parents?
15:38Yes, we do, sir.
15:39Although, sadly, we only really get to see each other at family funerals, court hearings, the like.
15:45Sir, today is your special day.
15:50Your scholars are an inspiration to us all.
15:53So, um, tell me, young man, what was your crime?
15:56Larceny, thieving, theft, petty theft.
16:00Although those days are well and truly behind me, spiritually and permanently, there we are, reformed, was a taker, now
16:09a giver.
16:10Reborn to serve, sir.
16:12I'm sure we can take care of ourselves from now on.
16:14Brother dearest.
16:15Very well, sir.
16:18I'm so sorry, sir.
16:20Well, no need to apologize, Michael.
16:22You've got this most interesting thing about you.
16:27One should assume here that X is greater than Y and define the powers of X and Y using a
16:33holomorphic branch of log defined on an open disk of radius centered at X.
16:43Y.
16:46Why?
16:47Why?
16:47Because that is how it works.
16:51An open disk of radius centered at Y, not X.
16:59My apologies.
17:01Why?
17:03Who so generously thought to correct me?
17:09Ah, Mr. Holmes, the scout.
17:12I see you've read my book.
17:14I did, Professor Thompson.
17:16Which is more than I can say for some of my students.
17:22Saved by the bell.
17:24Homework.
17:25Find me all the solutions of this.
17:28Quintick.
17:31Quintick.
17:50You're having trouble finding the solutions.
17:54Now, don't worry about that.
17:57You just have to get yourself some new numbers.
18:01These solutions, they're not real.
18:04They're imaginary.
18:07That means even if you can't see the target, you can still shoot for it.
18:11So you're a mathematician now, a porter, a waiter, a candlestick maker, and a kleptomaniac.
18:18Who was a taker, now a giver.
18:22Does Hodges' pocket watch keep good time?
18:24They say that it's the unconscious desire of every thief to be caught.
18:27That it's the fear of incarceration that gives freedom its currency.
18:30The fundamental fault of man is to think the enemy is external, not internal.
18:34Prison is in here, not out there.
18:38I'll get you with your heart of war.
18:45James Moriarty.
18:50Sherlock Holmes.
18:55It's a long line.
18:57A line, not a great one for waiting.
18:59Waiting for what?
19:01We're going to a party.
19:03We're not quite dressed for this.
19:04Are you even invited?
19:05I don't think you need to worry about that.
19:08You'll just follow my lead.
19:09Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.
19:11May I see your invitations, please?
19:14Sirs, madams, please stand tight to the wall to keep the path clear for the other students.
19:18This is marvelous.
19:19I won't be moaned.
19:21Wonderful dress, madam.
19:26Excuse me.
19:27Excuse me.
19:30Leave this with me.
19:31Sorry.
19:33You have a dramatic split in the back of your jacket.
19:42Two Sazeracs.
19:43There you go.
19:45My pleasure.
19:48Excuse me, sir.
19:49You cannot take that.
19:50Oh, you're absolutely right, sir.
19:51But I can borrow it.
19:52And I shall return it to its cradle.
19:54Oh, oh, oh.
19:57Well, look to this day, for it is life.
20:07You're the scout.
20:08Indeed.
20:09How did you get in here?
20:10I invited him.
20:11And who invited you?
20:12No one.
20:13And yet, here I am.
20:15If I wish to socialize with a cleaner, I'd have a party in the servants' quarters.
20:20So if you wouldn't mind, I'd ask you to leave.
20:24He might be a cleaner, but he's a very clever cleaner.
20:26Oh, such fun.
20:27At last we have characters at one of your parties, Peregrine.
20:30I have an idea.
20:32You outsmart the scout, and he'll leave without further protest.
20:36You take a good long look at him, and you tell us what you can glean.
20:40And then he'll do the same to you.
20:42And then I'll be the judge of who wins.
20:45Very well.
20:46Show me your hand.
20:49Interesting signet ring.
20:50I notice an absence of any type of ring, and no calluses.
20:55He's clearly not intimately acquainted with anything approaching hard labor.
20:59So not just a servant, but a lazy one, too.
21:02Had you not considered that he wears gloves?
21:04So what else?
21:07Oh, that's it.
21:08Well, you had a promising start, but you had no follow-through.
21:12What you made was an observation, not a deduction.
21:15No calluses.
21:16So how does he find himself in this position?
21:19Well, I'd say he got into a spot of bother along the way.
21:22He got kicked out of school, so he brought shame upon his parents and his father
21:26and made him take this position to teach him a lesson.
21:28Quiet.
21:29Brother.
21:30Yes.
21:31A high achiever.
21:32Am I correct?
21:33Spot on.
21:35Well, it wasn't so hard, was it?
21:36My turn.
21:39Your signet ring.
21:40The crest.
21:42Your ancestor was the Count of Boulogne.
21:44Fought at the Battle of Hastings.
21:45He was five foot two, and he had a face like a cow's udder, but he fought like a titan.
21:49So, ugly, yes, but magnificent nonetheless.
21:51Now, as is consistent with custom, a man knows he must wear his signet ring facing inward
21:56to represent content, not outward to represent form.
22:00Inward for noble lion, outward for tabby cat.
22:03Tell me, which direction does your ring point?
22:07Oh, peregrine.
22:10That must hurt.
22:11Not as much as this is going to hurt.
22:24Well, ladies, until next time.
22:28I look forward to that.
22:29Whiskey?
22:30Yes, of course.
22:36Come on!
22:56At least you can run, because...
22:57You definitely can't fight.
23:03Yes, well.
23:05I've always been more of a thinker than a fighter.
23:07Upstairs for thinking, downstairs for dancing.
23:11You might want to re-strategize that philosophy.
23:14The two aren't mutually exclusive.
23:16Why do you think an emperor employs a general?
23:20A hand of mercy means nothing without the hand of judgment.
23:24Slap needs a tickle. Tickle needs a slap.
23:26There's an art to fighting.
23:29There's an art to war.
23:32These belong to the father of Princess Shuan.
23:35The art of war.
23:37Part of the original scrolls, 5th century BC.
23:42In order to know your enemy, you must become your enemy.
23:47My father had a copy of this.
23:50Didn't do him much good, no.
23:53I'd say it's worth a pound or two.
23:56Let's steal it.
23:58Or better still, you're the expert.
24:00You steal it.
24:02I don't think that's a very good idea.
24:06Oh, that's a shame.
24:08You could do a lot with the money.
24:10I could do more with my freedom.
24:33I could do more with my freedom.
24:40Not quite sure.
24:41Not quite sure I'm following.
24:41The robbery last night.
24:42The library.
24:43You had keys.
24:44The scrolls have been stolen and you was the last one seen going in.
24:49I hope for your sake it wasn't you, my boy.
24:52Excuse me, Mr. Smudger.
25:03Just for clarity's sake, we didn't take those scrolls last night, did we?
25:07No, we didn't.
25:13I just think we did.
25:14He was just in here.
25:15What did he say?
25:16He took my scholarship.
25:19Oh dear.
25:21Yeah, so without that I can't stay here.
25:25Lucky you.
25:28Gets better.
25:29Go on.
25:30I can hardly wait.
25:33Well, you'll be gone back to prison.
25:35Lucky me.
25:39I'm going to find my brother.
25:42Get dressed.
25:44Meet me in the library.
25:49Mycroft.
25:51Stay out of trouble.
25:53One simple request.
25:56Is there any point protesting my innocence?
25:57Sherlock Holmes.
25:59What is that?
26:02You need my help, don't you?
26:03No.
26:03Sherlock Holmes.
26:04I am arresting you in suspicion of theft.
26:06Er, you won't need those.
26:08Sir, stop.
26:09I'm a constable.
26:10Yes, the clue is in the uniform.
26:12Constable Lestrade of Oxford City Police Force.
26:14Yes, and I am Mycroft Holmes of Her Majesty's Foreign Office.
26:17I'm in Oxford to assist Sir Bucephalus Hodge with the opening of his new science building.
26:21Now, surely this is more detective's work?
26:24I thought we'd make initial inquiries.
26:26Early worm catches the bird.
26:28Could be in trouble, yeah.
26:29I'm merely trying to prevent you from the professional embarrassment from being reprimanded by your chief officer, who happens to
26:33be my bridge partner, and is, as you know, a stickler for due process.
26:38Yes, sir.
26:39Quite.
26:42Thank you, sir.
26:43Good man.
26:44Sir.
26:44Come on.
26:47I need you to get me into the library.
26:50You've got ten minutes?
26:52Don't embarrass me again.
26:54Do you know what we're looking for?
26:55Not really, no.
26:56I thank you for keeping me updated, but I would like to see the crime scene for myself.
27:03A hole in the window.
27:05Wonder what that's for.
27:07You should be a detective.
27:08Hard to escape.
27:09My powers of observation.
27:11What are these powers of observation telling you now?
27:14There has been, wait for it, a break-in.
27:18Astounding.
27:19How did you develop these skills of penetrating deduction?
27:22We've been gifted a couple of paw prints.
27:24There's a hook there.
27:25Who's missing his guest?
27:28I think I've clocked the guest.
27:29Your ten minutes are up.
27:31Mycroft.
27:33Would you mind telling me why your brother, the prime suspect, is standing at the scene of the crime?
27:37I think it's only fair.
27:38He has a chance to defend himself, sir.
27:40No, he doesn't.
27:41Not here.
27:41He has a chance to defend himself in a court of law.
27:43Constable Sir Irvian.
27:44Right away, sir.
27:49Do you know each other?
27:51Never seen him before, sir.
27:54Leave him.
27:56Are you stealing the court?
27:58No, I'm not.
27:59He's a thief.
28:00He's a thief.
28:01He's a thief.
28:02He's a thief.
28:03I'm a thief.
28:04I'm a thief.
28:06Mycroft.
28:06What the bloody hell is going on?
28:08His brother of yours?
28:09Yes, sir.
28:09One minute he's a redeemed felon, then he's a servant, then he's a felon again, and now apparently he's a
28:14linguist.
28:16Again, it's not a very interesting story, sir.
28:18The thief was here at six minutes past ten.
28:21How can you possibly know that?
28:22Because when he climbed down from the window, he knocked this off.
28:26The clue was in the clerk.
28:28And she didn't notice this, Constable.
28:30I can help you find your father's scrolls.
28:32Well, there's a very good reason why you can help find them. You stole them.
28:35This is not proper procedure.
28:36Sir, I represent the law. I will do the investigation.
28:39And they're my father's scrolls.
28:42Need I remind you, sir, how much of your trade with China relies on my father's goodwill?
28:47We are running late for your appointment with the dean, sir.
28:50Indeed.
28:51Perhaps we should give the princess a chance to conduct this investigation as she sees fit.
28:55I must protest.
28:56Oh really, must you?
28:58Thank you, Constable. We'll take it from here.
29:01According to Lestrade, the thief scaled down the side of the building and into a boat.
29:06Lestrade told me there's a river in the woods where the thief rode from Candlin College.
29:10The thief rode out from Candlin College, then get out here with the scrolls.
29:13Then?
29:14Disappeared.
29:15Disappeared.
29:16We have no idea where he went, sir.
29:17Footprints.
29:19Only one set of tracks.
29:21Only one thief.
29:22Head off this way.
29:25Footprints in here.
29:27Thief got into a carriage.
29:29Aye, aye.
29:31Looks like one of them wheels was a little drunk.
29:33And a drunk wheel would need to sober out.
29:36Hello.
29:37A coaching in where one might get a wheel fixed.
29:41I wanted to ask, were you trying to impress me?
29:45Impress you?
29:46At the maths lecture.
29:48Why?
29:49Were you corrected, Professor Thompson?
29:51Why?
29:52The professor's calculations were incorrect.
29:54That was all?
29:56Disappointing.
29:57Well, frankly, I don't know what to see in him.
29:58I mean, yes, he is somewhere handsome in a sort of obvious clumsy kind of way,
30:03but if you were ever looking for something a bit more niche,
30:06more bespoke, more mysterious.
30:08And where might the princess find a man like that?
30:11As stimulating as this is, chaps, I need to return to my carriage.
30:15Why?
30:15The gull opening.
30:16Or just a new science building.
30:18I promised him I would be there.
30:21We hope.
30:24Your Royal Highness.
30:26A welcomed oasis in the parched desert of this rural wasteland.
30:36What can I do for you gentlemen?
30:38Two whiskies, my good lady, and whatever you'd like for your fine self.
30:43I know.
30:44I'm getting this.
30:44Your money's no good here.
30:45I'll get the drinks.
30:47You get the tip.
30:49And out of his pocket, he pulled sovereign's bride.
30:52And the landlady's eyes opened wide with the night.
30:57Excuse me.
30:58Our carriage is in need of a bit of repair.
31:01Is the wheel rider owned?
31:02Might we have a word with him?
31:03He's down at the village, but he'll be back shortly.
31:07We can wait.
31:20Are we playing the game of getting another, or are we playing follow the fiddler?
31:24Well, I'll take care of the former if you take care of the latter.
31:28It is your round.
31:32See?
31:33See you soon.
31:49There.
31:59See you soon.
32:14Here's the Skrulls, he's got the Skrulls, when are you going to stop blocking people's
32:30fists with your nose?
32:31It wasn't his fists, James, it was his forehead.
32:33Yes, well, when you're engaged in combat it actually helps to throw a punch from time
32:36to time.
32:43He pulled his punch.
32:53What is this place?
32:56Ah, you're here too.
32:58Welcome to my overactive imagination.
33:01Why pull your punch?
33:02He can hear you.
33:03Yes.
33:04But he can't answer you.
33:05No.
33:06Those are the rules I didn't make.
33:08Now he's paused.
33:09Yes.
33:09Waiting for something.
33:10What's he waiting for?
33:13He's waiting for me to come out.
33:16Wait, Sola!
33:20Oh, lovely tackle.
33:22Why wait for you to come out?
33:27What?
33:27What?
33:27What?
33:27What?
33:28What?
33:28What?
33:35What?
33:35What?
33:37What?
33:49What?
33:54What?
33:56What?
33:57What?
33:58What?
33:59You'll smash your caps.
34:01What do you reckon?
34:03Hmm.
34:04Decisions, decisions.
34:06Why don't you ask my chum?
34:07Oh, I think they're sweet.
34:16Please.
34:16Ah, that's interesting.
34:18Not exactly brimming with scrolls.
34:22I smell a rat.
34:23What if he pulled his punch because he wanted to lure us away?
34:25Well then, someone doesn't want us in Oxford.
34:29Not even the same tube.
34:33We've been gifted a couple of paw prints.
34:36How did you develop these skills of penetrating deduction?
34:40There are hand prints on either side of the window.
34:43Though he couldn't have been holding the scrolls.
34:45What happens if he has them strapped to his back?
34:48No, that's too big a cork for too small a bottle.
34:50So he hands them to an accomplice.
34:53Only one set of tracks.
34:55Only one feet.
34:56So he leaves them on the inside ledge and he reaches back for them.
34:59Wouldn't put them down as a gymnast.
35:01Here's another possibility.
35:03What if they never left?
35:05What if the scrolls are still in the library?
35:08That's one hypothesis.
35:09You have a better one?
35:11In the unlikely event that you are right.
35:13Why make it look like there was a theft?
35:14If there was no theft, that's the question.
35:18Have you ever used one of these?
35:20Indeed I have.
35:21What the devil do they think they're doing?
35:24Get back here!
35:26There is a special place in hell for any farming team.
35:31We'll pedal in there as fast as we can.
35:35Hold on, this doesn't make sense.
35:38The lead's cracked.
35:40Stress fracture.
35:41It's not been pushed from the outside in.
35:42It's been pushed from the inside out.
35:44And then back in again to make it look like it was pushed in from the outside.
35:49Well, this wasn't a break-in.
35:51But it's been made to look like it was a break-in.
35:58Is that where my statue's going to go?
36:00I believe so, sir.
36:01Hmm.
36:02I have a feeling it needs to be...
36:05Hmm.
36:06Bigger?
36:06Very good, Mycroft.
36:07Yes, bigger.
36:09Just higher than all those kings and queens and saints and whatnot.
36:14Hmm.
36:15Princess, so generous of you to find time for my humble little shindig.
36:19The pleasure is mine.
36:21So the scrolls should be in here somewhere?
36:23There's a thousand places to hide them.
36:26Yes, that does provide a challenge.
36:37Well, maybe you were wrong.
36:39I was wrong.
36:40Yes.
36:40Both the scrolls being here, that was all you.
36:43Remind me, what was your theory?
36:44You can't rush, genius.
36:46No.
36:46You take your time.
36:48Not you who's going back to prison.
36:49Well, maybe if you were a more accomplished pickpocket,
36:52then you wouldn't be going there in the first place, would you?
36:59We've been looking for a something,
37:01when we should have been looking for a someone.
37:03Walker.
37:04Who?
37:06Walker the porter.
37:07The porter who tidies the room.
37:10He suffers from chronic scrupulosity.
37:12Every night he walks around and makes sure everything in here is in order.
37:15Everything straight.
37:17Not just straight.
37:18As an arrow straight cushion.
37:20He hasn't been here since the crime.
37:22So, something or someone is not straight.
37:26John Dunn.
37:30He's been to the pub.
37:31He's had a drink.
37:32A drink or two.
37:34He could have another.
37:35He should go home.
37:36But he doesn't know when to stop.
37:43It's beginner's look.
37:46Our secret lies in confusing the enemy so he cannot fathom our true intent.
37:50What if it was a diversion?
37:52The library is the busiest room in college.
37:54Even at night, porters check on the place every 30 minutes.
37:57The thief makes it seem as though the scrolls were stolen
38:00to ensure the library is sealed off as a crime scene.
38:02He then squirrels himself away in here and waits for all to be quiet and clear.
38:07He needs to be undisturbed.
38:08He needs time.
38:09Time?
38:10Time for what?
38:16This is the case that housed the scrolls.
38:19Our Whisky has made its mark.
38:22Now, before the scrolls were stolen this case assassin up a cabinet.
38:25A cabinet which is now missing.
38:28Why was it taken and what was inside it?
38:30Let's focus on the how and that will give us the what and the why.
38:34Now how does a cabinet disappear when the police are at the only door?
38:40Through the walls. In its original incarnation, 400 years ago, before this was a library, what was this room?
38:46A medieval banqueting hall.
38:48So, there would have been five corridors.
38:50One for the Norman Aristarchus.
38:51Two for the masses.
38:52And two for the servants coming in and out from the kitchen.
38:54All bricked up and panelled over.
38:58Rattatatat.
39:00Rattatatat.
39:11Cat follows rat?
39:13Cat follows rat?
39:25Well, we found our cabinet.
39:30Now we know how it got here, shall we address the what?
39:35Door number one.
39:37We have some kind of mechanical activator.
39:41Door number two.
39:46The mechanism, it's activating.
39:48Door number three.
39:50The timing device.
39:52Door number four.
39:53How's that a guess?
39:58Oh dear.
40:00Well, now we know the what.
40:01So, what's the why?
40:04Nothing has such power to broaden the mind as the ability to investigate.
40:10Hodges Gala.
40:11Do you know how to defuse one of these?
40:14No.
40:15Do you?
40:15Can we move it?
40:17I wouldn't.
40:18Solution?
40:19Well, we've only got 90 seconds according to that clock.
40:21This building will be a cathedral to science.
40:24The stone and mortar that surround us.
40:27It is.
40:29I must now make mention of our brilliant mathematician, Professor Charles Thompson, for his invaluable contribution.
40:37Ladies and gentlemen, I invite you to charge your glasses.
40:50Holmes, what the devil are you taking in my chimney?
40:52Sorry to bother you, sir.
40:54Well, a rather pressing issue.
40:55Well, I hope it is for your sake.
40:56What is it?
40:56A bomb.
40:57What do you mean a bomb?
40:58A bomb is an incendiary device.
41:00I don't know what a bloody bomb is, Holmes.
41:02What's that got to do with interrupting my speech and destroying my chimney?
41:05Proximity, sir.
41:06It's likely to go off in the next 30 seconds, killing anyone within the blast radius, which
41:10I would assume is likely to be pretty much this whole room, sir.
41:12I see.
41:13Well, that does seem to be a sound reason.
41:15For God's sake, if you stop being so English, there's a bomb!
41:19Let's go!
41:20Let's go!
41:46Let's go!
41:53Gravers behind us, I'm going to string them up, cut them down while they're still alive,
41:57disembowel them and burn their entrails before the rise.
42:00Entrails.
42:01Very good, sir.
42:29So what exactly are we celebrating?
42:31We haven't solved anything.
42:32We don't know who planted the bomb or why.
42:36And that is not our concern.
42:38That's not our concern.
42:39We set out to find the scrolls.
42:40We found them.
42:41I'm not losing my scholarship and you're not going to prison.
42:45So I think that's worth raising a glass to.
42:54Why aren't you drinking?
42:56Not thirsty.
43:00Come in.
43:03Oh, I'm not a survivor.
43:05Yes, but I can't pretend I'm not shaken.
43:09Please sit.
43:13Can I have one of those?
43:16Yes, of course.
43:17Please come in.
43:18Close the door.
43:27Well, at least someone's thirsty.
43:29I wanted to thank you, Sherlock, for finding my father's scrolls.
43:35Oh, well, don't mind me.
43:37I'm just an Ashkenazi side dish.
43:41Besides, I have a previous arrangement.
43:44Do you?
43:46You're much more than chopped liver, my friend.
43:48You must stay.
43:48You're the main course.
43:49Oh, no, no, no, no.
43:50So, Romeo, Juliet, good night, good night.
43:56Parting is such sweet sorrow that I should say good night.
44:01Because I'm after the pub.
44:10Now, how should I reward you?
44:12Oh, no, that's not necessary.
44:15At least let me top you up.
44:24Your companion, James Moriarty, is quite brilliant.
44:28But not as brilliant as you.
44:35Here's to your extraordinary future.
44:47You missed a bit.
44:54Why don't you sit down over there, and I'll clean you up.
44:59I'm not quite sure this is all, uh...
45:01I insist.
45:02Stop it.
45:18Come play with me, sonor.
45:21Laywood's home.
45:23Charlotte, why don't you play with your sister?
45:25Go on.
45:26Get off, you idiot.
45:30Laywood's home.
45:33Five!
45:35Where is it?
45:37Cordelia!
45:38Beatrice!
45:39Beatrice!
45:40Beatrice!
45:48Your fault.
45:51Alright, mate.
45:52Come on!
45:55Get him over!
45:58Police!
45:59Open up!
46:00That's it. Get him on his feet, Max.
46:03On your feet.
46:07Sherlock Holmes.
46:09I'm arresting you for the murder of Professor Charles Thompson.
46:13Take him away.
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