Marie-Angelique Finds Out That Her Husband Is Alive | Sharpe
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- Опубликовано: 2 дек 2020
- General Simmerson says that Major Philippe Joubert was the one who stuck him under the sun.
From Sharpe's Peril: On their way home to England, Richard Sharpe and Patrick Harper reluctantly agree to escort Marie-Angelique Bonnet to the hill fort of Kalimgong, where her fiancé, Major Joubert is stationed. They encounter a baggage train heading to Madras, made up of soldiers from the King's and the East India Company's armies, commanded by the young Ensign Beauclere, engineer Major Tredinnick, and Subedar Pillai.
Arriving at Kalimgong, Sharpe and Harper find the entire garrison killed, with the exception of the fort's commander, General Sir Henry Simmerson, Sharpe's old enemy. Strung up naked in the courtyard, Simmerson's mind is addled with the heat and he seems to only speak nonsense, such as "save the harvest." Major Joubert is not among the dead, to Marie-Angelique's relief, but neither are the Company ledgers that reveal what has been stolen from the fort. The Subedar dies.
Continuing on, the train finds a farming village destroyed by bandits, the entire harvest stolen, and everyone dead but a young girl who witnessed the attack. Between what the girl saw and Simmerson's addled ramblings, Sharpe realises that not only were these people growing opium for the Company, but Colonel Count Dragomirov and Major Joubert were responsible for the slaughter in the village and at Kalimgong, using bandits as scapegoats.
Welcome to the OFFICIAL Sharpe RUclips Channel.
Follow Sharpe, a fictional British Soldier as he fights during the Napoleonic Wars!
Sharpe is a British period drama series starring Sean Bean as Richard Sharpe, and Daragh O'Malley as his second in command, Patrick Harper.
Throughout the series, Sharpe gradually gets promoted through the ranks but makes a number of dangerous enemies along the way. Eventually, his success gains him a steady promotion, and by the end of the Napoleonic Wars, he becomes Lieutenant-Colonel Sharpe!
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#SharpesPeril - Развлечения
It says a lot that Simmerson is the most useful when he's been staked in the sun and not full aware of whats going on.
I liked Simmersons turn, it was a good way to end his story arc...
more useful than any of the Lords
Simmerson was left to simmer in the Sun
@@MrRugbylane 7/10
"You've think I'd marry such a man?"
No offense, madame, but... You didn't exactly make a good impression at the very start.
Anyone else getting flash backs to the Wolf Brigade? That massacre, that child soldier, that traitorous contact, and rebellious soldiers within the ranks... General Loupe remains in spirit.
"They belong to Brigade Loupe, "magnifying glass brigage", named after their commanding officer, Brigadier General Guy Loupe. Loupe is French for magnifying glass." -Rifleman Harris
The mastermind being French also helps. xD
Sharpe is always surrounded by women. He is literally one lucky bastard. He never knew his dad.
Probably inherited his fathers traits
@@magnusthered4973 a later movie had Captain Wilkiamson Henrickson after Colonel Richard Shape just how many females he needs to have. Henrikson seemed hurt that the women he was interested in rejected him and only wanted Sharpe. Only 10% of men get all the sexual partners they want. The other 90% get nothing or take the leftover scraps.
"I think I might remember the name of the man that staked me out under the sun to die!"
All this vocal britishness makes me feel smarter already. Great actors and writing
Amazing show so addicting
It's for those who possess a ...
*Sharp* IQ.
Addictive*
Just like the opium
still cant get over the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte
No dislikes after three hours?
Now that sir, is soldiering!
i disliked because of your "thats soldiering" comment
Always the French...what if they sent Sharpe to North America after Napoleon's defeat, where he'd have to fight Americans alongside French-Canadian soldiers? They could call it, "Sharpe's Confusion".
France and England were enemies in this period of time.
@@Kahdeksanpenninen123 So were Britain and the US. From 1812-1815.
@@Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry And Russian and Sweden. But the film is about the Napoleonic war thus the Sharpe's enemy is "always the French". ;)
Achievement Unlocked: Et Tu Brute
Come and have a go if you think you're hard enough.
Achievement Earned:
*Soldier’s Solution*
Last time I was this early, I didn't have an account to comment with.
Also, drawing lots to stand assassin?
. . .
That's not soldiering.
But a soldier’s solution.
Also remember what Sharpe taught us, “A bad officer is better off dead, and a good soldier better learn how to kill him.”
@@Southern_Crusader I tend to think he was trolling Kiely when he said that. It also had the benefit of getting the real compañía irlandesa on his side very quickly when he had only a short time to get them into shape.
I haven't seen the whole episode here, but I can't offhand think of any way in which Sharpe is a bad officer, nor Wormwood and his cronies good soldiers.
Close to 8 minutes 😍
I miss the old days in spain
Sharpe need to be promoted to general to complete his cycle of becoming president the ultimate raised from the ranks story
At that time Colonel was an honorary rank, with the responsibility to clothe a regiment given a generous budget, the excess of which formed a decent pension. Any other responsibilities were handled by a lieutenant colonel. I think Sharpe's retirement rank is entirely satisfactory.
@@bloodspatteredguitar Thank you, I didn't know any of this. So does this mean Sharpe still has responsibilities to the South Essex? I may have misunderstood, but that doesn't sound much like retirement?
@@talavera9515 assuming that the regiment of which he is colonel is the South Essex. I've not read the Sharpe books, and as far as I ever picked up from the films, he just ended up as colonel in retirement, which suggests the position I presented above (the other possibility is that he retired as a lieutenant colonel and is therefore always addressed as colonel, but I think the films suggest that he retired as major).
So yes, he does have a responsibility to the regiment of which he is colonel, but I think that responsibility could more or less be left to administrative staff and the rest be drawn as a pension.
I disclaim that my knowledge is drawn from memory of a single chapter of the book "Fusiliers" by Mark Urban about the American war of independence. His follow up book "Rifles" is about the 95th, and taught me that, unfortunately, they weren't actually at the battle of Talavera, so Sharpe could not possibly have taken an eagle there.
@@bloodspatteredguitar Ah, but Sharpe and his men were merely detached to join the South Essex in Sharpe's Eagle, rather than fighting with the 95th as a whole. Presumably Wellington sent them along to help act as scouts, since that was something the Rifles excelled at at the time due to actually wearing something that couldn't be seen a mile away.
@@233Deadman a good point if the main body of the 95th was simply deployed elsewhere and Sharpe left behind. But the 95th weren't there because they had only just arrived on the peninsula and were marching as fast as they could to catch up to Wellesley.
I wish this full movie were available here on RUclips. I've never seen it.
Uploading an 8 minute clip during a pandemic? Now that's YouTubing.
And the plot thickens
Шарп всегда Шарп ...
Man, fatboy really turned about heel, he seemed to be a decent character (unless I missed something), before they got to that damn fort.
he was already a troublemaker before even meeting Sharpe.
@@SantomPh I must've missed that, all I recall before the rape thing he tried to cover up was being out of dress and telling one of his men off for being cryptic to Sharpe.
Sir Henry Simmerson turned from asshole to relatively nice guy after he almost died by being staked to the ground in the hot sun. I guess almost dying by heat stroke is the cure for being jerks? We should implement that cure for asshole behavior.
With a name like wormword you’re just destined to be a villain.
4th, I love this show
OHHHHHHHHH SWEET MARIE
Seeing no that’s soldiering comments and writhing your own that’s memeing
What episode is this ?
Sharpes peril
@Richard Narrows it down!
Last one
Richard looks real old.
The next installment is, "Sharpe's Rehab". His eyes are two piss holes in the snow.
Fiancee not yet Husband
What's the casting call for this? "We need Indian children to play corpses"? What parent would send their child to play a corpse?
War makes men do what things they would have never had done
3
😈😈😈😈😉Marie g
The writers really tried too hard to simulate how they thought people spoke back then, but they came off a little too Shakespearean at times :/
I almost agree, but there are plenty of books, diaries and letters from the period for them to consult, and I'd hope they did. I think perhaps the problem is that some actors are better than others at putting the more formal speech patterns over as natural. Imo Sean Bean as Sharpe doesn't always succeed, but possibly it's actually Sharpe, not Bean, for whom formal speech of the time sits uneasy on the tongue?
@@talavera9515 I agree
@@talavera9515 I believe English as spoken in Yorkshire at the time would have been peppered with many thees, thous, and thys. Probably a mercy that they sacrificed historical accuracy for a wider international audience. And more profitable for the production and distribution companies.
First, comment first if your cool
FILTH!
Hey YANKS its Mar'm NOT MOM 😑ANGELIQUE Is an ANGEL 😈😈😈😈😉💖g