Highlander Season Three
Next week: They Also Serve
Shadows, Air Date: November 1994
MacLeod is tormented by visions of his own death, beheaded by a mysterious dark-hooded figure. Anne tries to convince him to seek medical help, but instead he turns to his old friend Garrick, who has spent centuries studying the mind. MacLeod saw Garrick in the 17th century when MacLeod barely escaped being burned as a witch. What MacLeod didn't know was that Garrick was unable to escape as well.
Garrick convinces MacLeod that the dark-hooded figure is a racial memory that haunts all Immortals and that the way to defeat it is to not fight it, to accept it for what it is. When MacLeod, haggard and exhausted, faces the specter for the last time, puts down his sword and refuses to fight it, the figure goes for MacLeod's head -- until at the last moment MacLeod realizes the figure is Garrick, seeking his revenge after all these years. In the tag, Anne, frustrated that MacLeod won't open up to her despite their intimate relationship, leaves him. ~ recap via tv.com
Next week: They Also Serve
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 02:00 pm (UTC)From:From Carmel:
.....I really really really do try and find other shows that engage me the
way Highlander did and still does but I just can't seem to find one....don't
get me wrong - I love West Wing...Gilmore Girls ...Alias....but when
push comes to shove it's my Highlander DVDs that get pulled out. We
(Nancye, Aine, Karen Scott) are having a HLWW planning and plotting weekend
for Vancouver and tonight for a well earned break put on Shadows from Season
3. Wow - what an episode! Adrian was superb in it; it was a great story;
the sword fights were amazing as was the location shooting around
Vancouver....and my heavens but what a Kata we were treated to. I thought
that the Garrick character was played very well - superb musical score - and
all this in an 8 day shoot!
What I also particularly liked was the continuing threads and references:
Duncan's susceptibility to illusions; the pathos of his near killing of
Richie which got played out for real in Archangel; recognising David A's
comment in the Behind the Scenes clips that Evil's greatest trick was to
convince us that it doesn't exist and remembering that he put those very
words into Duncan's mouth in the tag scene of Armageddon when he is in the
Bar with Joe.
So - why is Duncan so susceptible to mind games? We saw it in him as a
child with Cassandra and again in Prophecy; Ahriman, Garrick....his falling
victim to the dark quickening (something we are told was so rare that there
was no record of it in the Chronicles)....in order to 'save' him, Methos
also resorts to an illusion (the underground cavern and the pool) and uses
the illusion to lead Duncan back.....
Of course, I also use the above to posit the possibility that Connor is not
dead at all but used the powers he inherited from Nakano to trick Duncan
into thinking that he has killed Connor (meanwhile Connor has retreated to
another haven, one day to re-surface....)....
You know - I love this show as much as I did when I first came across it-
probably more so because of the way it has stood the test of time in terms
of its overall quality on so many levels.
p.s. make sure you listen to F Braun's commentary on just how exhausting
this episode was to do - FIVE sword fights + the kata....no wonder
Adrian/Duncan looked ragged and haggard! Of course, it's a look that he
wears so well - LOL.....
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 02:01 pm (UTC)From: