It's time to meet immortals
It's time to hack off heads
It's time to sharpen broadswords
on the Highlander show tonight
That's great. Can picture Fozzie popping into the frame at the end to say, "Heads will roll!"
Statler and Waldorf doing the commentary on each fight?
It's time to meet immortals
It's time to hack off heads
It's time to sharpen broadswords
on the Highlander show tonight
Odder that a 56 year old Sean Connery?....46 year-old Michael Fassbender as an immortal? I mean....sure...but still feels like an odd choice age-wise.
Yea, I mean if we go by the 'rules' from the original you become immortal when you die an unnatural death. So the physical age of the 'immortal' can vary.Odder that a 56 year old Sean Connery?
Immortallity can really suck.Yea, I mean if we go by the 'rules' from the original you become immortal when you die an unnatural death. So the physical age of the 'immortal' can vary.
The TV series had a child who died and was an immortal locked in that form for like hundreds of years. Highlander 3 had a Japanese Immortal who had his violent death in his 60s and had lived in that form for centuries.
Eh? What about child vampires?....46 year-old Michael Fassbender as an immortal? I mean....sure...but still feels like an odd choice age-wise.
The TV series had a child who died and was an immortal locked in that form for like hundreds of years.
Did the bastards kill Kenny?Kenny was supposedly over 800 years old- about twice as old as Mac. In my mind, his appearance was really (for me) the first time Highlander truly dipped into something like a horror genre. Kenny was like a live version of Chucky.
Did the bastards kill Kenny?
I mean, it works so well.
Animal= Kurgan
My first introduction to Highlander was the TV series, that was on when I was visiting a couple of SCA friends. Our shire was working on a group project - a latch hook rug/banner of the shire's heraldic device. That thing was big enough for 3 people to sit side by side and work on it, so we just gathered over at their place and Highlander was on in the background.The tv show was fun however.
Tennant's natural accent is very pleasing to the ear.And If they don't have David Tenneant in the movie using his natual scottish lilt in atleast a supporting roll, there not trying hard enough.
As for the TV show, I ran across a YT channel that has some massively long video compilations of every single one of Duncan's historical flashbacks. Each video covers a century of his life, and I've finally reached partway through the last one (20th century), and it's over 5 HOURS long.Oh, I heartily recommend the TV show. I hate the sequel movies, but the TV show is just wonderful.
And, hey, I like origami too!![]()
The beauty of fanfic is that if you don't like something about the source material, just write an AU. I haven't read it myself, but I did see a reference to a series of stories in which Richie survives for centuries, and joins Starfleet (during the TOS era).The series peaked with season 4 for me, season 5 was fine too. But was gutted with the ending of season 5.
I actually quite liked the raven series. Amanda was a good character
I don't think age matters as much as what someone is interested in. My intro, as mentioned earlier in this post, came as a result of the SCA. That organization has people of all ages in it, from young kids to great-grandparents. It's older than Star Trek (by a couple of months) and especially when you get multiple generations of the same family being part of it, you have multiple generations being exposed to all kinds of medieval-era historical things (and earlier, as some of us are history buffs in general; I was into Roman history for 10 years before getting into the SCA and medieval history).I can imagine it being an age thing. While some movies are popular with younger generations despite their age I'd think Highlander is one that would appeal to those of us of a certain age. I'd be willing to be my 30 ish nephews nieces never heard of it, and also the same for the likes of the breakfast club etc, but they will know top gun,grease etc
Fitz was such a hoot!Like most, I dislike the first season of the show, but when they moved production to Paris, it got much better. Roger Daltry's character was a lot of fun!
Well, corvids are attracted to shiny things, and so is Amanda. Rebecca was only able to civilize her so much before she embarked on centuries of being a thief.Yep, Amanda is a decent actor and the series was okay. I'm still questioning the choice of cutting off all that lovely black hair giving her a bleached white buzz cut in a show called "Raven."![]()
Ditch the notion that every Immortal has to be a foundling. I always found that idea ridiculous.What I want to know is what the reboot does differently. I do expect better acting. But how else can they make it better?
Is that series still on? I lost track of it years ago after it was switched to a channel I don't get.So can Sam Heughan given the timeline Outlander is set in.
Some of the fanfic I've read lately addresses the issue of the Watchers being the cleanup crew. Watchers aren't any more eager than the Immortals for the mortal cops to find out what's going on.In terms of some of the TV series' "problems"...
1. Don't give them magic sword pockets.
2. Have the Watchers be part of the lore from day one, and have the Watchers clean up after duels so that there aren't dozens of headless people all over the place. (Headless people aren't a problem if you use that as part of the storytelling, but the TV show mostly ignored it.)
The movie gives us one of the most bonkers moments in cinema, that of Christophe Lambert, who's about as Scottish as a croissant, explaining haggis to Sean Connery.
I've only seen him in The Tudors.I'm cautiously excited for this reboot. Cavill (who seems to be making a thing of taking on iconic roles in franchise reboots; Superman, Napoleon Solo and now Connor MacLeod) seems much closer to a Duncan type than Lambert's Connor.
Older in how long it's been since they died, or older in their biological age when they died? Immortality doesn't grant instant knowledge or wisdom. Duncan was illiterate when he died, and later he learned to read in a monastery. The person who taught him was an Immortal lay priest, and the reading material was Shakespeare's Macbeth. People like Duncan opted to improve themselves, learn new things. Others either didn't want to, or they couldn't manage the opportunity.One thing I always chuckled about with the series was that so many older immortals seemed to have learned absolutely nothing in the centuries they'd been alive, or managed to amass enough resources to live without needing to resort to petty theft, shenanigans, or borrowing from their friends.
In reality, a 400 year old immortal would probably live in a shadow world where nobody knew of his existence for the most part, he was rarely seen, and had an entire 'secret society' like the Templars or something as his personal staff to do his bidding, mind his investments, keep the properties free of trespassers, and ensure his existence and training was undisturbed. Meetings between immortals would require decades worth of Machiavellian planning and execution, like a gang war of old (but more subtle), resulting in a meeting between two master swordsmen where the duel would be over in a pass or two and winner take all. An organization like the Watchers would have been eradicated as soon as the first immortal learned of its existence. The deal where they randomly bump into each other on a street and have a sword fight in the dirty alley a block over? That wouldn't happen between men and women who had survived for centuries. As TV entertainment it would be pretty boring, but that is how it would probably go.
That would have been the episode in which Kristin became a problem. She was obsessed with remaking Duncan into her idea of the perfect man, and he finally had enough of it and left her. She didn't take it well.I'm still not sure whether I saw all of the series or not but suspect I saw a lot of it. I seem to recall that Methos was my favourite character by far and my only real memory of the show is the episode where he castigated all the newer immortals for growing up in a world where chivalry and nobility existed whereas he'd come from a much more barbaric time and hence could be way more of a bastard!
The TV series makes the point that whatever makes a pre-Immortal into an Immortal is only activated with a quick and violent death.In Highlander three Connor says that a potential immortal can have children, and will die of old age eventually, unless they prematurely expire from a violent death, which is when their "powers" kick in.
I have a short story anthology called An Evening at Joe's. All the stories were written by people involved in the series, whether production, tech, or actors. Peter Wingfield, who played Methos, wrote an absolutely chilling story about an Immortal baby.Kenny was supposedly over 800 years old- about twice as old as Mac. In my mind, his appearance was really (for me) the first time Highlander truly dipped into something like a horror genre. Kenny was like a live version of Chucky.
The beauty of fanfic is that if you don't like something about the source material, just write an AU. I haven't read it myself, but I did see a reference to a series of stories in which Richie survives for centuries, and joins Starfleet (during the TOS era).
Which brings up an interesting point. It's asking a lot of audiences to suspend their disbelief at a bunch of people in the 20th century who carry swords around with them that are invisible until it's time to fight. Where would Richie have carried one while serving on a starship?
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