Screen Crime Revives 3 New Sleuth Adaptations as TV Doubles Down on Amateur Detectives
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 5
Screen Crime Revives 3 New Sleuth Adaptations as TV Doubles Down on Amateur Detectives
1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 5
Summary
High Potential, Elsbeth and Ludwig exemplify a fresh wave of TV crime series built around gifted outsiders who solve cases alongside police rather than serving as officers.
The article argues the trope endures because it offers brisk, light puzzle-solving and a maverick hero who outsmarts bureaucracy while still delivering a neat arrest and restored order.
That formula traces back to Edgar Allan Poe’s C Auguste Dupin in 1841 and Sherlock Holmes in 1887, whose “consulting detective” model still shapes modern screen sleuths.
Real policing rarely resembles that setup: former detectives say outside specialists are used for narrow expertise such as gait analysis, while civilian investigators mostly handle low-level tasks without arrest powers.
Recent adaptations also tilt toward women-led and Holmes-inspired stories—from Enola Holmes 3 to a newly announced BBC Poirot—showing how the consultant figure keeps evolving with audience tastes.