Top Gear (2002) s21e06 Episode Script
Burma Special (1)
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Hello.
Hello, everybody, thank you very much.
Thank you.
A big welcome! Nice.
A big welcome.
Thank you and welcome.
Welcome to what is a very special show, because it is our Christmas special.
Yeah, and this year it's a little bit different.
Yeah, because it's actually the middle of March.
It is.
The main reason it's a little bit different is because our producers have told us that we should try our hands at long-distance lorry driving.
Literally, my idea of heaven.
Yeah.
They told us each to buy a truck and report with it to what the BBC calls the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
But everybody else calls it Burma.
The meeting point was a giant parade ground in the middle of the old capital city, Rangoon.
And I was the first to arrive.
ENGINE SQUEALS INTO SILENCE I've bought a stereo.
I have a speaker system here in the roof, the passenger seat has been replaced with a subwoofer, and there are two amps with a combined power of 2,300 watts.
The best thing is, included in the price was this comb andan entire lorry.
It was built in 1959 or 1976.
People are a bit hazy on that.
What we do know for sure is that Isuzu made the mud flaps, which is odd, because it says Mitsubishi on the axles.
Ooh! ENGINE APPROACHES Is that James? It is James.
Don't really call that a lorry.
Morning.
Van, mate.
What? We had to bring lorries.
That is a lorry.
It's a van.
Technically it's a crane, actually.
I've bought a crane.
Oh, is that what that is? Look at that.
A crane, two winches, hydraulic rams, legs 'And it had the latest in high-tech dashboards.
' That's a mess.
Isn't this going to drive your OCD madness Well, I've put labels on things corresponding to what I think they do.
Hazards What's that? I've got one of those.
I've had to put a question mark on it.
Mine is a sports lorry.
Straight six, rear-wheel drive, twin exhausts.
BMW 325i and this, almost identical.
Banging stereo.
Really? Seriously.
You want to hear it? Not really.
I expect it's quite DEAFENING MUSIC MUSIC DISTORTS AT HIGH VOLUME Anyway, I'm sure that won't become annoying at all.
I need to ask you a question.
What? Why are you wearing a tie? Because I'm a modern lorry driver, and modern lorry drivers are crisp and sharp.
The days are over when you simply turned up with a glove box full of strong pornography and egg on your vest.
At this point, Hammond arrived with a glove box full of strong pornography and egg on his vest.
CLEARS THROAT What do you think? What is it? A lorry or a Hindu temple? This has been extensively modded.
Has it? Not just the visual improvements.
They are significant, the lights and the little studdy things, but note Oh, God.
All of that frame arrangement, right, it's a farm truck.
Yeah.
And that's so it can accommodate those low-density big loads.
Big loads of what? Crops.
What crop? Here? In Burma? Home of the Golden Triangle? Hay.
No.
Or turnips.
No.
Kale.
No, heroin.
That's all they really grow here.
You've bought a heroin lorry.
Fit a lot of heroine in there, wouldn't you? Hammond, this seat, well, let's be honest, it's a church pew.
Yeah.
It looks like the sort of railway carriage that Agatha Christie went about in.
James has bought a van.
Has he parked it a long way away, or is it that small? 'As we were admiring the paintwork on Jeremy's lorry, our challenge arrived.
' I'm quite excited, actually, come to think of it! We're here with these.
"In 1943, British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war "were forced by their Japanese captors to build the Burma Railway "across South-East Asia.
"Their efforts and their suffering were immortalised in the film "Bridge On The River Kwai.
That's what you're going to do.
"You're going to build a river bridge which is strong enough "to support the weight of your lorries.
" I don't know anything about bridge-building.
Build a bridge?! How big a bridge are we going to have to build Yeah, how big? How much does yours weigh? About You know they said long-distance lorry driving? Yes.
"The only trouble is that you have to drive to the river in question, "which is in Thailand.
" The River Kwai is not in Thailand.
Yes, it is.
The River Kwai is in Thailand.
Is it? Where's Thailand? But it's in I promise you, the River Kwai, I know everyone thinks it's Burma, it isn't, it's Thailand.
So we're going to go and build a bridge over the River Kwai.
Like Alec Guinness.
I don't know how to build a bridge.
THEY WHISTLE "Colonel Bogey March" 'In high spirits, the journey began.
' We are off.
Oh, yeah.
We worked out that the most sensible way of getting to the river was to head right across Burma to its northernmost border crossing with Thailand.
On this epic 1,200 mile journey, we would find strange new cities with no-one in them, cross mountain ranges straight out of Jurassic Park, ford disease-filled rivers and attend a party which made the scene at the end of Apocalypse Now look like a quiet night in.
And we'd have to do it all in lorries which, right at the start, weren't really working properly.
There are gauges.
Nothing works.
Nothing at all.
Not one of them.
Not fuel gauge, oil, oil pressure, charge, vacuum, temperature, nothing works.
GEARS RASP Oh, God above! Ah! That's not it.
There's no synchromesh on this gearbox, so when you go from third to second or whatever, you have to - oh, bloody Nora - double de-clutch.
GEARS RASP Like that.
Only smoother.
Oh! RATTLING AND SCRAPING Oh, God.
How fast am I going? Speedo doesn't work.
Oh, my giddy aunt! The ride is shocking.
OG! Possibly a bit of play in the steering.
Let me talk you through my brakes.
They don't really work.
I've got three centimetres of pedal travel where nothing happens, and then a millimetre where it all happens and the wheels lock up.
There's no handbrake, and I'm not being stupid.
I've looked everywhere.
There isn't a puh-chh! one, there isn't hand one, there isn't a switch.
And on top of the mechanical problems, we had to deal with Rangoon's pedestrians.
CARS HONK HORNS Stop wandering about in the road! Whoa! A granddad's just walked by that child, right underneath your lorry.
Whoa! Somebody else just did it.
Pedestrians have no concept of traffic.
None at all.
And there was another issue.
One of the reasons that driving here is so difficult is because everybody, as you can see, has right-hand-drive cars, but they drive on the right.
And this is because, for 46 years, Burma was run by a chap called General Ne Win, who was a proper lunatic.
He was guided mostly either by his dreams or by his astrologers.
One morning, he woke up and he thought, "My country is slipping too far to the left politically, "so I shall correct this by forcing everybody "to drive on the right-hand side of the road.
" This makes life particularly difficult for bus passengers.
In a minute, we'll see a bus pulled up at the side of the road, at a bus stop, but all the people will be getting out into the road, because the bus used to go on the left, so the doors It's just complete madness! You may be wondering why today people don't buy left-hand-drive cars .
.
and if I'm honest, I'm wondering that as well.
Our worst problem, however, was that James was navigating.
James, can I say, this can't be right.
HORNS HONK Sorry! Sorry! How does James ever land his aeroplane where he wants to be? Right, should be this way.
'It wasn't.
' Will I even fit down there? Mind that sign on your right, Hammond.
This is ridiculously tight! 'As I sorted out some compensation for the damaged fruit' Thank you.
No, no! Oh, I see, it was not enough.
'.
.
Hammond was discovering for the very first time 'the problems of being tall.
' Hold on a second, these wires these are too low.
Oh, God.
I'm thinking if I crane out It's only this one, isn't it? Yeah, lift that, you come underneath, I'll drop it on you, then it will just slide along your rails.
Do it.
How about five crisp English pounds? SHE SPEAKS IN HER OWN LANGUAGE Keep coming.
Keep coming.
Haven't been electrocuted yet.
Haven't been electrocuted yet.
Still haven't been electrocuted.
I don't like it! Oh, everyone's going to die! BANG! You've ripped a hole in the top of my truck! James Why is your Your lorry's moving, James! You've winched yourself into Put your handbrake on.
It hasn't got a handbrake.
What do you mean, it hasn't got a handbrake? It hasn't got a handbrake! 'We were causing chaos.
' It's broken.
Whoa! What was that?! James, I've got a headache! I've never concentrated this hard! Sorry.
I don't think it will go through there, mate.
HE SIGHS Sorry.
Sorry.
Still, the good news is we've done two miles.
'Mercifully, we eventually broke free from the narrow streets.
' I'm in agony.
Left foot, endless gear changing GEARS CREAK God above.
Reverse.
Third Oh, Christ! Hang on a minute.
If I engage the low range then I can put it in third gear and basically leave it there all day.
A-ha! How brilliant is this? Oh, yeah.
No more gear changing.
MECHANICAL WHIRRING That doesn't feel very low range to me.
What is it if it isn't a low-range gearbox? Oh, my God! My truck has split in half.
'After I had explained to Jeremy that he'd bought a tipper lorry, 'I then had to deal with CW McCall on the CB radio.
' Hey, James.
Hello.
I've got it.
You've got it? Yeah, my handle.
I'm going to be called Fighting Peacock.
Can I just abbreviate that to Cock? What are you going to be? I thought I'd be James, because that's my name.
Fighting Peacock! 'On the outskirts of Rangoon, we came across a memorial 'to the 27,000 Commonwealth soldiers 'who died here in the Second World War.
'It was a timely reminder that the Bridge On The River Kwai 'was rather more than a Sunday afternoon movie.
' "The Japanese sergeant moved into position, lifted his pick handle "and delivered a blow across Smith's back that would have laid out a bull.
"All the thugs now set to in earnest.
"Soon, little could be seen but the rise and fall "of pick helves above the heads of the group, "and there were sickening thuds as blows went home on the squirming, kicking body, "periodically pulled back onto its feet only to be knocked down again.
"Bill Smith cried out repeatedly that he was 50 years of age, "appealing for mercy, but to no avail" The tragedy is that all of those 27,000 men died fighting for the liberation of Burma, and straight after the war, Britain got rid of it and then it fell into the hands of a tin-pot dictator and Mystic Meg.
'With James still map-reading, we headed out into the countryside, 'where we hoped the driving would be less stressful.
' ENGINES ROAR PAST AND HORNS HONK BLEEP Nora! That's my first lock-up, total lock-up.
I've lost second gear.
There it is.
Jeremy, that bus overtaking you, he's mad.
HORNS HONK INCESSANTLY Look, I can't, I'm trying to change gear.
'The miles and the hours rolled by.
' Ow! Ow! I'm sitting on a church pew, for God's sake.
My knee Ah! Ow! Ow! My knee! Ow! That is the going down of the sun.
It's fabulous.
Look at that.
However, when the sun had finished going down, things weren't so fabulous.
That girl on that bike, she's just invisible.
There's a moped there with no lights on and a bicycle there with no lights on, and I can't really see them, because my headlights are, well, they're glow-worms in jam jars.
Can you see anything, Hammond? Not a thing.
Literally, just my own stupid reflection in my windscreen.
Jeez, I'm so frightened of running over a pedestrian, I'm not even worried about my knee any more.
HORN HONKS SUDDENLY Whoa! Well, if I had to dip the headlights, it would appear to be full beam or off.
A lorry with one central headlamp, so you think it's a motorbike until the last second, and then, no! It's a massive truck! I'm bloody tired.
I've been driving today for exactly 12 hours.
That would be illegal in Britain.
But we are now very close to the overnight hotel.
'Two agonising hours later, we reached it.
' Do you know what? This is like a trucker's place.
Are we staying here? 'The producers said yes, and that our room was upstairs.
' Oh, it's not so bad! Is it not so bad? Yeah.
Oh, God.
Worst night's sleep in history.
It wasn't sleep.
This lot.
What were they doing? ENGINE SPUTTERS NOISILY INTO LIFE That.
Look what I've done.
What have you done? It's a leg brace so I can change gear.
So it supports my knee.
Let's go.
Let's just move on, erase it You know those Ice Road Truckers, they're always going, "We got a real tough job" They can shut up.
Cos I don't suspect that the Ice Road Truckers have to sleep like this chap here.
Look at him.
'Before leaving, I checked the map to see how far we'd come.
' No? Here? Are you sure? Here.
Show me.
Hammond.
This is where we began.
We're heading for here, up here, around here.
So where do you think we are, then, on this road? No.
We're here.
You know that fork when we left Rangoon and James went left? All of yesterday we drove up here.
What was it, 14, 15 hours? Yeah, but You're on the way to Bangladesh.
'James suggested we go all the way back to Rangoon 'and start again, but I fired him as navigator and said 'we should take a small road over the hills to get back on course.
'This would mean driving deep into the sticks.
' There seems to be a tradition here for riding on a lorry rather than necessarily in it.
I've just seen three or four blokes on the top of the cab of a lorry.
So if he brakes suddenly, they all get run over, I suppose.
'Still, could be worse.
' Uh! I'm not a young man and I'm not a fit man, I'll be honest.
And I am suffering in here.
This ride is really brutal.
The problem is that the sports lorry was designed to work for a living, was designed to have five or six tonnes of stuff in the back.
Without that weight, it's just bouncing all over the place.
'Obviously, I didn't want to admit this to my colleagues, 'so when we stopped for tea I tried discreetly to rectify the problem.
' CLANG! JEREMY TRIES TO DISGUISE IT WITH A COUGH HE FEIGNS COUGHING He's putting bricks in his truck to weigh it down to improve the ride.
I can see.
He's going to need a lot of bricks.
'Having come to the same conclusion, 'I decided to borrow James's complicated crane.
' I can't stand watching this.
Right.
What the hell's happening? What have you done, you moron? I think you've actually caught your own lorry.
Stop! Help! My knee! Save the day! Oh, dear.
Stop! Put it down! You'll break the jib off the crane.
And you've knackered my lorry.
I've just saved the day by tipping my lorry up.
The bricks have fallen out, the handbrake's not on.
What have you done? It is on.
'At this point, I opted for a less high-tech solution.
'And after they'd loaded a tonne of bricks in the back, 'there was a noticeable difference.
' It's not perfect, but it's a hell of a lot better.
If I put more weight in, it will be even more comfortable.
'So at the next village, I bought some of the region's special seeds.
' What's he doing? He thinks he's bought some heroin.
I have.
Has he? I have bought heroin.
It's rice.
It isn't rice.
It is rice.
Richard Hammond, trust me on this, on the streets of London, this has a value of £12 million.
No, mate, on the shelves of Tesco, that has a value of about a fiver.
It's not rice! Are you going to cut it with peas? 'With the heroin loaded, 'I found a heavy old tree stump 'and asked James to crane it on board as well.
' He is so unbelievably happy.
'With the sports lorry fully loaded, it was transformed.
' Oh, yeah! First bump, I shan't even feel it, because the ride is sublime.
The ride of a Rolls-Royce Phantom.
'However, on the hills, there was a bit of a downside.
' Hello, James and Richard? What? This is my new top speed.
Oh, God, I thought we were stuck behind a moped.
I couldn't see.
Is this it? Yes.
You're a right dipstick.
Yes.
'And because the road was so narrow, we couldn't get past him.
' Uh-oh! Steep gradient.
Foot hard down.
Dearie me, we're in trouble here.
This is ridiculous! We're hardly moving.
ENGINE REVS AND THEN STOPS No, we've had it.
You're going to have to back up.
I need a run-up for this bit.
What? It won't go up this hill.
You're going to have to back up.
No, this hill has gone on for about a mile through hairpins.
I'm not reversing back down.
James, could you explain the situation to him? I can't go forwards.
I can't back up either.
A, Hammond's in the way, and B, I can't be bothered.
.
.
There's round bends, this people on bikes.
No.
Well, there's only one thing for it, then.
I have to lose weight.
MECHANICAL WHIRRING Oh, no.
No! Jeremy, that's not You are a complete child, a petulant child.
You wanted me to move out of your way.
I am now able to move out of your way.
Look at this.
Yes! This lorry is now scampering up these hills.
Right.
Well One, two 'Stopping to mend my tailgate allowed the others to catch up, 'and when they did, they weren't in the best of moods.
' I've got a new handle for you on the CB.
It's called Selfish BLEEP.
'And things didn't improve a few miles later 'when the hill route I'd selected went a bit wrong.
' Your road is sort of not a road, is it? Let's be honest.
Clarkson, you are a It's not really a road here at all.
We've got a ford.
Here we go, into the water.
Lots of wheel spin, sliding badly.
Oh, yes.
The sports lorry is clear, it's through.
It's time for the smug face.
'Mr Slowly went nextin his van.
' That's quite clunky.
It's There's something stuck there, I can feel it.
We'll break the front axle off.
'Hammond immediately rushed to May's aid.
' Ramming.
Stop! 'James then tried to winch himself off 'using Hammond's truck as a ground anchor.
' Ted Nugent and George Michael are helping one another out.
'After this failed, I tried to tow him clear.
' Three, two, one, now.
'But that didn't work either.
' Stop! 'He then decided to use his crane, which immediately broke.
'He really was stuck, so we were forced to take drastic action.
' Hammond and I have had a bit of a chat and we are Well, we're leaving him.
He has bought a van that has no traction at all, no ability to work off road and now no hydraulics so none of his tools work.
You've got to be ruthless in these circumstances.
With his crane, he was useful.
Without it, he's just another mouth to feed.
'I settled in for another stint with the world's most cooperative gearbox.
' Oh, bollocks, missed again.
Nothing there.
Nothing there, there it is.
'I knew, on these twisting roads, life was even worse for Hammond.
' This is really annoying.
'Still, at least I was moving.
' The situation report.
I've been rescued by a very helpful local man with his truck.
I still don't know his name.
He's lent me this arc welder to repair the shaft that drives the pump that makes the crane work.
'With that done, my fellow knight of the road towed me 'back to firmer ground.
' And then we're free.
I must remember to say a thousand chei-zu-boos to this man.
'Miles ahead.
in the advance party, we were really starting to climb.
' Oh-ho-ho! Wow! 'The views were stunning.
'And at the top of the hill, we pulled over for a bit of a look.
' You know we always say that Italy is God's race track, Canada is his pantry, Germany is his workshop? That's his garden.
Absolutely staggering.
'Captain Traction would have enjoyed this view very much, however' Bollocks.
ENGINE STRUGGLES The local bloke with a digger is giving me a little leg up there.
HE TOOTS HORN It's great, isn't it? This must be Buddhism in action.
I might convert.
From whatever I already am.
'Very, very far ahead, Hammond and I finally found the road 'we should have been on in the first place.
' Put it in top gear.
There it is.
Oh, yeah.
That sounds terrible.
It's like being back in Spain.
Nothing on it.
'Regrouped, we continued onwards.
'Our destination, Burma's brand-new capital city, Naypyidaw.
' 'Here, the producers had once again lined up a hovel for us to stay in.
'But we were hot, filthy and worn out.
'So we ignored them and headed for the best hotel in town.
' A flushing lavatory.
Oh, rest my weary head.
Having first filled it with gin.
Oh, listen to that rain.
It'll be like the shower or something.
30 seconds.
'Our only problem was that two of us 'weren't exactly dressed for a place like this.
' Let me do the talking.
Good evening, sir.
Evening, sir.
HE CLEARS THROAT Three rooms, please.
Sorry, no more rooms, sir.
Fully booked.
Sorry, sir.
THUNDERCLAPS 'The next morning after another dreadful night, 'we decided enough was enough and agreed we should modify our lorries 'to make them more suitable for our travels through Burma.
'So we found a workshop, hired some local help, 'toiled through the night, 'and the next morning the job was done.
' Every modification I have made is inspired by my desire not to run over any of the locals.
So it has, for example, Buddha looking down, a lucky elephant, the lucky owl which is very important, it has better mirrors, better lights and it is wearing a high visibility jacket.
Yes, as are you.
What is the boiler in the back? That Are you brewing beer? What? No, sadly.
It's the water tank for the brake cooling system.
What, like racing lorries have? Exactly like that.
It sprays.
I've got a little switch.
It sprays water on the drums, makes them more efficient downhill.
I didn't think of that.
No.
What's the box? Air conditioning.
What's that got to do with safety? Keeps me alert.
Does it? Yes.
And keeps him alert as well.
Because he'll want to break it.
Yes.
'Jeremy then showed us his work.
' Why would you not have a convertible lorry.
Cos it's raining.
Look at it! It's It's quite good actually.
Smashing.
It's very good.
Shelby striping.
Sports badging on the side.
Living accommodation on the back.
This is fashioned from lead and rhodium.
Is it? Yes, for extra weight to improve my ride.
Come back.
Simple, crisp accommodation inside, Shelby bedding and ebony wood floor.
More weight.
Come on! It looks brilliant.
'As, it must be said, did Hammond's.
' Hammond, you've got white walls! Oh, yeah, yeah! The ugly duckling has become a swan.
Wow! Yeah! Check out my stacks.
Please don't tell me they're exhausts.
Yeah.
Both sides.
What, actually func? They are.
Yeah, there's a T-junction.
Hang on, you've made it even taller.
I have.
It's bigger, isn't it? It's better.
But, come round the back, this Honestly.
He did a little skip then.
He's very excited.
He did a skip.
I am very, very What I have here, this is the bathroom area.
Shower.
It's got a shower.
Where's the water come from? Ha-ha! Ha-ha yourself.
There is, up the top, a reservoir.
About so big.
On my viewing gallery.
Hammond, it's a bucket.
It's It's a bucket.
It's a remote reservoir.
And that is, right now, collecting beautiful crisp, clean, fresh, invigorating rainwater.
This is the kitchen area with lino to reflect that.
What's that? Over there is a wardrobe.
There is a hammock with mosquito net built-in.
Drinks globe on the right.
'And Hammond wasn't finished.
' From up here, on a sunny evening, I can sit here as the sun goes down, gaze at the stars and enjoy a drink from my drinks globe.
Do you take visitors? Yeah.
I think he's going to have to because something has just occurred to me.
What? You haven't got any living accommodation.
That's a very good point.
You've forgotten it, you idiot! No, I haven't.
Well, you have.
Are you sleeping in the cab? Because it's not going to be comparable.
Let's Let's see.
'Before we set off, I gave the chaps some presents.
' You bought us a teddy bear? No, that's for me.
Is it? Yeah, that's my bonnet ornament.
Are you feeling lonely? It's your what? Bonnet ornament for weight.
It's the heaviest teddy bear in Burma.
'I'd got Hammond a bonnet ornament too.
' Wow, that's beautiful.
I know you don't have a clock so you'll have it on the bonnet, you'll be able to tell the time.
Oh, it really is It's a high-quality gift.
Oh, fantastic! Thank you.
I've always wanted a Shuanglin hammer.
It's from my own personal collection.
'Having christened my bear Rudyard, and attached him to the sports lorry, we set off.
' Oh, this feels better already.
Oh, hang on.
Richard Hammond is doing a remake of The Poseidon Adventure.
'We had many miles to cover 'but first we had to get through Naypyidaw's morning rush hour.
' This rush hour traffic is not as bad as I thought.
'The roads were completely empty.
And massive.
' One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
Yep, 16 lanes now.
HE LAUGHS Wait, it's gone bigger.
Five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
20.
It's 20 lanes now.
'This may look stupid and pointless, but actually it really isn't.
' The problem with most cities is that the growth comes and the city simply can't accommodate it.
That happened in London, Rome, Paris, Bangkok, everywhere.
That is not going to happen here.
I think this must be the first city built entirely in anticipation of the future.
'But the future hasn't arrived yet.
'So, for now, the whole place is almost completely deserted.
'Even here, in the shadow of the parliament building, 'we were able to have a game of football in the middle of the road.
' Officer.
It's the Burmese police versus Top Gear.
Oh, no.
Rush hour, game over.
Look at it, traffic.
Really though, it was too wet for football.
So, much to Hammond's annoyance, we organised a city centre drag race.
ENGINES REV This doesn't seem fair.
I've got the same 6.
4 litre Isuzu straight-six diesel as Jeremy's and probably James's, but the lumber bus is bigger.
We're not going to cover ourselves in glory here, old girl.
HE COUNTS DOWN Disastrous start.
There it is! This is going to hurt, we're going to have to rev you hard.
Sports truck is gaining.
Gaining.
Gaining.
Gaining, gaining.
No! Come on! Yes! Oh, victory is sweet.
Second place.
But I have got a crane.
Must brake, must brake.
Oh, got a football under the brake pedal.
That's bad.
Hammond, have you finished yet? Still going.
'After Hammond had lumbered across the line, we headed out of Naypyidaw 'and soon we started to discover some flaws with our modifications.
' Oh, my Nono, wait.
I'm speaking to you now from underneath my businessman's umbrella.
It has taken the water about 15 minutes to fathom it out but it's in here now and it's in in great quantities.
Oh, I can hear my exhaust hitting a tree.
Hammond, you're doing the council out of a job, mate.
It's like I'm driving through the aftermath of a hurricane.
Let's rename him Pruning Peacock.
JEREMY LAUGHS 'Soon, though, James was punished for mocking.
' Captain Workmanship.
It's a radiator hose.
It's not a bit I've touched.
Well, we have a tradition.
Oh, no, how am I going to do it without them(!) 'Leaving James to deliver an interesting lecture' If you're watching this from an engineering workshop or technical college, this is not the correct tool for the job.
'.
.
we continued on our way.
' I think a lot of the fumes are coming into the cab from under my new stack.
Not all of my improvements have turned out to be improvements.
GLASS SMASHES The simple tradition of the British dustman, putting a teddy bear on the front of a lorry, is bringing joy to the children of Burma.
They love Rudyard! 'By mid-afternoon we were all reunited 'and James took advantage of my mobile maintenance service.
' This isn't perilous at all(!) Oh, it's about three or four inches.
Too far.
LAUGHTER 'Soon, the road started to climb, and as night fell, 'I turned on the roof lights that I'd fitted myself.
' Oh, yes! MUSIC: "The Great Gig In The Sky" by Pink Floyd I'm driving a Pink Floyd gig right now.
I love this! The noise, the chaos, the heat CLANGING I think I might have just lost one of my Yeah, I did.
I lost a stack.
I've got to carry on.
I'm just going to pretend I didn't.
'Meanwhile, in the darkness, James was coming over all Buddhist.
' Hang on, I've got a personal dog escort here.
Shift your ass, dog.
HORN HONKS Oh, God, give me strength! I think that dog was inhabited by a benign spirit.
Seriously - if that dog hadn't done that, I'd have gone onto the bridge and I'd have hit the bus.
'Sadly, Buddhist dog wasn't around when five miles later, 'I had another breakdown.
' That's what came off.
That's the old one, which tore itself to shreds and in the process, pulled the wire out of the sender for the temperature gauge, so I don't have that any more.
This lorry is crap.
'Up ahead, Richard and I were looking forward 'to a night in our new on-board accommodation.
'But thanks to the British Empire, we didn't need it.
' 'After a night here, '4,000 feet up a mountain in a small village in the middle of Burma, 'at this strangely odd but comfortable Bournemouth hotel, 'we were feeling refreshed.
'And with Hammond leading, ''we were out of the village in a mere couple of hours.
' Hang on - whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! Oh, God Go slowly.
OK? Oh, thank you.
Keep going, hang on Are we going to spend the whole day tiptoeing under telephone wires? No, because you'll break down eventually.
OK, there's going to be a motorcyclist coming past you.
Check out his helmet.
That's quite a strong statement.
'After a quick map check, 'I decided we should take a tempting-looking short cut.
' Right, follow me.
'Which went well.
' Oh, dear God Any other adventures lined up on your short cut, Jeremy? Landslides, or avalanche? It's just a tropical mountain shower.
Gone in a jiffy.
THUNDER RUMBLES Or maybe not.
No, this looks pretty terrible.
'Eventually, my scenic route brought us to a remote settlement - 'that was very muchoff the grid.
' Good thing is in this little town there'll be no low wires.
'Instead, there was something worse.
' Oh, no! Oh, no.
Oh, this is bad.
I'm stuck, I'm stuck.
Hang on, I'll park up and come back on foot.
Stand by.
'Bored with Hammond's chimney-related problems, 'I went on an explore.
'And found some locals playing something that was nearly football.
' This is a brilliant idea.
They're using a monk as a referee.
And he's smoking.
WHISTLE BLOWS APPLAUSE 'Back at the bridge, the villagers had broken out their tool box.
' Really? If you're sure.
OK.
Move the entire sign.
I wouldn't be this helpful.
We know that.
'Meanwhile, I'd stumbled on a scene from an Indiana Jones movie.
' There's thousands of them! MAN SPEAKS IN LOCAL LANGUAGE That's "Hurry up.
It's heavy.
" Oh, right.
OK How we doing? James, I can't see.
Yeah? MAN: OK! Yes.
You through? Yay! 'With the town behind us, progress was good.
'And thenit wasn't.
' My fuel gauge is just on the top of the red.
Um I don't have one.
What I do have is the same engine as you but a much heavier truck, so I must have used more.
'And out here on my short cut, 'there were no filling stations at all.
' The needle is now nearly all in the red.
Trying to use the tiniest throttle movements, just to keep it ticking along.
'In the next village, James and I decided to pull over 'and dip our tanks.
' I've got no fuel.
None? A smear on the end of the stick.
What's the news? None.
I mean, it's dry, I don't know what I'm running on.
If you actually run a diesel out you've got to bleed the system, haven't you? And it's hours.
BOTH: Yeah.
Well, look, why don't you just go and snout around the village and see if you can find some? Why me? You're the youngest and fittest.
Well, it's your fault we're in this situation.
But I'm old and hot.
It's your short cut.
Seriously.
If anybody's got to go, it's you, mate.
Right, right, I'll go.
Fuel.
Diesel.
And as much as you can.
Yes.
What is Burmese for "diesel"? How do you mime "diesel"? Mime a lorry.
Brrr And then do that.
Right, so I'm a butler with Parkinson's, and I've got a gun.
'Jeremy headed off.
'And was gone for quite some time.
' Still quite hot, that.
Done the oil.
Have you? Are you reading Bridge On The River Kwai? Yeah, he's just gone into the hut Bad news.
What? Bad news.
What? I haven't been able to get any diesel.
'However - I had come up with a clever alternative.
' No, you halfwit.
There's no diesel in this village.
But there is diesel in the next village.
So we use the horses to ride to the next village, get the diesel, bring it back to the trucks.
We're not in a Western.
I can't ride a horse.
What? Well, I might have been pony trekking when I was eight, but Well, it'll be in there, won't it? Well, I wouldn't use that one there.
Holy moly! Why do they have five legs in Burma? Maybe so it can milk itself? Shall we spend all day looking at a horse's willy, or shall we go?! Oh, it's gone wrong 'Being the most experienced horseman, 'I took the frisky five-legged stallion.
' We're on.
Oh, Christ almighty! Hello, horse.
I shall call you Tesco.
Ready, steady, go.
Well, I've bought a stalled horse.
It's going backwards.
I've bought a reversing horse.
I think if we get moving, yours might follow more readily.
James, can you turn right and go up there? Turn around.
How do you make it turn around? Anybody know how to start a Burmese horse? Go on, follow your mate.
Yes.
Very good.
The controls are reversed I'm off! Oh, yeah.
Yeah! MUSIC: Theme from "A Fistful Of Dollars" by Ennio Morricone 'Soon, James was getting a taste 'of what the ride was like in my sports lorry.
' My nadgers are getting a pummelling.
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow Look at the anal action going on here.
My horse is going up your one's bottom.
Oh, Christ, we've had an accident.
You go ahead.
I'm terrified! My nads are killing me! HORSE GRUNTS Oh, stop that, please don't fight! Walk on.
I'll stop calling you Tesco if you promise not to fight.
Go! Walk.
There you go.
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow Oh, God above! Not much further now, James.
Jesus! I mean - Buddha! 'A few hundred yards further on, 'Richard's stallion decided to get amorous with James's mare.
' HORSE WHINNIES Ooh! BLEEP HORSE WHINNIES Oh! BLEEP Has he gone? What happened? It reared and mounted that.
Don't get kicked.
'Things quickly went to pot.
' This is the doctor, going to attend to Richard but the van is stuck.
I've just dismounted my reversing horse, and actually genuinely have hurt my testes.
Oh! I can see why they should be glue, these things.
'Richard was diagnosed with a suspected broken wrist 'and went on a four-hour journey to the nearest hospital.
'So I walked my horse to the next village to get fuel, 'and then, we found a spot to camp for the night.
' HE SIGHS 'Here, while I enjoyed the view, 'James unveiled his sleeping accommodation.
'A mountaineering tent he could suspend from his crane.
' So I'm going to rest it against the front of the cab.
Cos all these bitey ants, they don't get in your tent and eat you.
'It may have been insect-proof '.
.
but soundproof? No.
' SNORING I want to go to bed.
But I can't, with that racket going on.
Listen to it.
SNORING 'The next morning I discovered that Hammond was back.
' So that's just a sprain? Yep.
Not bust.
Nothing exciting.
So what is it you have to do, basically steering? Yeah, be all right.
You just have to Yeah.
Still do that.
Right.
And how was sleeping in your lorry? Um, not bad.
What about yours? Fine.
Where did James sleep in the end, what's he done? Oh, he's got some stupid high-tech mountaineering tent on his crane.
Why is it up there? JEREMY LAUGHS Well You know his snoring? Yeah Quite loud.
So I moved him a bit further away.
Jesus Clarkson! What? Funny.
Very funny.
Yes.
I don't like heights, I don't like camping I don't like snoring.
Anyway, shall we get on? 'After Pinky and Perky had winched me down, 'we set off on our seventh day of long-distance lorry driving.
' I'm still staggered that they put diesel in my truck.
I mean, that's a generous gesture.
Assuming it IS diesel.
Oh, no.
Hammond What's happened? I've lost my other stack.
Well, as you know, we're not the US Marines, we leave a man behind.
Yeah, too hot.
Er, right It's covered in ants Oh, it's an ants' nest! That's a mistake.
Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! 'This, then, looked like it was going to be 'another day of calamities and mishaps.
'But actually, here, in this part of Burma, 'we had to get properly serious.
' Today is a big day for us, because we are headed for the Shan.
Top Gear's been to a lot of remote places over the years but we've never been anywhere quite like this.
The Shan is to Burma what Scotland is to Britain, it's a part of it, and yet it's separate.
We know there's been a civil war in there, we understand there's a cease-fire at the moment Only a handful of Westerners have ever been there, and certainly, no TV show has ever been allowed in.
We are the firstever.
All of the people who've been fighting are coming together tonight to welcome us here to the Shan State.
CHEERING Who's got any whisky? Got any Scotch? BLEEP second gear failed and now the engine has BLEEP.
Hammond, you idiot! You've reversed into the sports lorry! "Work on the bridge starts at 0500"? What? Get in! Get in.
Hello, everybody, thank you very much.
Thank you.
A big welcome! Nice.
A big welcome.
Thank you and welcome.
Welcome to what is a very special show, because it is our Christmas special.
Yeah, and this year it's a little bit different.
Yeah, because it's actually the middle of March.
It is.
The main reason it's a little bit different is because our producers have told us that we should try our hands at long-distance lorry driving.
Literally, my idea of heaven.
Yeah.
They told us each to buy a truck and report with it to what the BBC calls the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
But everybody else calls it Burma.
The meeting point was a giant parade ground in the middle of the old capital city, Rangoon.
And I was the first to arrive.
ENGINE SQUEALS INTO SILENCE I've bought a stereo.
I have a speaker system here in the roof, the passenger seat has been replaced with a subwoofer, and there are two amps with a combined power of 2,300 watts.
The best thing is, included in the price was this comb andan entire lorry.
It was built in 1959 or 1976.
People are a bit hazy on that.
What we do know for sure is that Isuzu made the mud flaps, which is odd, because it says Mitsubishi on the axles.
Ooh! ENGINE APPROACHES Is that James? It is James.
Don't really call that a lorry.
Morning.
Van, mate.
What? We had to bring lorries.
That is a lorry.
It's a van.
Technically it's a crane, actually.
I've bought a crane.
Oh, is that what that is? Look at that.
A crane, two winches, hydraulic rams, legs 'And it had the latest in high-tech dashboards.
' That's a mess.
Isn't this going to drive your OCD madness Well, I've put labels on things corresponding to what I think they do.
Hazards What's that? I've got one of those.
I've had to put a question mark on it.
Mine is a sports lorry.
Straight six, rear-wheel drive, twin exhausts.
BMW 325i and this, almost identical.
Banging stereo.
Really? Seriously.
You want to hear it? Not really.
I expect it's quite DEAFENING MUSIC MUSIC DISTORTS AT HIGH VOLUME Anyway, I'm sure that won't become annoying at all.
I need to ask you a question.
What? Why are you wearing a tie? Because I'm a modern lorry driver, and modern lorry drivers are crisp and sharp.
The days are over when you simply turned up with a glove box full of strong pornography and egg on your vest.
At this point, Hammond arrived with a glove box full of strong pornography and egg on his vest.
CLEARS THROAT What do you think? What is it? A lorry or a Hindu temple? This has been extensively modded.
Has it? Not just the visual improvements.
They are significant, the lights and the little studdy things, but note Oh, God.
All of that frame arrangement, right, it's a farm truck.
Yeah.
And that's so it can accommodate those low-density big loads.
Big loads of what? Crops.
What crop? Here? In Burma? Home of the Golden Triangle? Hay.
No.
Or turnips.
No.
Kale.
No, heroin.
That's all they really grow here.
You've bought a heroin lorry.
Fit a lot of heroine in there, wouldn't you? Hammond, this seat, well, let's be honest, it's a church pew.
Yeah.
It looks like the sort of railway carriage that Agatha Christie went about in.
James has bought a van.
Has he parked it a long way away, or is it that small? 'As we were admiring the paintwork on Jeremy's lorry, our challenge arrived.
' I'm quite excited, actually, come to think of it! We're here with these.
"In 1943, British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war "were forced by their Japanese captors to build the Burma Railway "across South-East Asia.
"Their efforts and their suffering were immortalised in the film "Bridge On The River Kwai.
That's what you're going to do.
"You're going to build a river bridge which is strong enough "to support the weight of your lorries.
" I don't know anything about bridge-building.
Build a bridge?! How big a bridge are we going to have to build Yeah, how big? How much does yours weigh? About You know they said long-distance lorry driving? Yes.
"The only trouble is that you have to drive to the river in question, "which is in Thailand.
" The River Kwai is not in Thailand.
Yes, it is.
The River Kwai is in Thailand.
Is it? Where's Thailand? But it's in I promise you, the River Kwai, I know everyone thinks it's Burma, it isn't, it's Thailand.
So we're going to go and build a bridge over the River Kwai.
Like Alec Guinness.
I don't know how to build a bridge.
THEY WHISTLE "Colonel Bogey March" 'In high spirits, the journey began.
' We are off.
Oh, yeah.
We worked out that the most sensible way of getting to the river was to head right across Burma to its northernmost border crossing with Thailand.
On this epic 1,200 mile journey, we would find strange new cities with no-one in them, cross mountain ranges straight out of Jurassic Park, ford disease-filled rivers and attend a party which made the scene at the end of Apocalypse Now look like a quiet night in.
And we'd have to do it all in lorries which, right at the start, weren't really working properly.
There are gauges.
Nothing works.
Nothing at all.
Not one of them.
Not fuel gauge, oil, oil pressure, charge, vacuum, temperature, nothing works.
GEARS RASP Oh, God above! Ah! That's not it.
There's no synchromesh on this gearbox, so when you go from third to second or whatever, you have to - oh, bloody Nora - double de-clutch.
GEARS RASP Like that.
Only smoother.
Oh! RATTLING AND SCRAPING Oh, God.
How fast am I going? Speedo doesn't work.
Oh, my giddy aunt! The ride is shocking.
OG! Possibly a bit of play in the steering.
Let me talk you through my brakes.
They don't really work.
I've got three centimetres of pedal travel where nothing happens, and then a millimetre where it all happens and the wheels lock up.
There's no handbrake, and I'm not being stupid.
I've looked everywhere.
There isn't a puh-chh! one, there isn't hand one, there isn't a switch.
And on top of the mechanical problems, we had to deal with Rangoon's pedestrians.
CARS HONK HORNS Stop wandering about in the road! Whoa! A granddad's just walked by that child, right underneath your lorry.
Whoa! Somebody else just did it.
Pedestrians have no concept of traffic.
None at all.
And there was another issue.
One of the reasons that driving here is so difficult is because everybody, as you can see, has right-hand-drive cars, but they drive on the right.
And this is because, for 46 years, Burma was run by a chap called General Ne Win, who was a proper lunatic.
He was guided mostly either by his dreams or by his astrologers.
One morning, he woke up and he thought, "My country is slipping too far to the left politically, "so I shall correct this by forcing everybody "to drive on the right-hand side of the road.
" This makes life particularly difficult for bus passengers.
In a minute, we'll see a bus pulled up at the side of the road, at a bus stop, but all the people will be getting out into the road, because the bus used to go on the left, so the doors It's just complete madness! You may be wondering why today people don't buy left-hand-drive cars .
.
and if I'm honest, I'm wondering that as well.
Our worst problem, however, was that James was navigating.
James, can I say, this can't be right.
HORNS HONK Sorry! Sorry! How does James ever land his aeroplane where he wants to be? Right, should be this way.
'It wasn't.
' Will I even fit down there? Mind that sign on your right, Hammond.
This is ridiculously tight! 'As I sorted out some compensation for the damaged fruit' Thank you.
No, no! Oh, I see, it was not enough.
'.
.
Hammond was discovering for the very first time 'the problems of being tall.
' Hold on a second, these wires these are too low.
Oh, God.
I'm thinking if I crane out It's only this one, isn't it? Yeah, lift that, you come underneath, I'll drop it on you, then it will just slide along your rails.
Do it.
How about five crisp English pounds? SHE SPEAKS IN HER OWN LANGUAGE Keep coming.
Keep coming.
Haven't been electrocuted yet.
Haven't been electrocuted yet.
Still haven't been electrocuted.
I don't like it! Oh, everyone's going to die! BANG! You've ripped a hole in the top of my truck! James Why is your Your lorry's moving, James! You've winched yourself into Put your handbrake on.
It hasn't got a handbrake.
What do you mean, it hasn't got a handbrake? It hasn't got a handbrake! 'We were causing chaos.
' It's broken.
Whoa! What was that?! James, I've got a headache! I've never concentrated this hard! Sorry.
I don't think it will go through there, mate.
HE SIGHS Sorry.
Sorry.
Still, the good news is we've done two miles.
'Mercifully, we eventually broke free from the narrow streets.
' I'm in agony.
Left foot, endless gear changing GEARS CREAK God above.
Reverse.
Third Oh, Christ! Hang on a minute.
If I engage the low range then I can put it in third gear and basically leave it there all day.
A-ha! How brilliant is this? Oh, yeah.
No more gear changing.
MECHANICAL WHIRRING That doesn't feel very low range to me.
What is it if it isn't a low-range gearbox? Oh, my God! My truck has split in half.
'After I had explained to Jeremy that he'd bought a tipper lorry, 'I then had to deal with CW McCall on the CB radio.
' Hey, James.
Hello.
I've got it.
You've got it? Yeah, my handle.
I'm going to be called Fighting Peacock.
Can I just abbreviate that to Cock? What are you going to be? I thought I'd be James, because that's my name.
Fighting Peacock! 'On the outskirts of Rangoon, we came across a memorial 'to the 27,000 Commonwealth soldiers 'who died here in the Second World War.
'It was a timely reminder that the Bridge On The River Kwai 'was rather more than a Sunday afternoon movie.
' "The Japanese sergeant moved into position, lifted his pick handle "and delivered a blow across Smith's back that would have laid out a bull.
"All the thugs now set to in earnest.
"Soon, little could be seen but the rise and fall "of pick helves above the heads of the group, "and there were sickening thuds as blows went home on the squirming, kicking body, "periodically pulled back onto its feet only to be knocked down again.
"Bill Smith cried out repeatedly that he was 50 years of age, "appealing for mercy, but to no avail" The tragedy is that all of those 27,000 men died fighting for the liberation of Burma, and straight after the war, Britain got rid of it and then it fell into the hands of a tin-pot dictator and Mystic Meg.
'With James still map-reading, we headed out into the countryside, 'where we hoped the driving would be less stressful.
' ENGINES ROAR PAST AND HORNS HONK BLEEP Nora! That's my first lock-up, total lock-up.
I've lost second gear.
There it is.
Jeremy, that bus overtaking you, he's mad.
HORNS HONK INCESSANTLY Look, I can't, I'm trying to change gear.
'The miles and the hours rolled by.
' Ow! Ow! I'm sitting on a church pew, for God's sake.
My knee Ah! Ow! Ow! My knee! Ow! That is the going down of the sun.
It's fabulous.
Look at that.
However, when the sun had finished going down, things weren't so fabulous.
That girl on that bike, she's just invisible.
There's a moped there with no lights on and a bicycle there with no lights on, and I can't really see them, because my headlights are, well, they're glow-worms in jam jars.
Can you see anything, Hammond? Not a thing.
Literally, just my own stupid reflection in my windscreen.
Jeez, I'm so frightened of running over a pedestrian, I'm not even worried about my knee any more.
HORN HONKS SUDDENLY Whoa! Well, if I had to dip the headlights, it would appear to be full beam or off.
A lorry with one central headlamp, so you think it's a motorbike until the last second, and then, no! It's a massive truck! I'm bloody tired.
I've been driving today for exactly 12 hours.
That would be illegal in Britain.
But we are now very close to the overnight hotel.
'Two agonising hours later, we reached it.
' Do you know what? This is like a trucker's place.
Are we staying here? 'The producers said yes, and that our room was upstairs.
' Oh, it's not so bad! Is it not so bad? Yeah.
Oh, God.
Worst night's sleep in history.
It wasn't sleep.
This lot.
What were they doing? ENGINE SPUTTERS NOISILY INTO LIFE That.
Look what I've done.
What have you done? It's a leg brace so I can change gear.
So it supports my knee.
Let's go.
Let's just move on, erase it You know those Ice Road Truckers, they're always going, "We got a real tough job" They can shut up.
Cos I don't suspect that the Ice Road Truckers have to sleep like this chap here.
Look at him.
'Before leaving, I checked the map to see how far we'd come.
' No? Here? Are you sure? Here.
Show me.
Hammond.
This is where we began.
We're heading for here, up here, around here.
So where do you think we are, then, on this road? No.
We're here.
You know that fork when we left Rangoon and James went left? All of yesterday we drove up here.
What was it, 14, 15 hours? Yeah, but You're on the way to Bangladesh.
'James suggested we go all the way back to Rangoon 'and start again, but I fired him as navigator and said 'we should take a small road over the hills to get back on course.
'This would mean driving deep into the sticks.
' There seems to be a tradition here for riding on a lorry rather than necessarily in it.
I've just seen three or four blokes on the top of the cab of a lorry.
So if he brakes suddenly, they all get run over, I suppose.
'Still, could be worse.
' Uh! I'm not a young man and I'm not a fit man, I'll be honest.
And I am suffering in here.
This ride is really brutal.
The problem is that the sports lorry was designed to work for a living, was designed to have five or six tonnes of stuff in the back.
Without that weight, it's just bouncing all over the place.
'Obviously, I didn't want to admit this to my colleagues, 'so when we stopped for tea I tried discreetly to rectify the problem.
' CLANG! JEREMY TRIES TO DISGUISE IT WITH A COUGH HE FEIGNS COUGHING He's putting bricks in his truck to weigh it down to improve the ride.
I can see.
He's going to need a lot of bricks.
'Having come to the same conclusion, 'I decided to borrow James's complicated crane.
' I can't stand watching this.
Right.
What the hell's happening? What have you done, you moron? I think you've actually caught your own lorry.
Stop! Help! My knee! Save the day! Oh, dear.
Stop! Put it down! You'll break the jib off the crane.
And you've knackered my lorry.
I've just saved the day by tipping my lorry up.
The bricks have fallen out, the handbrake's not on.
What have you done? It is on.
'At this point, I opted for a less high-tech solution.
'And after they'd loaded a tonne of bricks in the back, 'there was a noticeable difference.
' It's not perfect, but it's a hell of a lot better.
If I put more weight in, it will be even more comfortable.
'So at the next village, I bought some of the region's special seeds.
' What's he doing? He thinks he's bought some heroin.
I have.
Has he? I have bought heroin.
It's rice.
It isn't rice.
It is rice.
Richard Hammond, trust me on this, on the streets of London, this has a value of £12 million.
No, mate, on the shelves of Tesco, that has a value of about a fiver.
It's not rice! Are you going to cut it with peas? 'With the heroin loaded, 'I found a heavy old tree stump 'and asked James to crane it on board as well.
' He is so unbelievably happy.
'With the sports lorry fully loaded, it was transformed.
' Oh, yeah! First bump, I shan't even feel it, because the ride is sublime.
The ride of a Rolls-Royce Phantom.
'However, on the hills, there was a bit of a downside.
' Hello, James and Richard? What? This is my new top speed.
Oh, God, I thought we were stuck behind a moped.
I couldn't see.
Is this it? Yes.
You're a right dipstick.
Yes.
'And because the road was so narrow, we couldn't get past him.
' Uh-oh! Steep gradient.
Foot hard down.
Dearie me, we're in trouble here.
This is ridiculous! We're hardly moving.
ENGINE REVS AND THEN STOPS No, we've had it.
You're going to have to back up.
I need a run-up for this bit.
What? It won't go up this hill.
You're going to have to back up.
No, this hill has gone on for about a mile through hairpins.
I'm not reversing back down.
James, could you explain the situation to him? I can't go forwards.
I can't back up either.
A, Hammond's in the way, and B, I can't be bothered.
.
.
There's round bends, this people on bikes.
No.
Well, there's only one thing for it, then.
I have to lose weight.
MECHANICAL WHIRRING Oh, no.
No! Jeremy, that's not You are a complete child, a petulant child.
You wanted me to move out of your way.
I am now able to move out of your way.
Look at this.
Yes! This lorry is now scampering up these hills.
Right.
Well One, two 'Stopping to mend my tailgate allowed the others to catch up, 'and when they did, they weren't in the best of moods.
' I've got a new handle for you on the CB.
It's called Selfish BLEEP.
'And things didn't improve a few miles later 'when the hill route I'd selected went a bit wrong.
' Your road is sort of not a road, is it? Let's be honest.
Clarkson, you are a It's not really a road here at all.
We've got a ford.
Here we go, into the water.
Lots of wheel spin, sliding badly.
Oh, yes.
The sports lorry is clear, it's through.
It's time for the smug face.
'Mr Slowly went nextin his van.
' That's quite clunky.
It's There's something stuck there, I can feel it.
We'll break the front axle off.
'Hammond immediately rushed to May's aid.
' Ramming.
Stop! 'James then tried to winch himself off 'using Hammond's truck as a ground anchor.
' Ted Nugent and George Michael are helping one another out.
'After this failed, I tried to tow him clear.
' Three, two, one, now.
'But that didn't work either.
' Stop! 'He then decided to use his crane, which immediately broke.
'He really was stuck, so we were forced to take drastic action.
' Hammond and I have had a bit of a chat and we are Well, we're leaving him.
He has bought a van that has no traction at all, no ability to work off road and now no hydraulics so none of his tools work.
You've got to be ruthless in these circumstances.
With his crane, he was useful.
Without it, he's just another mouth to feed.
'I settled in for another stint with the world's most cooperative gearbox.
' Oh, bollocks, missed again.
Nothing there.
Nothing there, there it is.
'I knew, on these twisting roads, life was even worse for Hammond.
' This is really annoying.
'Still, at least I was moving.
' The situation report.
I've been rescued by a very helpful local man with his truck.
I still don't know his name.
He's lent me this arc welder to repair the shaft that drives the pump that makes the crane work.
'With that done, my fellow knight of the road towed me 'back to firmer ground.
' And then we're free.
I must remember to say a thousand chei-zu-boos to this man.
'Miles ahead.
in the advance party, we were really starting to climb.
' Oh-ho-ho! Wow! 'The views were stunning.
'And at the top of the hill, we pulled over for a bit of a look.
' You know we always say that Italy is God's race track, Canada is his pantry, Germany is his workshop? That's his garden.
Absolutely staggering.
'Captain Traction would have enjoyed this view very much, however' Bollocks.
ENGINE STRUGGLES The local bloke with a digger is giving me a little leg up there.
HE TOOTS HORN It's great, isn't it? This must be Buddhism in action.
I might convert.
From whatever I already am.
'Very, very far ahead, Hammond and I finally found the road 'we should have been on in the first place.
' Put it in top gear.
There it is.
Oh, yeah.
That sounds terrible.
It's like being back in Spain.
Nothing on it.
'Regrouped, we continued onwards.
'Our destination, Burma's brand-new capital city, Naypyidaw.
' 'Here, the producers had once again lined up a hovel for us to stay in.
'But we were hot, filthy and worn out.
'So we ignored them and headed for the best hotel in town.
' A flushing lavatory.
Oh, rest my weary head.
Having first filled it with gin.
Oh, listen to that rain.
It'll be like the shower or something.
30 seconds.
'Our only problem was that two of us 'weren't exactly dressed for a place like this.
' Let me do the talking.
Good evening, sir.
Evening, sir.
HE CLEARS THROAT Three rooms, please.
Sorry, no more rooms, sir.
Fully booked.
Sorry, sir.
THUNDERCLAPS 'The next morning after another dreadful night, 'we decided enough was enough and agreed we should modify our lorries 'to make them more suitable for our travels through Burma.
'So we found a workshop, hired some local help, 'toiled through the night, 'and the next morning the job was done.
' Every modification I have made is inspired by my desire not to run over any of the locals.
So it has, for example, Buddha looking down, a lucky elephant, the lucky owl which is very important, it has better mirrors, better lights and it is wearing a high visibility jacket.
Yes, as are you.
What is the boiler in the back? That Are you brewing beer? What? No, sadly.
It's the water tank for the brake cooling system.
What, like racing lorries have? Exactly like that.
It sprays.
I've got a little switch.
It sprays water on the drums, makes them more efficient downhill.
I didn't think of that.
No.
What's the box? Air conditioning.
What's that got to do with safety? Keeps me alert.
Does it? Yes.
And keeps him alert as well.
Because he'll want to break it.
Yes.
'Jeremy then showed us his work.
' Why would you not have a convertible lorry.
Cos it's raining.
Look at it! It's It's quite good actually.
Smashing.
It's very good.
Shelby striping.
Sports badging on the side.
Living accommodation on the back.
This is fashioned from lead and rhodium.
Is it? Yes, for extra weight to improve my ride.
Come back.
Simple, crisp accommodation inside, Shelby bedding and ebony wood floor.
More weight.
Come on! It looks brilliant.
'As, it must be said, did Hammond's.
' Hammond, you've got white walls! Oh, yeah, yeah! The ugly duckling has become a swan.
Wow! Yeah! Check out my stacks.
Please don't tell me they're exhausts.
Yeah.
Both sides.
What, actually func? They are.
Yeah, there's a T-junction.
Hang on, you've made it even taller.
I have.
It's bigger, isn't it? It's better.
But, come round the back, this Honestly.
He did a little skip then.
He's very excited.
He did a skip.
I am very, very What I have here, this is the bathroom area.
Shower.
It's got a shower.
Where's the water come from? Ha-ha! Ha-ha yourself.
There is, up the top, a reservoir.
About so big.
On my viewing gallery.
Hammond, it's a bucket.
It's It's a bucket.
It's a remote reservoir.
And that is, right now, collecting beautiful crisp, clean, fresh, invigorating rainwater.
This is the kitchen area with lino to reflect that.
What's that? Over there is a wardrobe.
There is a hammock with mosquito net built-in.
Drinks globe on the right.
'And Hammond wasn't finished.
' From up here, on a sunny evening, I can sit here as the sun goes down, gaze at the stars and enjoy a drink from my drinks globe.
Do you take visitors? Yeah.
I think he's going to have to because something has just occurred to me.
What? You haven't got any living accommodation.
That's a very good point.
You've forgotten it, you idiot! No, I haven't.
Well, you have.
Are you sleeping in the cab? Because it's not going to be comparable.
Let's Let's see.
'Before we set off, I gave the chaps some presents.
' You bought us a teddy bear? No, that's for me.
Is it? Yeah, that's my bonnet ornament.
Are you feeling lonely? It's your what? Bonnet ornament for weight.
It's the heaviest teddy bear in Burma.
'I'd got Hammond a bonnet ornament too.
' Wow, that's beautiful.
I know you don't have a clock so you'll have it on the bonnet, you'll be able to tell the time.
Oh, it really is It's a high-quality gift.
Oh, fantastic! Thank you.
I've always wanted a Shuanglin hammer.
It's from my own personal collection.
'Having christened my bear Rudyard, and attached him to the sports lorry, we set off.
' Oh, this feels better already.
Oh, hang on.
Richard Hammond is doing a remake of The Poseidon Adventure.
'We had many miles to cover 'but first we had to get through Naypyidaw's morning rush hour.
' This rush hour traffic is not as bad as I thought.
'The roads were completely empty.
And massive.
' One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
Yep, 16 lanes now.
HE LAUGHS Wait, it's gone bigger.
Five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
20.
It's 20 lanes now.
'This may look stupid and pointless, but actually it really isn't.
' The problem with most cities is that the growth comes and the city simply can't accommodate it.
That happened in London, Rome, Paris, Bangkok, everywhere.
That is not going to happen here.
I think this must be the first city built entirely in anticipation of the future.
'But the future hasn't arrived yet.
'So, for now, the whole place is almost completely deserted.
'Even here, in the shadow of the parliament building, 'we were able to have a game of football in the middle of the road.
' Officer.
It's the Burmese police versus Top Gear.
Oh, no.
Rush hour, game over.
Look at it, traffic.
Really though, it was too wet for football.
So, much to Hammond's annoyance, we organised a city centre drag race.
ENGINES REV This doesn't seem fair.
I've got the same 6.
4 litre Isuzu straight-six diesel as Jeremy's and probably James's, but the lumber bus is bigger.
We're not going to cover ourselves in glory here, old girl.
HE COUNTS DOWN Disastrous start.
There it is! This is going to hurt, we're going to have to rev you hard.
Sports truck is gaining.
Gaining.
Gaining.
Gaining, gaining.
No! Come on! Yes! Oh, victory is sweet.
Second place.
But I have got a crane.
Must brake, must brake.
Oh, got a football under the brake pedal.
That's bad.
Hammond, have you finished yet? Still going.
'After Hammond had lumbered across the line, we headed out of Naypyidaw 'and soon we started to discover some flaws with our modifications.
' Oh, my Nono, wait.
I'm speaking to you now from underneath my businessman's umbrella.
It has taken the water about 15 minutes to fathom it out but it's in here now and it's in in great quantities.
Oh, I can hear my exhaust hitting a tree.
Hammond, you're doing the council out of a job, mate.
It's like I'm driving through the aftermath of a hurricane.
Let's rename him Pruning Peacock.
JEREMY LAUGHS 'Soon, though, James was punished for mocking.
' Captain Workmanship.
It's a radiator hose.
It's not a bit I've touched.
Well, we have a tradition.
Oh, no, how am I going to do it without them(!) 'Leaving James to deliver an interesting lecture' If you're watching this from an engineering workshop or technical college, this is not the correct tool for the job.
'.
.
we continued on our way.
' I think a lot of the fumes are coming into the cab from under my new stack.
Not all of my improvements have turned out to be improvements.
GLASS SMASHES The simple tradition of the British dustman, putting a teddy bear on the front of a lorry, is bringing joy to the children of Burma.
They love Rudyard! 'By mid-afternoon we were all reunited 'and James took advantage of my mobile maintenance service.
' This isn't perilous at all(!) Oh, it's about three or four inches.
Too far.
LAUGHTER 'Soon, the road started to climb, and as night fell, 'I turned on the roof lights that I'd fitted myself.
' Oh, yes! MUSIC: "The Great Gig In The Sky" by Pink Floyd I'm driving a Pink Floyd gig right now.
I love this! The noise, the chaos, the heat CLANGING I think I might have just lost one of my Yeah, I did.
I lost a stack.
I've got to carry on.
I'm just going to pretend I didn't.
'Meanwhile, in the darkness, James was coming over all Buddhist.
' Hang on, I've got a personal dog escort here.
Shift your ass, dog.
HORN HONKS Oh, God, give me strength! I think that dog was inhabited by a benign spirit.
Seriously - if that dog hadn't done that, I'd have gone onto the bridge and I'd have hit the bus.
'Sadly, Buddhist dog wasn't around when five miles later, 'I had another breakdown.
' That's what came off.
That's the old one, which tore itself to shreds and in the process, pulled the wire out of the sender for the temperature gauge, so I don't have that any more.
This lorry is crap.
'Up ahead, Richard and I were looking forward 'to a night in our new on-board accommodation.
'But thanks to the British Empire, we didn't need it.
' 'After a night here, '4,000 feet up a mountain in a small village in the middle of Burma, 'at this strangely odd but comfortable Bournemouth hotel, 'we were feeling refreshed.
'And with Hammond leading, ''we were out of the village in a mere couple of hours.
' Hang on - whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! Oh, God Go slowly.
OK? Oh, thank you.
Keep going, hang on Are we going to spend the whole day tiptoeing under telephone wires? No, because you'll break down eventually.
OK, there's going to be a motorcyclist coming past you.
Check out his helmet.
That's quite a strong statement.
'After a quick map check, 'I decided we should take a tempting-looking short cut.
' Right, follow me.
'Which went well.
' Oh, dear God Any other adventures lined up on your short cut, Jeremy? Landslides, or avalanche? It's just a tropical mountain shower.
Gone in a jiffy.
THUNDER RUMBLES Or maybe not.
No, this looks pretty terrible.
'Eventually, my scenic route brought us to a remote settlement - 'that was very muchoff the grid.
' Good thing is in this little town there'll be no low wires.
'Instead, there was something worse.
' Oh, no! Oh, no.
Oh, this is bad.
I'm stuck, I'm stuck.
Hang on, I'll park up and come back on foot.
Stand by.
'Bored with Hammond's chimney-related problems, 'I went on an explore.
'And found some locals playing something that was nearly football.
' This is a brilliant idea.
They're using a monk as a referee.
And he's smoking.
WHISTLE BLOWS APPLAUSE 'Back at the bridge, the villagers had broken out their tool box.
' Really? If you're sure.
OK.
Move the entire sign.
I wouldn't be this helpful.
We know that.
'Meanwhile, I'd stumbled on a scene from an Indiana Jones movie.
' There's thousands of them! MAN SPEAKS IN LOCAL LANGUAGE That's "Hurry up.
It's heavy.
" Oh, right.
OK How we doing? James, I can't see.
Yeah? MAN: OK! Yes.
You through? Yay! 'With the town behind us, progress was good.
'And thenit wasn't.
' My fuel gauge is just on the top of the red.
Um I don't have one.
What I do have is the same engine as you but a much heavier truck, so I must have used more.
'And out here on my short cut, 'there were no filling stations at all.
' The needle is now nearly all in the red.
Trying to use the tiniest throttle movements, just to keep it ticking along.
'In the next village, James and I decided to pull over 'and dip our tanks.
' I've got no fuel.
None? A smear on the end of the stick.
What's the news? None.
I mean, it's dry, I don't know what I'm running on.
If you actually run a diesel out you've got to bleed the system, haven't you? And it's hours.
BOTH: Yeah.
Well, look, why don't you just go and snout around the village and see if you can find some? Why me? You're the youngest and fittest.
Well, it's your fault we're in this situation.
But I'm old and hot.
It's your short cut.
Seriously.
If anybody's got to go, it's you, mate.
Right, right, I'll go.
Fuel.
Diesel.
And as much as you can.
Yes.
What is Burmese for "diesel"? How do you mime "diesel"? Mime a lorry.
Brrr And then do that.
Right, so I'm a butler with Parkinson's, and I've got a gun.
'Jeremy headed off.
'And was gone for quite some time.
' Still quite hot, that.
Done the oil.
Have you? Are you reading Bridge On The River Kwai? Yeah, he's just gone into the hut Bad news.
What? Bad news.
What? I haven't been able to get any diesel.
'However - I had come up with a clever alternative.
' No, you halfwit.
There's no diesel in this village.
But there is diesel in the next village.
So we use the horses to ride to the next village, get the diesel, bring it back to the trucks.
We're not in a Western.
I can't ride a horse.
What? Well, I might have been pony trekking when I was eight, but Well, it'll be in there, won't it? Well, I wouldn't use that one there.
Holy moly! Why do they have five legs in Burma? Maybe so it can milk itself? Shall we spend all day looking at a horse's willy, or shall we go?! Oh, it's gone wrong 'Being the most experienced horseman, 'I took the frisky five-legged stallion.
' We're on.
Oh, Christ almighty! Hello, horse.
I shall call you Tesco.
Ready, steady, go.
Well, I've bought a stalled horse.
It's going backwards.
I've bought a reversing horse.
I think if we get moving, yours might follow more readily.
James, can you turn right and go up there? Turn around.
How do you make it turn around? Anybody know how to start a Burmese horse? Go on, follow your mate.
Yes.
Very good.
The controls are reversed I'm off! Oh, yeah.
Yeah! MUSIC: Theme from "A Fistful Of Dollars" by Ennio Morricone 'Soon, James was getting a taste 'of what the ride was like in my sports lorry.
' My nadgers are getting a pummelling.
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow Look at the anal action going on here.
My horse is going up your one's bottom.
Oh, Christ, we've had an accident.
You go ahead.
I'm terrified! My nads are killing me! HORSE GRUNTS Oh, stop that, please don't fight! Walk on.
I'll stop calling you Tesco if you promise not to fight.
Go! Walk.
There you go.
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow Oh, God above! Not much further now, James.
Jesus! I mean - Buddha! 'A few hundred yards further on, 'Richard's stallion decided to get amorous with James's mare.
' HORSE WHINNIES Ooh! BLEEP HORSE WHINNIES Oh! BLEEP Has he gone? What happened? It reared and mounted that.
Don't get kicked.
'Things quickly went to pot.
' This is the doctor, going to attend to Richard but the van is stuck.
I've just dismounted my reversing horse, and actually genuinely have hurt my testes.
Oh! I can see why they should be glue, these things.
'Richard was diagnosed with a suspected broken wrist 'and went on a four-hour journey to the nearest hospital.
'So I walked my horse to the next village to get fuel, 'and then, we found a spot to camp for the night.
' HE SIGHS 'Here, while I enjoyed the view, 'James unveiled his sleeping accommodation.
'A mountaineering tent he could suspend from his crane.
' So I'm going to rest it against the front of the cab.
Cos all these bitey ants, they don't get in your tent and eat you.
'It may have been insect-proof '.
.
but soundproof? No.
' SNORING I want to go to bed.
But I can't, with that racket going on.
Listen to it.
SNORING 'The next morning I discovered that Hammond was back.
' So that's just a sprain? Yep.
Not bust.
Nothing exciting.
So what is it you have to do, basically steering? Yeah, be all right.
You just have to Yeah.
Still do that.
Right.
And how was sleeping in your lorry? Um, not bad.
What about yours? Fine.
Where did James sleep in the end, what's he done? Oh, he's got some stupid high-tech mountaineering tent on his crane.
Why is it up there? JEREMY LAUGHS Well You know his snoring? Yeah Quite loud.
So I moved him a bit further away.
Jesus Clarkson! What? Funny.
Very funny.
Yes.
I don't like heights, I don't like camping I don't like snoring.
Anyway, shall we get on? 'After Pinky and Perky had winched me down, 'we set off on our seventh day of long-distance lorry driving.
' I'm still staggered that they put diesel in my truck.
I mean, that's a generous gesture.
Assuming it IS diesel.
Oh, no.
Hammond What's happened? I've lost my other stack.
Well, as you know, we're not the US Marines, we leave a man behind.
Yeah, too hot.
Er, right It's covered in ants Oh, it's an ants' nest! That's a mistake.
Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! Ow! 'This, then, looked like it was going to be 'another day of calamities and mishaps.
'But actually, here, in this part of Burma, 'we had to get properly serious.
' Today is a big day for us, because we are headed for the Shan.
Top Gear's been to a lot of remote places over the years but we've never been anywhere quite like this.
The Shan is to Burma what Scotland is to Britain, it's a part of it, and yet it's separate.
We know there's been a civil war in there, we understand there's a cease-fire at the moment Only a handful of Westerners have ever been there, and certainly, no TV show has ever been allowed in.
We are the firstever.
All of the people who've been fighting are coming together tonight to welcome us here to the Shan State.
CHEERING Who's got any whisky? Got any Scotch? BLEEP second gear failed and now the engine has BLEEP.
Hammond, you idiot! You've reversed into the sports lorry! "Work on the bridge starts at 0500"? What? Get in! Get in.