Sharpe's Challenge (TV programme)

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Sharpe's Challenge
Genre Military drama
Running time 138 min.
Director(s) Tom Clegg
Producer(s) Malcolm Craddock
Muir Sutherland
Writer(s) Bernard Cornwell (novel series)
Russell Lewis
Starring Sean Bean
Daragh O'Malley
Toby Stephens
Padma Lakshmi
Music by Dominic Muldowney
John Tams
Country of origin Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language(s) English
Release date(s) 2006
Preceded by Sharpe's Waterloo
IMDb profile

Sharpe's Challenge is a British television drama, part of a series that follows the career of Richard Sharpe, a former British soldier who undertakes one last mission for his former commander, the Duke of Wellington. Unlike most installments of the series, this episode is not based on a novel by Bernard Cornwell.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In 1803 India, Sergeant Sharpe (Sean Bean) leads a patrol to an East India Company outpost. He arrives shortly before another supposedly friendly group of soldiers led by Major William Dodd (Toby Stephens). Dodd has his men kill every man, woman and child there. Sharpe is wounded and left for dead, but survives.

Fourteen years later, Sharpe, now a farmer in France, is summoned by the Duke of Wellington (Hugh Fraser) to undertake one more mission for him, to find a man in India. The missing agent was trying to learn the identity of a turncoat officer advising a rebellious Maratha rajah. Sharpe refuses, unwilling to press his luck any further, until he learns that the agent is his best friend, Patrick Harper (Daragh O'Malley).

Sharpe sets out for India. On his way to report to General Burroughs (Peter Symonds), he passes a group of soldiers accompanying Celia Burroughs (Lucy Brown), the general's attractive daughter. After a short conversation with her, he rides on ahead. He is soon ambushed by a band of bandits, but is rescued by Patrick Harper. Celia Burroughs' escort is also attacked; she is captured and taken to the fortress of Khande Rao (Karan Panthaky), the nominal leader of the revolt. However, he is not quite of age and is under the influence of a regent, his late father's favourite concubine, Madhuvanthi (Padma Lakshmi), and her lover, General Dodd, who plan to kill Rao before he can take over fully.

Sharpe reaches the British encampment, where he finds General Burroughs incapacitated by illness. Command has passed to an old enemy of Sharpe's, General Sir Henry Simmerson (Michael Cochrane). When Simmerson refuses to act without orders and reinforcements from Agra, Sharpe gets his permission to infiltrate Ferraghur, the enemy fortress.

He and Harper pretend to be deserters and are taken in by the rebels. He makes the acquaintance of former French Colonel Gudin (Aurélien Recoing), a fellow veteran of the Battle of Waterloo two years earlier, who has been hired to train the rebels.

Meanwhile, Simmerson finally arrives and lays siege to Ferraghur. Sharpe discovers that Dodd has deceived the British into attacking just where he has planted barrels of gunpowder. In a skirmish, some British soldiers are captured, among them Sergeant Shadrach Bickerstaff (Peter-Hugo Daly), who had clashed with Sharpe earlier. To save his life, he betrays Sharpe.

He and Harper are beaten and imprisoned, but Gudin, disgusted by the barbaric execution of prisoners, helps Sharpe and Harper escape, just as the British launch their assault. Sharpe triggers the trap prematurely, blowing up many of the rebels. Harper encounters and shoots Bickerstaff, while Sharpe searches for Dodd. Seeing that the fortress has fallen, Dodd prepares to flee. Madhuvanthi attacks him with a knife when she learns that he is abandoning her, and is killed. Then Sharpe finds him and, in the ensuing swordfight, ends his life.

Celia is reunited with her father. Khande Rao is captured alive and is allowed to keep his throne after he signs a peace treaty, much to Sharpe's disgust. Their mission accomplished, Sharpe and Harper ride off.

[edit] External links