''Sharpe's Justice'' is a British
television drama, the 13th of
a series that follows the career of
Richard Sharpe, a fictional British soldier during the
Napoleonic Wars. Unlike most of the other instalments of the series, this episode was not based on a novel by
Bernard Cornwell. A key scene in the story is based on the
Peterloo Massacre of 1819, reset here to
Keighley in Yorkshire, in 1814.
Plot
It is 1814. There is peace in Europe as a defeated
Napoleon
Napoleon Bonaparte ; it, Napoleone Bonaparte, ; co, Napulione Buonaparte. (born Napoleone Buonaparte; 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821), later known by his regnal name Napoleon I, was a French military commander and political leader who ...
is sent into exile on the island of
Elba. Major Sharpe is assigned to head the Scarsdale
Yeomanry in his native
Yorkshire, depriving him of a chance to settle the score with his adulterous wife
Jane and her lover, Lord Rossendale.
Sharpe and Regimental Sergeant Major Harper are met on their arrival by Captain George Wickham, an officer in the Yeomanry. As he escorts them to town, they are ambushed and shot at. Sharpe pursues (but does not catch) one of the men, who turns out to be his close childhood friend, Matthew Truman.
Wickham takes Sharpe to meet Sir Willoughby Parfitt and Sir Percy Stanwyck, wealthy businessmen who own many cotton mills between them. Parfitt tells Sharpe about the post-war unrest. The discharge of men from the army has flooded England with unemployed workmen; the increased competition and a reduced demand for cotton gives Parfitt an excuse to lower wages. He is opposed by Truman, a rabble rouser who stirs up the discontented, poverty-stricken masses.
Meanwhile, the financially strapped Rossendale inherits an estate in neighbouring
Lancashire. He had used his influence to get Sharpe posted as far from London as possible, but now has to relocate (with Jane) nearby. Both Rossendale and Jane speak with Sharpe separately, but nothing is resolved.
Dan Hagman, one of Sharpe's former riflemen, shows up looking for work, but turns down Sharpe's offer - nine years in uniform is enough for him. He becomes a follower of Truman.
When Sharpe hears of an illegal meeting, he orders his soldiers to tread gently, but Wickham deliberately disobeys his orders and incites a massacre; Truman gets away in the confusion. However, Wickham cleverly manages to place all the blame on Sharpe.
Sharpe visits Sally Bunting, a woman who had been kind to him in his childhood. From her, he learns that his mother is dead and also that Truman is his brother (or more likely half-brother). He arranges to meet with him at their mother's grave. Parfitt learns of it and sends Wickham to take them both. Sharpe, Harper and Hagman get away, but Truman is shot dead by Wickham.
While in hiding, Sharpe is warned by Lady Anne Camoynes that Parfitt and Wickham intend to secretly intercept and destroy a steam engine that Stanwyck is bringing in, in order to weaken his business rival. They intend to blame it on disaffected machine wreckers. Sharpe and his friends foil the scheme, catching Wickham red-handed. Sharpe uses this to blackmail Parfitt into clearing his name. In the end, Sharpe heads back to London, Harper to Ireland, while Hagman stays behind, having taken a liking to Sally.
Cast
*
Sean Bean – Major
Richard Sharpe
*
Daragh O'Malley –
Regimental Sergeant Major Patrick Harper
*
Abigail Cruttenden
Abigail Lucy Cruttenden (born 23 March 1968) is an English actress.
Cruttenden played opposite Sean Bean as his character Richard Sharpe's wife Jane in several episodes of the TV series '' Sharpe.'' In 2007, Cruttenden joined the cast from the ...
–
Jane Sharpe
*
Caroline Langrishe – Lady Anne Camoynes
*
Philip Glenister – Matt Truman
*
John Tams –
Rifleman Daniel Hagman
*
Douglas Henshall – Captain
George Wickham, namesake of a minor character with similar traits in
Jane Austen
Jane Austen (; 16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. Austen's plots of ...
's novel ''
Pride and Prejudice
''Pride and Prejudice'' is an 1813 novel of manners by Jane Austen. The novel follows the character development of Elizabeth Bennet, the dynamic protagonist of the book who learns about the repercussions of hasty judgments and comes to appreci ...
''
*
Alexis Denisof – Lord Rossendale
*
Tony Haygarth – Sir Willoughby Parfitt
*
Karen Meagher – Sally Bunting
* Philip Anthony – Sir Percy Stanwyck
*
Philip Martin Brown – Saunders
*
Sean O'Kane
Sean O'Kane (born 11 November 1964) is a Scottish actor.
Career
Sean O'Kane grew up in Cambuslang near Glasgow, in a family with twelve siblings. He was interested in acting as a child, then at the age of 19, after a stint in the Territorial A ...
– Lt. Fosdyke
* Henry Moxon – Whitbread
*
Rita May – Mrs. Trent
*
Richard Bremmer – Arnold
*
Tony Aitken –
Horse Guards Clerk
*
Nick Conway
Nick Conway (born Nicholas Campbell on 25 December 1962) is an English actor. He played Billy Boswell in Carla Lane's BBC comedy series '' Bread''. He has also appeared in ''Starting Out'', '' Thank You Mrs Clinkscales'', ''When Saturday Comes ...
– Sam West
External links
*
''Sharpe's Justice'' at SharpeFilm.com
{{Sharpe Films
1997 British television episodes
1990s historical films
1990s war films
Napoleonic Wars films
Justice
War television films
Films set in 1814
Films directed by Tom Clegg (director)