Iconic Hero-Villain Duos: Sherlock and Moriarty
In the Batman series, a very well known hero-villain couple is Batman and the Joker. They compliment one another really well because Batman is sane and the "good guy", while the Joker is the "bad guy" and plays the role of an insane, yet intelligent character. They try to outsmart the other and take control of the situation. Similarly, Sherlock Holmes and James Moriarty from Sherlock Holmes are an iconic duo who are a good pair for each another.
For starters, the two of them are very intelligent. In "The Final Problem", Sherlock says to Watson,
They are good for one another because at different parts throughout the story, Sherlock finds himself bored. There aren't many criminals that he finds worth his time, and not many intelligent enough. Coming across Moriarty, however, he found a challenge, a threat. It was something new and something he was not used to, something to keep the story going for him. They compliment and go hand in hand with one another, because they don't agree with the other's motives or ideas, but have their higher level of intelligence in common.
For starters, the two of them are very intelligent. In "The Final Problem", Sherlock says to Watson,
"You know my power, dear Watson, and yet at the end of three months I was forced to confess that I have at last met an antagonist who was my intellectual equal." (Doyle, 339)
This quote shows Sherlock's admiration towards Moriarty. They are incredibly compelling to the other because neither of them had met their equal, but meeting one another and having opposing goals pulls them closer in a way that one wants to better the other.
They are good for one another because at different parts throughout the story, Sherlock finds himself bored. There aren't many criminals that he finds worth his time, and not many intelligent enough. Coming across Moriarty, however, he found a challenge, a threat. It was something new and something he was not used to, something to keep the story going for him. They compliment and go hand in hand with one another, because they don't agree with the other's motives or ideas, but have their higher level of intelligence in common.
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