It's stylistic, and it has a sort of 'narrator-like' quality. It's like 'narrator voice.'
It's less common now, but movies used to have narrators that would introduce a scene, provide background about a scene, etc. Also, of course, plays and books do this as well. It reminds me of a 1950's news reel or something like that.
To some degree, it's treating the person as a subject: "In the next scene, we find an extremely unhappy Harry..."
It's sort of a strangely constructed sentence, and it sounds dated or old. I wouldn't put too much weight on a sentence like that, moreso, it's just an example of the possible variations that you can find in sentence structure. More commonly, the article would be absent.