mercredi 22 octobre 2014

Useful Links


Useful Links






The Episodes

The complete series





Various Documentaries

Blackadder: the whole rotten saga
Part 1/7 
Part 2/7
Part 3/7
Part 4/7
Part 5/7
Part 6/7
Part 7/7 

Blackadder rides again

Part 1

(the other parts can be found if you dig well)

"Corporal Punishment"

"Corporal Punishment"



We have all heard, at some point in our lives, tragic stories about one the most abject and shameful aspect of the first world war; the countless executions of soldiers accused of desertion by firing squad, under the order of their own generals.
This particular episode is, in many respects, a homage of various anti-war movies such as Stanley Kubrick's "Paths of Glory" (1957) or "King and Country" by Joseph Losey (1964).


Summary:
In this episode, Captain Blackadder shoots a carrier pigeon carrying orders for his men to go over the trenches and face the Germans. It turns out that his actions are punishable by court-martial. He is found guilty and is scheduled to be shot by firing squad. However, at the last second, a call from the Minister of War saves his life.

 

   Blackadder takes advantage of the frequent communications problems to avoid the inevitable message from HQ ordering him to go into no man's land. When HQ resorts to sending pigeons to carry orders, the captain kills the bird in cold blood and says:
"Come on, George. With 50,000 men getting killed a week who's going to miss a pigeon?"
Those sort of allusions to the ever-increasing number of casualties is recurrent throughout the entire season. In the first episode, for instance, when yet again they are ordered 'to go over the top', Blackadder gives is opinion (in a brilliant deadpan delivery by Rowan Atkinson) and declares "Clearly Field Marshall Haig (who was an actual senior officer during WWI) is about to make yet a Gargantuan effort to move his drinks cabinet six inches closer to Berlin". Sadly, this is barely an exaggeration, trench warfare was incredibly slow paced and offensives were often rewarded by a the gain of a very small parcel of land.

Melchett: "Look, this is the amount of land we've recaptured since yesterday."

George: "Oh, excellent."

Melchett: "What's the actual scale on the map, Darling?"

Darling:"Uhm ... one to one, sir."








However ludicrous the scene above may appear, one cannot deny it efficiently conveys the message that sometimes many thousands of soldiers gave their lives for what seemed to be a fruitless progress.
Yet the episode "corporal punishment" conjures up another morbid account of the war.
In "Paths of Glory" a hundred men are sentenced to died for crime of 'cowardice' after a travesty of a trial, as it was clear that only three men were involved and they could not possibly have gone over the trenches because it was utter suicide.

The absurdity in Blackadder stems from the fact that not only judge of the court is the accuser General Melchett (how convenient), but also the latter seems to be utterly indifferent to Blackadder's  repeated disregard of orders and rather focuses his accusations on the murder of his pet pigeon 'Speckled Jim'. Although it bears absolutely no historical relevance, I would argue that the plot is eminently symbolical of the lack of fair trials and the over abundance of power in the hands of the generals.


dimanche 5 octobre 2014

Introducing the characters




The Characters







  • Captain Blackadder (brilliantly played by Rowan Atkinson) is a sly and ostensibly cynical man. His uppermost desire is to live through the war without ever going over the trenches.
  • Leftenant George (played by the now world famous Hugh Laurie) is, on the other hand, thrilled at the prospect of fighting the Germans. He harbours all sorts of delusions about the war and the propaganda is reinforcing his blind enthusiasm.
  • Private Bladrick is the quintessential average Tommy and who better than Tim Robinson (the performer) to describe him: "I had the privilege of performing a part that represented the ordinary lives of the grandfathers of an awful lot of people in the country in which I live but really it was for the to imbue Baldrick with that notion rather than me. I was just a bloke who couldn't make coffee"
  • Tim McInnerny's character's personality revolved around the fact that his name is 'Darling'. Therefore this Captain Darling is an thoroughly embittered man. He has landed a desk job under the order of General Melchett which enables him to exercise his revenge on the people who make his life a living hell.
  • General Melchett is played by Britain's most beloved celebrity: Steven Fry. Melchett represents the insanity of the First World war. He is the embodiment of the madness associated with men who have abundance of power. Although there is a slight discrepancy between Stephen Fry's portrayal of the raving mad general and the actual generals of that time, there is no denying it corresponds to the popular opinion about the sheer absurdness of the war.





An introduction to Blackadder goes forth.



Foreword



The last season of the Blackadder series is set in a trench in Flanders. One of the difficulties during the writing and filming of this season was not to make cheap jokes about an eminently serious and grim matter such as the First World War during which countless brave men fought and died.

One of the important aspects the creators (Richard Curtis, Ben Elton and John Lloyd) wanted to re-create in this final season was the claustrophobic environment of the trenches (which, in addition, suited the sitcom genre) and the various impacts it had on the behavior of the soldiers.

Blackadder goes forth has not been praised so much for its historical accuracy but rather for the uncanny portrayals of the cast: each character has their specific 'philosophy' about the war to which most people nowdays can relate to. Be that as it may, there is a substancial amount of satirical comments about the First World War which have a historical relevence.