This is a common misunderstanding. Your sentence mentions an action. That action seems to be in the past. The statement uses the present tense. Why?
Some verbs express action. Other verbs express state of being*. The verb "to have" expresses a state of being.
1) I saw the film.
2) I have seen the film.
3) I had seen the film.
In 1), the only verb is a past-tense action verb.
in 2), there are two verb words which form a single verb phrase. The "have" is a present-tense state-of-being verb. The "seen" is a verb without any tense but with the perfect aspect. This form does not express the action of the verb "to see". It expresses the result of that action.
I have seen the film. I possess a result of the action.
In 3), the "had" is a past-tense state-of-being verb.
The structure of 3) is rarely used on its own. Often, it's used to suggest that one thing is even further in the past than another:
4) I had seen the film when I read the book.
The action of "to read" is in the past. At the time of the action of "to read", my state of being included the result of the action of "to see". This suggests that that action of "to see" happened before the action of "to read".
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* As far as I can tell, we use the phrase "state of being" because the word "condition" would be confusing. Verbs like "to be" and "to have" express a condition in the sense of "the way things are", rather than the sense of "something required for something else". We use the word "condition" in the second sense when discussing subordinate clauses, so we use "state of being" when discussing what a verb can express.
Another way to phrase these sentences would be:
- the show is not finished yet
- someone or something has started the show just now
- someone or something has started the show in (not so distant) past
- the show has really started!
I'm not an expert in explaining this in fancy terms, but I hope you get the difference from these examples.
Best Answer
Has is present tense (now), while had is past tense (in the past).
Hope it helps!