Indie Spotlight: ‘Whitlock’ Gender-Flips ‘Sherlock Holmes’ To Great Effect

We receive a ton of tips every day from independent creators, unaffiliated with any major motion picture studios, television networks, new media studios, or other well-funded online video entities. The Indie Spotlight is where we’ll write about and shout out to a select few of them and bring you up to speed on the great (and sometimes not-so-great) attention-grabbing series you probably haven’t heard about until now.  Read previous installments here.

Fans of the BBC’s Sherlock will have to wait another agonizing two years before their favorite detective returns, but luckily for them, there’s a new private investigator shaking things up on the web. Her name is Whitlock, and she’s the titular character of a clever web series that provides a gender-flipped version of Sherlock Holmes.

Studies like the Bechdel test offer compelling evidence that female characters are often underrepresented in fiction, and Whitlock responds by bringing a dose of estrogen to Baker Street. The main character is Sophie Whitlock (played by series creator Lauren Tess), an investigator who has a little less of Holmes’ sociopathy but just as much of a ‘my way or the highway’ attitude. Her assistant is Fawn Watkins, described by the series description as “New-Agey” and always decked out in unusual outfits. Whitlock

also moves from Holmes’ London to the sunnier (and far more convenient) hills of Los Angeles.

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Whitlock has much more going for it than its girl-power spin. The writing is sharp, Tess’ portrayal of Whitlock is icy and on-point, and the pacing is smooth and even. Considering the genre and the format, the last of those achievements in particularly impressive. It is hard to give time for a mystery to unfold while also moving at a speed that is comfortable for web viewers, but Whitlock makes it all seem elementary.

OTHER UNDER-THE-RADAR SERIES TO CHECK OUT:

  • Lungs. A woman meets interesting characters as she walks from Newport, RI to Manhattan.
  • Jewvangelist. A rabbi must balance all of the unusual characters who hang out in her synagogue.
  • You Are Here. The patrons of a coffee shop are hit by the news that their favorite hangout might be closing down.
  • Twinzies. A sketch series that features the misadventures of a pair of identical twins.

Got a series you’d like to see featured in the Indie Spotlight? Be sure to contact us here. For best coverage, please include a full episode in your e-mail.

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Published by
Sam Gutelle

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