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Dictionary:

highlander

  ('lən-dər) pronunciation
n.

One who lives in a highland.


 
 
Movies:

Highlander

DVD Release: Highlander [Director's Cut]

  • Release Date: 2000

DVD Release: Highlander

  • Release Date: 2002
  • Widescreen presentation (1.85:1) enhanced for 16x9 TVs
  • Languages: English, French
  • Audio commentary with director Russell Mulcahy and producers Peter S. Davis and William N. Panzer
  • Theatrical trailer
  • Talent bios
  • DVD-ROM link to Highlander website

DVD Release: Highlander [Immortal Edition]

  • Release Date: 2002
  • Widescreen presentation (1.85:1) enhanced for 16x9 TVs
  • Queen music videos: "Who Wants to Live Forever," "A Kind of Magic," and "Princes of the Universe"
  • Languages: English, French
  • Queen companion CD: "Princes of the Universe," "One Year of Love (Extended Version)," "Friends Will Be Friends"
  • Audio commentary with director Russell Mulcahy and producers Peter S. Davis and William N. Panzer
  • Theatrical trailers
  • Talent bios
  • Highlander poster and still gallery
  • Queen still gallery
  • DVD-ROM links to Highlander and Queen websites

  • Rating: StarStar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure, Sword-and-Sorcery
  • Themes: Heroic Mission, Immortality, Lone Wolves
  • Director: Russell Mulcahy
  • Main Cast: Christopher Lambert, Roxanne Hart, Clancy Brown, Sean Connery, Beatie Edney
  • Release Year: 1986
  • Country: US/UK
  • Run Time: 120 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

With the ultimate throw-down, "There can be only one," Highlander captured the imaginations of fantasy fans seeking a well-executed swordplay epic, becoming a cult classic in the process. Connor MacLeod (Christopher Lambert) is one of a waning few survivors of a clan of immortals The breed have been dueling each other for centuries in the quest to be the last one remaining, and hence achieve a supreme enlightenment that would be dangerous in the wrong hands. The immortals can only die by decapitation, so they hunt each other through time and across continents to meet for each decisive duel, which will bring one of them a step closer to ultimate power. In present-day America, the troubled hero MacLeod lives a brooding and lonely existence, having lost his true love centuries ago. The evil Kurgan (Clancy Brown), an immortal who plans to use his power toward unspeakable ends, has fought MacLeod before but is still trying to finish him off. After emerging victorious from a parking garage skirmish with the third-to-last immortal, MacLeod knows that only Kurgan is left, and the two are on a collision path toward the inevitable. In the film's numerous flashbacks to the past, Sean Connery plays Ramirez, the immortal who first tutors MacLeod after the hero survives a mortal battle wound, prompting his fearful village to banish him. Roxanne Hart plays MacLeod's modern-day love interest, who tries to help him while struggling to believe his incredible story. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Review

Essentially a B-movie that found an audience, Highlander made less than six million dollars in its American theatrical release, ten million shy of its budget. But it developed enough of a word-of-mouth following on video to spawn three confused sequels, and deliver Christopher Lambert a career's worth of low-budget action vehicles. Although downright laughable in spots, Highlander won its audience on the basis of a giddy idea -- that life for these immortals is the ultimate game of Survivor, with beheadings determining the outcome instead of votes at the tribal council -- and film noir visuals that span centuries of narrative. Director Russell Mulcahy does a noteworthy job of blending the time periods, with visually ambitious segues in which shapes from one scene blend seamlessly into the next. What detracts from Highlander, making it a cult hit rather than a legitimate one, is the poor acting by everyone not named Sean Connery, and some pretty amateurish dialogue. Lambert has always been something of a hack, and Clancy Brown gives one of the more over-the-top portrayals of evil of his typecast career. Still, the duels are executed crisply enough, and the story has epic genre flair that's easy to get lost in. It's understandable why the movie was eventually beloved by teens and young adults, even beyond the Dungeons & Dragons set. However, as tightly resolved as it is, Highlander was just as predictably doomed in its attempt to support a franchise, resulting in a bunch of messy, self-contradicting sequels. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast


Alan North - Lt. Frank Moran; Sheila Gish - Rachel Ellenstein; Jon Polito - Detective Walter Bedwoe; Ron Berglas - Erik Powell; Anthony Fusco - Barman; Louis Guss - Newsvendor; Damien Leake - Tony; Christopher Malcolm - Kirk Matunas; Anthony Mannino - Boisterous Drunk; Buckley Norris - Derelict; Hugh Quarshie - Sunda Kastagir; Gordon Sterne - Dr. Willis Kenderly; Ian Tyler - Lab Technician; Ed Wiley - Garfield; Peter Diamond - Fasil; Billy Hartman - Dugal MacLeod; James Cosmo - Angus MacLeod; Peter Banks - Priest; John Cassady - Kenny; Frank Dux - Old Man in Car; Alistair Findley - Chief Murdoch; Prince Howell - Drunk in Hotel; Celia Imrie - Kate; Ted Maynard - Newscaster; Sion Tudor Owen - Hotchkiss; Nicola Ramsey - Rachel as a Girl; Ian Reddinton - Bassett; Waldo Roeg - German Soldier; Corrinne Russell - Candy; Helena Stevens - Old Woman in Car; James McKenna - James/Father Rainey

Credit

Andrew Bradford - Stunts; Queen - Songwriter; James Acheson - Costume Designer; Martin Atkinson - Art Director; Peter Bellwood - Screenwriter; Peter Brace - Stunts; Lois Burwell - Makeup; Allan Cameron - Production Designer; Peter S. Davis - Producer; Sandra Exelby - Makeup; Larry Ferguson - Screenwriter; Gerry Fisher - Cinematographer; Graham Freeborn - Makeup; Martin Gutteridge - Special Effects; David Lee Henry - Screenwriter; Ilona Herman - Makeup; Peter Honess - Editor; Tim Hutchinson - Art Director; Garth Inns - Special Effects; Michael Kamen - Composer (Music Score); Vic Magnotta - Stunts; Douglas Milsome - Camera Operator; Russell Mulcahy - Director; William N. Panzer - Producer; Ian Whittaker - Set Designer; Gregory Widen - Screenwriter; Eva Monley - Associate Producer; David Tringham - First Assistant Director; E.C. Monell - Executive Producer; Michael McLean - Casting; Diane Dimeo - Casting; Bert Luxford - Special Effects; Graham Longhurst - Special Effects; John H. Starke - Associate Producer

Similar Movies

Highlander [TV Series]; Beowulf; X-Men
 
WordNet: Highlander
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 2 meanings:

Meaning #1: a soldier in a Scottish Highland regiment

Meaning #2: a native of the Highlands of Scotland
  Synonym: Scottish Highlander


 
Wikipedia: Highlander (film)
Highlander
Highlander_1_poster.jpg
Original style-A poster
Directed by Russell Mulcahy
Produced by Peter S. Davis
E.C. Monell
William N. Panzer
Written by Story:
Gregory Widen
Screenplay:
Gregory Widen
Peter Bellwood
Larry Ferguson
Starring Christopher Lambert
Sean Connery
Clancy Brown
Roxanne Hart
Music by Queen
Michael Kamen
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) Flag of the United States March 7, 1986
Running time 116 min.
Language English
Followed by Highlander II: The Quickening
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Highlander is a 1986 film directed by Russell Mulcahy and based on a story by Gregory Widen. The film is set in 1985 with flashbacks establishing the backstory and the characters' relationships to one another[citation needed]. The film has inspired a number of movie sequels, three television series, non-canon novels and comic books and a feature-length animé[citation needed].

Plot

Scotland

Connor MacLeod (Christopher Lambert) was born in the year 1518 "in the village of Glenfinnan on the shores of Loch Shiel." In 1536, his clan is in conflict with the rival Clan Fraser, and Connor rides along into his first battle. The Frasers have employed a towering monster of a man known as The Kurgan (Clancy Brown), who apparently recognizes that Connor is a fellow Immortal, though even Connor himself has not yet discovered this, although he feels the pain from sensing the Kurgan's proximity. The Kurgan manages to mortally wound Connor in battle, but the MacLeods recover the body before he can decapitate it. The MacLeods mourn Connor, but he revives shortly after his "death." Accusing him of witchcraft, Connor's clansmen beat him, and are preparing an execution, but his cousin Angus MacLeod (James Cosmo) persuades them to exile Connor instead. He escapes with his life, but is banished from his clan and birthplace.

Connor eventually settles as a blacksmith in Glencoe, where he marries Heather (Beatie Edney). In 1541, he is located by a much older Immortal, who introduces himself as Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez (Sean Connery). Ramirez soon appoints himself Connor's tutor in the situation of being Immortal, their pursuit of The Prize, and the rules of an age-old "Game," noting that "in the end, there can be only one." He also explains that his own name was just his current alias, being Egyptian by birth. He adopted it while serving as Chief Metallurgist for Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (also King of Spain between 1516-1556). His sword is a katana he received in Japan in 593 B.C. by his (then) father-in-law Masamune. Masamune, a genius far ahead of his time in the forging of swords, was the father of Princess Shakiko, Ramirez's third wife. Ramirez also took it upon himself to improve Connor's swordsmanship, which he commented on as "no better than that of a clumsy child."

Love and death

Connor MacLeod
Enlarge
Connor MacLeod

Ramirez tells MacLeod to leave his wife or face heartbreak, explaining that "I was born 2,437 years ago. In that time, I've had three wives. The last was Shakiko, a Japanese princess... When Shakiko died, I was shattered. I would save you that pain. Please, let Heather go."

Connor refuses to leave his wife, though he trains under Ramirez to prepare for Immortals like the Kurgan. However, the Kurgan manages to arrive at Connor's home while MacLeod himself is absent. The Kurgan and Ramirez duel, with the frightened Heather their only spectator. The Kurgan manages to decapitate Ramirez, and proceeds to rape Heather, in the belief that he was further humiliating his old enemy (Ramirez) and "his woman." Connor soon returns to find his residence in ruins, his mentor killed, and his wife alive, but traumatized. She never tells him about the rape, and Connor never learns of the event until 1985, when The Kurgan mocks Ramirez's memory.

Connor remains with his wife until her death from old age. Dying in Connor's arms, she confides that her only regret was not having his children. After burying Heather, MacLeod burns their residence and wanders the world, journeying as far away as Japan, and - like the rest of the Immortals - finally ends up in America. These travels include an 18th Century duel on Boston Common (in which a drunken MacLeod was repeatedly run through by a sword, to no effect, by an insulted husband), and killing a Nazi officer during World War II, rescuing young Rachel, a Holocaust survivor, in the process. His experiences over time have left him a bitter, cynical man.

Modern day

The action then shifts to 1985 New York, where the few surviving Immortals are drawn in "The Gathering," a final series of confrontations to determine the winner of "The Prize." Eventually, the last two surviving are Connor, under the alias of "Russell Edwin Nash" and the Kurgan, under the alias of "Victor Kruger." Meanwhile, the spike in what appear to be murders by decapitation has drawn the attention of the police, who suspect Connor as the sole person responsible (he is in fact responsible for at least one of the deaths being investigated). Among the investigators of the case is forensic scientist Brenda Wyatt (Roxanne Hart). Her investigation reveals MacLeod's apparent longevity through different names, and she eventually falls in love with him. This does not escape the attention of the Kurgan, who abducts her to force Connor into a final confrontation. MacLeod battles the Kurgan, finally defeating him (with a little help from Brenda), and apparently wins The Prize, which is revealed to be mortality, the ability to sire children, and a telepathic/empathic gift wherein he can communicate with and influence the greatest minds or most powerful people on the planet.

Cast

Actor Role
Christopher Lambert Connor MacLeod / Russell Nash
Roxanne Hart Brenda Wyatt
Clancy Brown The Kurgan / Victor Kruger
Sean Connery Juan Sánchez Villa-Lobos Ramírez
Beatie Edney Heather MacLeod
Alan North Lieutenant Frank Moran
Jon Polito Detective Walter Bedsoe
Sheila Gish Rachel Ellenstein
Hugh Quarshie Sunda Kastagir
Christopher Malcolm Kirk Matunas
Peter Diamond Iman Fasil
Billy Hartman Dugal MacLeod
James Cosmo Angus MacLeod
Celia Imrie Kate MacLeod
Alistair Findla Chief Murdoch Fraser

Reception

The film was directed by Russell Mulcahy and scripted by Peter Bellwood, Larry Ferguson and Gregory Widen. Upon initial U.S. release, it was not well-received[citation needed], but it gained increasing popularity in non-domestic markets[citation needed], and on home video[citation needed]. It has since obtained status as a cult classic film in both domestic and non-domestic markets[citation needed], leading to several sequels[citation needed], a television series[citation needed] and a volume of fiction[citation needed].

Today, it remains arguably the best-known film of the Highlander series[citation needed], and the one perhaps best-received by the public[citation needed]. The themes and concepts introduced by the film were further explored by many of the later movies and the TV series[citation needed].

Alternate cuts and deleted scenes

  • The European and Japanese cuts of the film contain scenes not found in the U.S. cut[citation needed].
  • The Director's Cut is 8 minutes longer than the U.S. cut[citation needed]. It includes, amongst other things, a flashback to World War II that further develops the character of Rachel Ellenstein. [1]
  • A number of deleted scenes from the film were lost in a fire. One such scene introduced an Asian immortal named Yung Dol Kim[citation needed], who was beheaded by the Kurgan[citation needed]. Another featured Connor and Kastigir in a night club with Detective Bedsoe[citation needed]. A few stills from these sequences, some in color and others in black and white, did survive[citation needed].

DVD releases

Highlander has been released to DVD on four occasions in the United States, initially on May 16, 2000 on a single disc[citation needed]. Subsequent editions were released on February 16, 2002 as a two disc set (Immortal Edition) and a single disc set both with a DTS Soundtrack[citation needed]. These version also include the European edition scenes cut from the American Edition.

Soundtrack

The original movie features a soundtrack by Queen, including "Princes of the Universe," which was also used in the Highlander television series title sequence[citation needed]. Queen saw an early screening of Highlander, and decided to compose music for the film's entire non-symphonic soundtrack[citation needed]. They wrote many of the songs specifically to match the mood of the scenes when the songs were played, notably Brian May's "Who Wants to Live Forever", concerning the doomed love of Connor and his original, mortal Highland bride[citation needed].

While an album specifically tied to the Highlander movie was never released, Queen's 1986 album A Kind of Magic (a phrase spoken twice in the movie by Connor) features most of the songs from the film, as well as other music on the same theme[citation needed]. Notably, Queen's version of "New York, New York" (playing while The Kurgan drives Brenda through New York) was never released by the band[citation needed].

All of Queen's songs in Highlander were purposely written for the movie, except for "Hammer to Fall", which had been previously released on their album The Works in 1984[citation needed].

Cultural impact

  • Master Shake from the animated series Aqua Teen Hunger Force considers Highlander to be a documentary, and the events that happened were in real-time. He also believes that jumping off a "magic cliff" will make him an Immortal (despite being told that one is born an Immortal, rather than becoming one), and uses this plot to make the suicidal Happy Time Harry suffer[citation needed],

References

    External links

    Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:


    Movies Highlander | Highlander II: The Quickening | Highlander III: The Final Dimension

    Highlander: Endgame | Highlander: The Source

    TV Series Highlander: The Series (episodes) | Highlander: The Raven (episodes)
    Animated Highlander: The Animated Series | The Methos Chronicles | Highlander: The Search for Vengeance
    Books The Element of Fire | Scimitar | Scotland the Brave | Measure of a Man | The Path | Zealot | Shadow of Obsession | The Captive Soul | White Silence | An Evening at Joe's
    Comics Highlander (Dynamite Comics)
    V. Games Highlander: The Last of the MacLeods
    Main Characters
    MacLeods Connor MacLeod | Duncan MacLeod | Quentin MacLeod | Colin MacLeod
    Friends Heather MacLeod | Juan Sánchez Villa-Lobos Ramírez | Rachel Ellenstein | Brenda Wyatt | Louise Marcus | Alex Johnson/Sarah | John MacLeod | Nakano | Kate MacLeod | Tessa Noël | Richie Ryan | Amanda | Joe Dawson | Methos | Charlie DeSalvo | Anne Lindsey | Darius | Hugh Fitzcairn | Cassandra | Nick Wolfe | Don Vincente Marino Ramírez
    Enemies The Kurgan | General Katana | Kane | Jacob Kell | Jacob Kell's Gang | The Guardian | Xavier St. Cloud | James Horton | Kalas | Kronos | Four Horsemen | Ahriman | Pharaoh Djer | Kortan
    Fictional Universe
    Misc. The Immortals | The Quickening | The Watchers | The Methuselah's Stone | Seacouver
    Listings Movie Characters | TV Characters | Immortals | Watchers | Timelines | Screenshots

     
    Translations: Translations for: Highlands

    Dansk (Danish)
    n. - Highlands

    Deutsch (German)
    n. - Highlands

    עברית (Hebrew)
    n. - ‮היילנדס‬


     
     

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    Copyrights:

    Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Movies. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Highlander (film)" Read more
    Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

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