Sunday, 27 January 2008

Sharpe

Sharpe. Sharpe is fucking class. I could give you a bunch of reasons why, culturally speaking, Sharpe is a thousand times greater than Swan Lake.... and I'm going to.

1) Harris, the singularly-monikered intellectual of the riflemen. Be sure, if there's ever a moment whereby Sharpe needs to tell someone to bugger off, be sure that Harris will piss him off by generally being a multi-lingual supergenius. Also, he looks like Ray Parlour's dad.
2) Dan Hagman, the Yorkshire-bred poacher with an eagle-eye and a good ear for a tune. In fact, he's so on the spot with the knees up I often wonder if he's been sent the advance copy of Bert Weedon's Play In A Day. Never plays Freebird though. Fucker.
3) And let's not go near Lieutenant Leprechaun.
4) The plot in every episode is exactly the same. Sharpe gets assigned to some stiff-nosed prick hot out of officer's school, always in a damn hurry to give the frogs a rodgering, thrashing, whatever. Inevitably they never take his advice, and he has to Jack Bauer it off to save the fucking day, again.
5) Brilliant revisionism; e.g. when "invent" hand grenades to defend some fort. In a later scene Harris beats Darwin to the punch with his improvised after-dinner speech on the origin of species.
6) Every fight scene ends with someone being kicked square in the balls.

Best programme with Ray Parlour's dad ever.

Portus Verdict: PPPPP

2 comments:

Ian said...

2) Dan Hagman is from Cheshire...see the first episode when Sharpe meets his charges. The accent is difficult to pick...he sounds Yorkshire but then again so do some Cheshire folk.

5) I think it's Colonel Brand (excellently played by Mark Strong) who proposes the 'survival of the fittest'...an idea that was in the air (actually coined by Herbert Spencer not Darwin) but I think the Napoleonic era was pushing it a bit from the scriptwriters.

The hang grenade (or petard - as in to be hoisted on ones own ie. holding on to it for too long) has been used as early as the English civil war. Difference with a hand grenade is that it fragments and causes more injury. More so than Sharpe's improvised bags of powder (unless they filled them with shrapnel/stones).

He does look like Ray Parlour's dad. Bravo!

Nick said...

I stand corrected - excellent knowledge sir. I thank you!