How Sherlock Changed the World

2013 • PBS
4.5
19 reviews
TV-PG
Rating
Eligible
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Season 1 episodes (2)

1 Episode 1
12/17/13
Season-only
From PBS: Episode 1 - The fictional Sherlock Holmes was a scientist who used chemistry, bloodstains and minute traces of evidence to catch criminals. In an era when eyewitness reports and "smoking gun" evidence were needed to convict criminals, Sherlock Holmes' crime-scene methods were revolutionary. Forensic scientists, crime historians and Sherlockian experts reveal for the first time the astonishing impact Arthur Conan Doyle's creation had on the development of real-life criminal investigation and forensic techniques. With a mix of interviews, dramatic reconstruction and archives, the program tells the story of the impact and legacy of the most famous crime fighter in history.
2 Episode 2
12/17/13
Season-only
From PBS: Episode 2 - The fictional Sherlock Holmes was a scientist who used chemistry, bloodstains and minute traces of evidence to catch criminals. In an era when eyewitness reports and "smoking gun" evidence were needed to convict criminals, Sherlock Holmes' crime-scene methods were revolutionary. Forensic scientists, crime historians and Sherlockian experts reveal for the first time the astonishing impact Arthur Conan Doyle's creation had on the development of real-life criminal investigation and forensic techniques. With a mix of interviews, dramatic reconstruction and archives, the program tells the story of the impact and legacy of the most famous crime fighter in history.

About this show

From PBS: HOW SHERLOCK CHANGED THE WORLD, a new show about the world's most legendary fictional detective, reveals the astonishing impact Holmes has had on the development of real criminal investigation and forensic techniques. From blood to ballistics, from fingerprints to footprints, Sherlock Holmes was 120 years ahead of his time, protecting crime scenes from contamination, looking for minute traces of evidence and searching for what the eye couldn't see.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
19 reviews
Renee Cook
February 1, 2014
This was a wonderful exploration into the literal birth of forensic science!!! (There's a pun in there somewhere. ..) Really fascinating the way a fictional character shaped a modern science...