Sharpe Sharpe's Company

1994

Action / Adventure / Drama / History / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Sean Bean Photo
Sean Bean as Lt. / Cpt. Richard Sharpe
Marc Warren Photo
Marc Warren as Cpt. Rymer
Pete Postlethwaite Photo
Pete Postlethwaite as Sgt. Obadiah Hakeswill
Nicholas Jones Photo
Nicholas Jones as Col. Fletcher
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
990.66 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S ...
1.99 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
25 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 0 / 9

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Rainey-Dawn8 / 10

Good Episode

Shape's enemy of the past comes back to get revenge but Sharpe has other plans for him. Meanwhile, Sharpe gets to see and hold his daughter for the first time. Sharpe is also given command of the Light Company again.

8/10.

Reviewed by Scaramouche20048 / 10

Sharpe - v- Obidiah Part 1

Sean Bean returns as Napoleonic hero Richard Sharpe. This time the action takes place in 1812 around the historical Battle and siege at Badajoz.

Sharpe has been demoted to no more than a quartermaster to make a place for an aristocratic fop who has bought Sharpe's captaincy of the light company at horseguards.

Sharpe realises that there is only one act of bravery that will help him regain his captaincy and keep it, and that it to lead the the 'Forlorn Hope' the first company that will storm the walls of badajoz when the assault finally begins... in short a suicide mission.

Sharpe also has personal reasons to get inside the city, and that is because his wife Teresa and his newborn daughter Antonia, are trapped inside and are in danger of being discovered by the French.

Also to add to Sharpes worries, a demon from his past, Sergeant Obidiah Hakeswell has returned to the ranks and is determined to rape, pillage and flog as many people as possible.

Pete Postlethwaite gives the performance of the movie as the evil, twitchy Obidiah, and the character of Patrick Harper is brought to the forefront a lot more and Daragh O' Malley really shines.

Another great Swashbuckling Sharpe adventure

Reviewed by freemantle_uk8 / 10

Fun bit of historical fiction.

Sharpe's Company is the third TV film in the series based on Bernard Cornwell novel. It tells the life of Richard Sharpe, an officer who serves in the British Army during the Napoleanic wars. This film is set years after Sharpe's Eagle in 1812 and Sharpe had become a Captain and fathered a child with the Spanish resistance fighter Teresa during that time. At the beginning of the film the British Army fought a tough battle against the French and Sharpe's commanding office Colonel Lawford is badly injured. Because of this he is relieved of his command and a new Colonel takes command of the regiment and bring in his own officers. Sharpe is demoted and loses command of the Chosen Men. Also with the new recruit is Sharpe's old enemy from years before, Sergeant Obidiah Hakeswill (Pete Postlethwaite). The new officers make Sharpe into no more then a desk clerk, and his Chosen Men are being humiliated, being turned into ordinary soldiers. Hakeswill is on a personal vendetta against Sharpe through the siege of Badajoz, sucking up to the officers so he can't be punished and making the Chosen Men do tasks like digging a trench. In the middle of this Teresa is spying for the English in the fortress.

What I like about Cornwell novels and the Sharpe films is that it shows a mix picture with the British army and that they was a lot of politics and positioning within the army. The French are casted as the enemy, but they are not made as pure evil, like the English were in Braveheart or the British in the Patriot. The big enemy was with the British army itself. Pete Postlethwaite steals the show as the villain of the film, and he was great being sleazy and psychopathic. They are also solid performance from Sean Bean, Daragh O'Malley and Marc Warren.

This is not as action packed as the previous two Sharpe films, but that's because the military focus was on the siege and not any battles. At times it was a little slow, but the personal focus was still needed and in general it was a good Sharpe film.

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