SonofStorms wrote:
Hmmmm maybe not "the" best but one of the better ones in my opinion is Dr. Spencer Reid on Criminal Minds...... I think I read somewhere that the actor playing him even suspects that he (the character) has AS.....but I have not seen the show lately (only watched it twice since they let the actress playing J.J. go....)
Awwww, Spencer.
Jory wrote:
Robert Downey Jr's Sherlock Holmes is never identified as an Aspie (he wouldn't be, since he's living in the 1890s, five decades before it was given a name) but there are scenes in both of his Holmes films that are such accurate representations of AS that the writers must have known what they were doing. The scene in the 2009 film in which Holmes meets Watson's fiance should be impossible for an Aspie to watch without identifying with it.
Before Watson and Mary arrive at the restaurant, Holmes is experiencing sensory overload, his eyes darting all over the place as he notices every little detail around him, and the volume level is cranked up to give the viewer an idea of what he's hearing. (There's a similar scene in the sequel, when someone asks Holmes, "What do you see?" He replies, "Everything. That is my curse.") When Watson and Mary show up, Holmes is completely oblivious that what he's saying to Mary is crossing the line. He offends her by accident and gets a glass of wine thrown in his face. Mary rushes out, Watson chases after her, and Holmes is left to finish his meal alone, with a look on his face that says, "Well, I f**ked it up again."
I can't speak for anyone else here, but this was uncomfortably on the spot for me.
That is an interesting point. It makes a lot of sense.
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