Jim From It Funny Sherlock Fanart
- "Every fairytale needs a skilful sometime-fashioned villain. You demand me, or you're aught."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock [src]
James "Jim" Moriarty was the world's just "consulting criminal"; a stark dissimilarity to his arch nemesis is Sherlock Holmes' similarly unrivaled "consulting detective" occupation.
Biography
Early history
In 1989, when he was xiii years sometime, Moriarty murdered Carl Powers, whom he claimed "laughed at him". He kept Powers' trainers almost twenty years until he used the shoes equally role of his plan to meet Sherlock Holmes and had them planted in the disused apartment at 221C Baker Street. [ii]
From that point onwards he developed and trained his skills at criminal activities and went on to create a large criminal organisation which would stretch across the whole globe.
Operating behind the scenes
Moriarty acted as a sponsor, an informant and a mastermind. He is shown to take an involvement in sherlock that borders on obsession, though he does not hesitate to try to kill him when he loses interest. In his operations, there is never whatsoever direct contact between Moriarty and his clients.
Jeff Hope, one of Moriarty's clients, attempts to murder Sherlock, just is shot dead by Dr John Watson, Sherlock's friend and flatmate. Hope had previously revealed that he had a sponsor, but refused to tell Sherlock his name. Only when Sherlock stamps on Hope's bullet wound does he somewhen scream, "MORIARTY!" [3]
Later, Moriarty assists in smuggling the Blackness Lotus criminal system into Britain. Sherlock and John thwart their plans, though. The leader of the organization, General Shan, has a cursory conversation with Moriarty over her laptop, and is shot by i of his snipers so that she cannot reveal his identity. [iv]
Moriarty eventually decides to play a "game" with Sherlock, forcing him to solve mysteries within a time limit and taking hostages to ensure that Sherlock is properly motivated. He too disguises himself as Molly Hooper's boyfriend Jim and visits Sherlock in his lab when he is trying to solve a mystery. Sherlock, unaware he is Moriarty, "deduces" that he is gay (though this was a plot past Moriarty), which upsets Molly.
Revealing himself to Sherlock
When Sherlock has solved every mystery, he finally meets Moriarty at a swimming pool. Moriarty has taken John hostage and wired plastic explosives to him, while having a sniper aimed at him. In an intense showdown, Moriarty warns Sherlock to back off, maxim he will "burn the eye out of [him]" if he does not. Moriarty then leaves, and Sherlock rips the explosives off John and tosses them abroad. Nevertheless, Moriarty then reappears forth with dozens of snipers, saying they cannot be allowed to continue. Sherlock aims at the explosives he took off John, intending to detonate them and take Moriarty with him. [2]
Moriarty'due south telephone rings, interrupting them. After a few words with the caller, Moriarty leaves for skillful and calls off the snipers.[5]
The caller is revealed to be Irene Adler. Moriarty constantly gives her communication on how to dispense the "The Holmes Boys", having given them both nicknames. Information technology is also mentioned that he asked for nothing in render, becoming involved just to cause trouble, suggesting his obsessions are deepening. [five]
Bringing downward Sherlock
Information technology is likewise alluded to that he might have an independent rivalry with Mycroft.[6] At some point, he was captured and interrogated by Mycroft, just was released, the information he gave coming at a personal price to Mycroft.[6] [ane] As he is leaving, it is shown he has repeatedly scratched the name Sherlock into the concrete walls of his dungeon, too as in reverse on the ii fashion mirror. [6]
Shortly afterwards this, Mycroft called for Moriarty to come to the Sherrinford maximum security prison in order to meet he and Sherlock's secret sister Eurus Holmes, who requested to spend 5 minutes alone with Moriarty unsupervised every bit part of a Christmas present.
Afterward, Moriarty is seen outside Tower of London dressed as an ordinary civilian, and after walking into the room where the Crown Jewels are kept, he then puts on his earphones and begins listening to Rossini'due south "A Thieving Magpie." Taking out his Droid Incredible S, Moriarty presses a push begetting the keepsake of the Crown of England. From there, information technology is shown that the Bank of England, Pentonville Prison house, and the Belfry of London's security systems take all been breached at the same time. Every bit London's constabulary force, including Lestrade and Sally Donovan, drive hastily to the scenes, the warning in the room begins to actuate, and as the nearby guards tell anybody to go out, the whole of the room is emptied of visitors and guards. As the door closes, a guard asks Moriarty to get out but earlier he can speak, Moriarty sprays a canister of sleeping gas at him. Nifty the glass case around the Crown Jewels, he dressed in them and waited for the police to take him into custody, existence establish non guilty after the jury are extorted by him. Moriarty paid Sherlock a visit subsequently to plant a faux clue in his mind and assured him nothing was over yet, before leaving.
Subsequently, Sherlock and John investigate the disappearance of two children of a U.Due south. administrator from a private school in London. It is revealed that the twenty-four hour period the kids disappeared was the aforementioned twenty-four hours the school term ended. So, with numerous parents and children surrounding the school, it was incredibly easy for Moriarty's homo to blend in with the crowd, become unnoticeable and enter the school. Waiting until nightfall, the kidnapper walked towards the room where the children slept, armed with a gun. As a result of spending the majority of his schoolhouse life in private education, the boy had become acquainted with all the shadows of all the people who passed the door, leaving a clue behind for the police force. Afterwards grabbing agree of the two children, Moriarty'southward man held them at gunpoint and led them out of the school. From there, he transported them to an abandoned warehouse in Addlestone. The kidnapper then locked the terrified children in a cage in a cold, dark room. The cage was filled with hundreds of sweets. The wrappers of the sweets were lined with a mortiferous poison (mercury) that was gradually killing the children.
Moriarty had traumatized the girl, and then upon meeting Sherlock, she would scream and go terrified of him, which was meant to convince DI Lestrade that Sherlock was actually potential kidnapper. Lestrade was so ordered by his superior to arrest Sherlock for kidnapping and John for punching Lestrade'due south superior in the face. After escaping from the police, Sherlock and John were at present fugitives. Subsequently Sherlock and John pause into the house of a journalist, they notice Moriarty. Seemingly terrified and shaking with fear, he tells Sherlock and John to keep abroad from him and begs John not to hurt him.
Reporter Kitty Reilly states that there never has been a man named James Moriarty and accuses Sherlock of inventing him, as well as all his crimes every bit a mode of becoming popular with the media and building up a reputation of himself every bit a Private Detective. John refused to believe this, arguing that Moriarty had simply recently been on trial for attempted burglary, and that Moriarty intended to detonate explosives to kill Sherlock and himself. Reilly countered by saying that Moriarty was really an actor named Richard Brook that Sherlock paid to act every bit a primary villain. Still in denial, John asks to be shown proof, from there the announcer shows him numerous papers about Richard Brook including various headshots and an actor'south profile. Moriarty then claims to be playing the role of a storyteller to young children on tv set. Sherlock then shouts at Moriarty, demanding him to stop this lie. Advancing on him, Sherlock and John chase Moriarty as he escapes through a nearby window.
Final Collision
Later, at St. Bartholomew's Infirmary, Sherlock texts Moriarty, who meets him on the roof. Sherlock claims that, with the code, he can completely delete all evidence of Richard Brook from the earth. Moriarty says that there is no code, and the tapping rhythm that he did at Sherlock'southward flat was actually the beats to Bach's Partita No. i. Moriarty said to Sherlock that his weakness was that he always wants everything to be intelligent and circuitous, so then he can solve it and brag about his intellect to others.
Moriarty explains that for the past 24 hours, he has convinced the general public that Sherlock Holmes is a fraud and a liar, therefore making Sherlock'due south once-swell reputation completely shattered, and the but person who yet trusted him was John. When asked by Sherlock how he managed to break into the prison house, the bank, and the Tower, Moriarty replied that he only bribed security guards to interact with him in his scheme. Moriarty's concluding program was to bulldoze Sherlock to the point where he would commit suicide to escape his shattered life, but as Sherlock had no wish to do so, Moriarty explained that he'd hired three assassins, strategically located around London, each one set up to shoot Sherlock'due south only 3 truthful friends; Lestrade, Mrs. Hudson and John. One was disguised every bit a constabulary officer outside DI Lestrade'southward office, some other was disguised every bit a repairman inside the Baker Street apartment, and the final i was located in a tower building reverse St. Bart's hospital.
Moriarty is then revealed to know a discussion that merely he could say, that when spoken, would telephone call off the assassins. Sherlock and Moriarty then spoke to each other, and Sherlock coldly stated that, although Mycroft would just lock up Moriarty, he would nigh likely kill him, and that even though Sherlock seemed to be a kind person and "on the side of the Angels", Moriarty should never presume that he is i of them. Sherlock says that he is willing to do annihilation to actuate the fail-safe. After acknowledging that he and Sherlock are alike (in the sense that Sherlock has a dark side), Moriarty realizes that every bit long every bit he is live, Sherlock tin actuate the neglect-safe and salvage his friends, so he produces a handgun from his coat pocket and shoots himself in the oral cavity. [i]
Legacy
Two years after Sherlock'due south 'expiry', it was concluded by police that the actor Richard Brook was in fact an allonym created past Moriarty and that Sherlock was innocent of fabricating Moriarty. Moriarty appears in numerous flashbacks and imaginary sequences when contemplating how Sherlock possibly faked his decease.[7]
Moriarty was also in Sherlock's mind palace, in solitary confinement and wearing a straitjacket. He taunted Sherlock but when John was mentioned, it gave Sherlock the strength he needed to recover from a serious bullet wound when he was nigh death. Moriarty's face was afterwards broadcast all over England and spoke the words "Did you miss me?", forcing Sherlock to return from his exile early on to work on the case.[8]
On the flight back, Sherlock enters his mind palace in a drug induced state to unravel the unsolved mystery of Emelia Ricoletti, a tardily 19th century adult female who, like Moriarty, shot herself in the head so appeared to rise from the grave. Afterwards, Sherlock concludes that Moriarty is yet dead but it becomes a thing of explaining how he's manipulating events across the grave, with Sherlock telling John and Mary Watson that he knows what Moriarty will do next.[nine]
When Eurus Holmes traps Sherlock, John and Mycroft at Sherrinford, she plays pre-recordings that Moriarty made years prior in lodge to stress out Sherlock, with one of them existence Moriarty going "tick-tick-tick-tick" when Sherlock is forced to work out one of her games.[10]
Personality
- Sherlock: "People have died."
- Moriarty: "That's what people DO!"
- ―Holmes and Moriarty[src]
A criminal genius, Jim Moriarty was a sadistic and psychopathic individual. He exhibited the post-obit traits: extreme intelligence, grandiosity, incapacity for remorse, arrogance, and an unhealthy degree of cocky-confidence. He also displayed highly Machiavellian traits. Much like Sherlock, he had a sarcastic, cynical, albeit kittenish sense of sense of humor only different Sherlock he oftentimes spoke in a tone that would intimidate or annoy his opponents.
Moriarty was arranging the deaths of others from a young age. In 1989, he killed schoolboy Carl Powers. He appeared to be a highly efficient criminal man of affairs and had a humongous network of people at his command. Moriarty seemed to show, at to the lowest degree superficially, concern for children, as he paid Jeff Promise big amounts of money for his children every time he killed, withal he actually has no care for them as shown when he had a bomb strapped to a very young male child.
Moriarty was obsessed with Sherlock Holmes and appeared to enjoy his role every bit a villain. Moriarty, like Sherlock, was willing to do anything to stop himself from getting bored. He was capable of frightening mood swings. He was ruthless, and committed torture and murder in sadistic ways, and when Sherlock accused him being responsible for people's deaths, Moriarty screamed at him 'That's what people do!', indicating that he didn't intendance if people lived or died. He likewise rather glibly referenced people's deaths when he was personally responsible, citing that Carl Powers 'laughed at me, so I stopped him laughing'.
Moriarty was a man who would resort constantly to humor regardless of the state of affairs, particularly when mocking people for falling for his deceptions - when he faced off confronting Sherlock at the swimming pool, he taunted Sherlock with the fact that he managed to convince the detective he was gay. When he played a sadistic trick on Sherlock with a derisive video during a taxi journey, he remarked 'No accuse' when Sherlock discovered him. When Sherlock held him over a rooftop and threatened to let him fall to his death and labelled him insane, Moriarty shot back 'Yous're only getting that at present', to belittle Sherlock.
Moriarty believed his only weakness (or at least openly suggested it to be) that he was extremely changeable - this was prominently shown in him offset deciding to abandon his showdown with Sherlock, only to abruptly return and threaten Sherlock again.
It is very debatable as to whether or not Jim fears death - he showed absolutely no concern or fear when he was held at the point of a gun by Sherlock (virtually likely because he knew he had too many advantages on the human at the time), only to cry out when Sherlock threatened to throw him from a rooftop.
Advent
Moriarty is of boilerplate summit, continuing a couple of inches below Sherlock, and of a slender build, with dark black hair and pale peel. He tin about e'er exist seen wearing total clothes suits (Westwood, to exist precise), such as a dark bluish one he wore in his first meeting with Sherlock and a grayness one during his visit to the latter'due south flat, oftentimes accompanied past a tie. Every bit "Richard Brook", he seemed to put on a more standard image, with unruly pilus and casual clothing.
Abilities
- Genius-Level Intellect: Moriarty is incredibly smart. He is ane of the most intelligent individuals on the planet, rivaled only past Sherlock, Mycroft, Charles Augustus Magnussen, and Eurus Holmes. His genius was strong enough that Moriarty was able to safely collaborate with Eurus in Sherrinford.
- Master Tactician: He was also clearly quite calculating and resourceful for his historic period, managing to retrieve an nearly undetectable toxicant that would piece of work effectively in the circumstances that Moriarty required. Every bit a consulting criminal, he was able to consult his clients to do a wide range of crimes, such every bit murder, forgery, and theft of height-hugger-mugger information.
- Chief Manipulator: He was highly skilled at manipulation, and even Sherlock institute information technology hard to predict Moriarty's side by side move. Also, he had complete mastery of terrorist techniques and intimidation strategies and knew exactly what buttons to press to force per unit area or enrage people.
- Expert Intimidator: He had an incredible capability for irresolute his tone of voice and beliefs several times in a single sentence for psychological warfare - ranging from serenity, humor, mockery, childish, laid-back, to violence, and this will brand the victim more terrified of him. Moreover, because of this, Moriarty is extremely difficult to read and anticipate.
- Skillful Deceiver: He is notably clever and skilled in deceiving and misdirecting through several ways, most notably with his Richard Brook persona, who managed to lead people to believe that Sherlock's a fraud, and was able to lead his assassins and clients to go after a non-real primal-lawmaking.
- Good Networker: He was shown time and once again to exist an expert at managing the web of criminals he led, and he was able to consult and command all of them flawlessly, including a centuries-old Chinese crime syndicate, the Tong, showing that his criminal network encompasses worldwide, even reaching the isolated nation of North korea.
Relationships
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes appears to be the only person who can continue Moriarty entertained. Moriarty reveals several unstable musings of his to Sherlock: he ponders suicide because he is bored with the world, and he is obsessed with the consulting detective until he believes Sherlock is merely "another ordinary person". When Sherlock spots the hole in Moriarty's plan, Moriarty seemingly kills himself so equally to take the last express mirth.[1] In their interactions (and in his interactions with any grapheme so far), Moriarty persists in playing his games on his ain terms.
Moriarty nicknames Sherlock "the virgin," and continuously interferes with his life, if just to watch him dance. On the few occasions they meet, Moriarty usually speaks to Sherlock casually while issuing threats to his friends. He displays a sick and twisted demeanour in Sherlock'south company, and will practise anything to win a game once he starts to play.
Irene Adler
Irene Adler was ane of Moriarty'south clients. He is one of the few people in the series that have openly threatened her and it appears equally though he is the only i who got away with it. He threatened to "pare her" and "brand [her] into shoes" if she lied to him, and at the same time, he also gave her communication on how to manipulate Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes. [two] [v]
Mycroft Holmes
While posing as Richard Brook, Moriarty used the information he'd gathered on Sherlock to defile the consulting detective's name in the media. It is revealed that he gained this information from Mycroft Holmes, whom he nicknamed "The Iceman". Mycroft was the only person who could elicit whatever sort of response from Moriarty when he had him imprisoned secretly. [1] When Moriarty returns, Mycroft displays signs of intimidation that he has only revealed when Sherlock mentions Charles Magnussen and when Irene Adler is presumed dead. [eight]
Molly Hooper
Molly and Moriarty dated briefly. She describes their meeting as an "office romance," although Moriarty was posing as an IT worker at the time. He did this to get close to her and, through doing so, meet with Sherlock Holmes. She is furious when Sherlock says Jim's gay, although she seems a lot more than angry at Sherlock for saying so, as opposed to Jim for flirting with him. They break upwardly some time afterwards. Sherlock then finds Moriarty, who mocks him for falling for the gay act. [2]
Molly was not told until subsequently on that Jim was Moriarty, as she is flustered when Sherlock brings up her old fellow when he and John Watson approach her as fugitives. Although they separated and Moriarty was taken to court for committing the "criminal offence of the century", it appears she remained in the dark until this moment. [8]
Molly's web log has shed some light upon their brief relationship.
Jeff Hope
The serial killer, Jeff Hope, was sponsored to kill by Moriarty, who made it then the more than people he killed, the more than coin his children would receive upon his death. Hope refused to speak his name until Sherlock stomped on his bullet wound earlier he died. This was the first incident that alerted Sherlock to Moriarty's interference.[3]
Carl Powers
Moriarty knew Carl Powers in his childhood and murdered him by poisoning him with botulinum, causing him to have a fit in a pond puddle and drown.[2]
Clients
Jim Moriarty is a consulting criminal who plans out and arranges for crimes to take identify. People contact him and pay him in exchange for planning out "perfect" crimes for their personal benefit. His area of expertise ranges from faking one'southward own decease to art forgery. He is cautious to never communicate to his clients straight as to avoid existence identified, ofttimes just leaving them with his name as the only thing they know about him.
- Sponsored Jeff Promise to start killing
- Helped smuggle Black Lotus agents into London
- Faked the death of Ian Monkford
- Supplied poison to Raoul de Santos to assist in the murder of Connie Prince
- Helped Miss Wenceslas in faking the authenticity of the Vermeer painting
- Brash Irene Adler on how to manipulate Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes
- Leaked information to a terrorist jail cell about a Usa/UK counter-terrorist operation
Eurus Holmes
Due to his interest in Sherlock Holmes, Moriarty defenseless Eurus Holmes'south notice and was asked by her to Mycroft for five minutes of unsupervised chat together. At Sherrinford, Eurus mentioned 'Redbeard' to Moriarty and, from then, hatched their respective games for Sherlock. Moriarty thought Eurus to be a clever daughter and supported her plans for Sherlock, Mycroft, and John by contributing recordings of himself and his epitome for Eurus to apply later his death for her games.
Gallery
Quote
- "Jim Moriarty. Hi!"
- ―Moriarty introducing himself in "The Great Game".
- "I've given you a glimpse, Sherlock, just a teensie glimpse of what I've got going on out at that place in the large bad earth. I'm a specialist, you see? Similar you."
- ―Moriarty in "The Great Game".
- "No ane ever gets to me...and no one ever will."
- ―Moriarty in "The Great Game".
- "The flirting's over, Sherlock, daddy'southward had plenty noooooow."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Great Game".
- "That'southward what people DO!"
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Dandy Game".
- "If you don't stop prying...I'll burn you. I'll burn down the HEART out of you."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Nifty Game".
- "No you won't!"
- ―Moriarty teasing Sherlock before leaving the puddle in "The Not bad Game".
- "Sorry boys, I'm so changeable!"
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock and Watson in "The Keen Game".
- "You lot can't be allowed to continue. You just can't. I would like to convince you lot but...everything I have to say has already crossed your heed!"
- ―Moriarty quoting his literary analogue in "The Not bad Game".
- "If y'all have what you say you have, I'll make you lot rich. If you lot don't, I'll brand you into shoes."
- ―Jim Moriaty to Irene Adler, "A Scandal in Belgravia".
- "No. Deplorable... Wrong solar day to die!"
- ―Moriarty walking away from Sherlock Holmes at the kickoff of A Scandal in Belagravia.
- "No rush."
- ―Moriarty to the police force in "The Reichenbach Fall".
- "In a world of locked rooms, the human being with the key is rex, and honey you lot should see me in a crown!"
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Reichenbach Fall".
- "I want to solve problems... our problem. The Terminal Trouble. It's gonna beginning very soon, Sherlock... the Fall. But don't worry: falling's just similar flying, except there's a more permanent destination."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Reichenbach Fall".
- "I owe y'all a fall, Sherlock. I. Owe. You."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Reichenbach Autumn".
- "Well, hither we are at last. You and me, Sherlock. And our trouble, our final problem...Stayin' alive... Then slow, isn't it? Merely staying...all my life I've been looking for distraction. You lot were the best of distraction, and now, I don't even have you. Because I've browbeaten y'all. And y'all know what? In the cease, it was easy. Yes...t'was easy...now I accept to get dorsum to play with the ordinary people...turns out YOU'RE ordinary, like all of them! Oh well..."
- ―Moriarty to Sherlock in "The Reichenbach Autumn".
- "No...you're non ordinary...you're me...yous're me!! Thank you, Sherlock Holmes. 'Cheers! Anoint you. Every bit long as I'chiliad alive, you lot tin save your friends. You've got a way out...well expert luck with that!"
- ―Moriarty's 'last words' before shooting himself in "The Reichenbach Autumn".
"Y'all e'er feel pain, Sherlock...but y'all don't have to Fright it!!"
__Moriarty to Sherlock in "His Last Vow"
- ""You're insane." "You're but getting that now?""
- ―Sherlock to Moriarty in "The Reichenbach Fall".
"Expressionless is the new sexy!"
- Moriarty towards Sherlock while licking a gun in "The Abominable Helpmate".
- "Did you miss me?"
- ―Moriarty in "His Concluding Vow".
- "Blood-red alarm! Cerise alarm! Large, ruby, bouncy red alarm! Klingtons attacking lower deck! Too cowboys in black hats! Darth Vader! Don't worry, I'thousand hither now! Did yous miss me? Did you miss me? Did you miss me? Miss me? Miss me? Miss me?"
- ―Gibberish Moriarty recorded for Eurus
Trivia
- Moriarty can be seen wearing a fox pin on his tie on several occasions.[i] In Grimm's Fairy Tales, in that location is a story chosen The Wedding of Mrs. Fox which involves a male fox who fakes his ain death. Moriarty also showed Sherlock an envelope with Grimm's Fairy Tales.
- His ringtone is "Stayin' Alive", by the Bee Gees.[5]
- Moriarty'south favourite composer is Johann Sebastian Bach.
- The vocal playing while Moriarty is robbing The Tower of London in "The Reichenbach Fall" is "La gazza ladra" by Gioachino Rossini.[one]
- Series Three's 2d episode "The Sign of Three" and Serial Four's second episode "The Lying Detective" are the only episodes in the serial where Moriarty isn't either mentioned, appears or gets alluded to.
- Serial Iv'south third episode "The Concluding Trouble" makes reference to Moriarty possibly having a brother who works equally a station main. This is an innuendo to Colonel James Moriarty, who is mentioned in the original Cohan Doyle stories The Adventure of the Final Problem and The Valley of Fear.
- The song playing while Moriarty arrives Sherrinford in "The Last Problem" is "I Want to Break Gratis" by Queen.
- It is said in Sherlock: The Casebook, that Moriarty was born in 1976.
Appearances
Sherlock
Series One
- "A Study in Pink" (mentioned)
- "The Bullheaded Banker" (chatroom as "Grand")
- "The Corking Game"
Series Ii
- "A Scandal in Belgravia"
- "The Hounds of Baskerville"
- "The Reichenbach Fall"
Series Three
- "The Empty Hearse" (flashbacks)
- "His Last Vow" (Sherlock's Mind Palace & Images)
Special
- "The Abominable Bride" (Sherlock's Mind Palace)
Serial Four
- "The Six Thatchers" (mentioned)
- "The Terminal Problem" (flashbacks & video footage)
Notes
References
- ↑ 1.0 i.one i.2 1.3 ane.4 one.v ane.six Thompson, Steve (writer) & Haynes, Toby (manager). (15 January, 2012). "The Reichenbach Fall". Sherlock (2010). Series 2. Episode 3. BBC 1.
- ↑ two.0 2.ane two.2 two.3 ii.iv Gatiss, Mark (writer) & McGuigan, Paul (director). (8 August, 2010). "The Swell Game". Sherlock (2010). Series ane. Episode three. BBC One.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Moffat, Steven (writer) & McGuigan, Paul (director). (25 July, 2010). "A Report in Pink". Sherlock (2010). Series 1. Episode ane. BBC One.
- ↑ Thompson, Steve (writer) & Lyn, Euros (director). (1 August, 2010). "The Blind Banker". Sherlock (2010). Serial 1. Episode 2. BBC One.
- ↑ 5.0 5.ane 5.2 v.3 Moffat, Steven (writer) & McGuigan, Paul (manager). (1 January, 2012). "A Scandal in Belgravia". Sherlock (2010). Series 2. Episode 1. BBC One.
- ↑ 6.0 6.ane 6.two Gatiss, Marker (writer) & McGuigan, Paul (director). (8 January, 2012). "The Hounds of Baskerville". Sherlock (2010). Series two. Episode 2. BBC One.
- ↑ Gatiss, Marker (writer) & Lovering, Jeremy (director). (1 Jan, 2014). "The Empty Hearse". Sherlock (2010). Series iii. Episode 1. BBC 1.
- ↑ 8.0 eight.1 8.2 Moffat, Steven (writer) & Hurran, Nick (director). (12 January, 2014). "His Terminal Vow". Sherlock (2010). Serial iii. Episode three. BBC One.
- ↑ "The Abominable Helpmate"
- ↑ "The Final Problem (Sherlock)"
Sherlock |
---|
Sherlock Holmes (Benedict Cumberbatch) • John Watson (Martin Freeman) • Mycroft Holmes (Marking Gatiss) • Jim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) • Greg Lestrade (Rupert Graves) • Molly Hooper (Louise Brealey) • Mrs Hudson (Una Stubbs) |
Secondary Characters |
Irene Adler • Mary Watson • Charles Augustus Magnussen • Eurus Holmes |
Series 1 |
"A Written report in Pink" • "The Blind Broker" • "The Nifty Game" |
Series 2 |
"A Scandal in Belgravia" • "The Hounds of Baskerville" • "The Reichenbach Fall" |
Series 3 |
"The Empty Hearse" • "The Sign of 3" • "His Last Vow" |
Serial 4 |
"The Six Thatchers" • "The Lying Detective" • "The Final Problem" |
Specials |
Unaired Pilot • "Many Happy Returns" • "The Beastly Bride" |
Others |
"Sherlock: The Network" • Manga |
Source: https://bakerstreet.fandom.com/wiki/Jim_Moriarty
0 Response to "Jim From It Funny Sherlock Fanart"
Post a Comment