http://www.blogcdn.com/www.cinematical.com/media/2010/04/sher5.jpg
With the exceptions of the comments left on articles, comments from colleagues, and occasionally, weekend box office receipts, I spend the majority of my time blissfully unaware that people don’t share the same feelings as I do about movies. I don’t mean to suggest that my feelings are correct; I’m merely observing that I’m surprised when people respond in a particularly strong way to a film, either when it’s released or some time after the fact. On my Iron Man 2 review, for example, there was a preponderance of comments from readers in which they dismantled The Dark Knight](http://www.moviefone.com/movie/the-dark-knight/27016/main?icid=movsmartsearch), a film which to my knowledge was almost universally beloved.
But there was also an outpouring of hostility when, in that same review, I championed Sherlock Holmes](Sherlock Holmes (2009) - Movie | Moviefone), a movie which I regarded as, well, if no great work of art, at least as really entertaining and fun. Upon second glance, however - which was afforded me thanks to the recent release of the film on Blu-ray by distributor Warner Brothers - I feel compelled to argue the artistic merits of at least one scene, even if it may have served as an interruption to the rest of the fun and entertainment.