Sidekicks,
partners, bosom buddies, and dastardly duos are often found in literature and
movie format. So many famous crime-fighting twosomes come to mind:
Miguel
de Cervantes Saavedra’s Don Quixote de la Mancha and his squire, Sancho Panza
Tarzan
and the Apes (later, Jane) in Edgar Rice Burroughs’s graphic novels (weren’t
the bad guys always trying to capture the chimpanzee?)
Batman
and Robin; Attila and the Huns; Gene Autry and Gabby Hayes;
Genghis
Khan and grandson Kublai (generations apart but both riveted on world
domination)
Rizzoli & Isles; Stephanie Plum &
Lula; Simon and Simon; Hart to Hart; ah, the list goes on.
Sherlock
Holmes has his ‘man Friday’ (reference to Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe intentional.)
Dr. Watson, the quintessential sidekick to Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous
detective, is narrator of Sherlock Holmes’s adventures. Watson does not fill
the role of leg-work man like Nero Wolfe’s Archie or the “muscle” of Stephanie
Plum’s Lula. When he attempts to detect, in the presence or unexpected absence
of the detective, the efforts fall short with, in his own words, “indifferent
success.”
Did
Dr. Watson remain with Mr. Holmes all those years, even after he married, for
the exhilaration of knowing the game was afoot?

My fav Dr. Watson is Jude Law. Not the portly sidekick, but a more kickass version!
ReplyDeleteAnd is it just me that can't stand Lulu in the Stephanie Plum numbers books? She drives me nuts!
Lula is more caricature than character, I think.
ReplyDeleteI devoured the Sherlock Holmes series when I was around 12, and I'm really enjoying the weird film camaraderie of Jude Law and Robert Downey Jr. Yes, there is something so entertaining about the petty conflicts between two friends who are so different from one another.
ReplyDeleteI love it when the main character and the "sidekick" are such foils for each other.
ReplyDeleteHolmes and Watson are a perfect example.
The BBC Sherlock and Watson are brilliant together. I still can't believe they want to ruin that chemistry with making Lucy Liu be Watson in "Elementary." The male comraderie is what makes the duo work so well together. With a boy-girl crime fighting show you'd end up with nothing more than another "Bones" type show.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Suzanne, the BBC version of Sherlock and Watson was fabulous.
ReplyDeleteThe team of Jude Law and Robert Downey Jr has that certain chemistry that wouldn't work with Lucy Liu. Besides, what is the point?
ReplyDeleteDefinitely prefer Jude Law's and Martin Freeman's revivals of Watson. I'm sure purists would have their issues with the way the roles have changed, but I prefer these two interpretations.
ReplyDeleteRE: Lula - I liked her early on in the series. Now, not so much. Too bad Connie isn't elevated to sidekick more often. Certainly a more diverse character (in my humble opinion).