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Highlander III: The Sorcerer

Highlander III: The Sorcerer (also known as Highlander: The Final Dimension or Highlander: The Final Conflict) is a 1994 action-adventure fantasy film and the third installment in the Highlander film series. Set as an alternate sequel to the original film, it is the final Highlander film to focus on Connor MacLeod as the protagonist. In the film, Connor MacLeod is forced to face a new, dangerous enemy, a powerful sorcerer known as Kane who threatens to win the fabled "Prize" in order to gain world domination by eliminating MacLeod. It grossed $36.7 million worldwide.

Highlander III: The Sorcerer
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAndy Morahan
Screenplay by
  • Paul Ohl
  • René Manzor
  • Brad Mirman
Story by
Based onCharacters
by Gregory Widen
Produced byClaude Léger
Starring
CinematographySteven Chivers
Edited byYves Langlois
Music byJ. Peter Robinson
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
  • November 30, 1994 (1994-11-30) (Philippines)
  • December 9, 1994 (1994-12-09) (United Kingdom)
  • January 27, 1995 (1995-01-27) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$26[3]–34[4][5] million
Box office$36.7 million[6]

Plot edit

Some time after the death of his wife Heather in the 16th century, the immortal Scottish Highlander Connor MacLeod travels to Japan to train with an immortal named Nakano, a sorcerer (said to be a master of illusion) and old friend of the Highlander's late teacher Juan Sánchez-Villalobos Ramírez. In a cave in Mount Niri, Nakano teaches MacLeod how to fight with the katana that once belonged to Ramírez. He also warns of Kane, an evil immortal making his way across Asia with two immortal henchmen named Khabul Khan and Senghi Khan. After burning down a village, the three reach the cave. Kane beheads Nakano, taking his immortal Quickening energy and power of illusion. The Highlander escapes and Nakano laughs as he dies, declaring that Kane will not be present at the time of the Gathering (when the last immortals fight) and implying he has planned one last trick. The release of his energy causes a cave in, trapping Kane and his henchmen.

In 1788 France, Connor meets and falls in love with Sarah Barrington, a visitor from England. During the French Revolution, MacLeod is captured and sentenced to death for treason against King Louis XVI of France. His immortal friend Pierre Bouchet takes his place, claiming he is tired of his immortal life. Believing Connor is dead, Sarah marries another man. By the time MacLeod finds her, he discovers she now has a family and decides to let her continue believing he is dead.

In 1985, the Gathering occurs in New York City and MacLeod is seemingly the last immortal left alive. He and his new love Brenda Wyatt move to Scotland and are married. She is killed in a car accident in 1987 and he survives without any wounds, indicating he has not lost his immortality and may not have won the Prize. By 1994, Connor is living with his adopted son John in Marrakesh. Meanwhile, archaeologist Dr. Alexandra Johnson (a woman identical to Sarah Barrington) is part of a team excavating the legendary cave of Nakano. The excavation frees Kane, who beheads Senghi to gain a boost in power while his other soldier Khabul leaves to find Connor.

Sensing the release of the Quickening again, MacLeod realizes the Game is not over and that he must return to New York City. MacLeod leaves John in the care of his friend, Jack Donovan. Arriving in New York, MacLeod (using his old alias of "Russell Nash" again) faces and kills Khabul. NYPD Lt. John Stenn believes Khabul's headless body is proof that the "headhunter" killer of 1985 is loose again. He concludes the killer is Russell Nash, who was a suspect during the original case.

Alex investigates a piece of kilt cloth found in the cave of Nakano, identifying it as branch of the MacLeod family, one where a clan member was banished for having unnatural powers. Learning that Russell Nash claims to be a descendant of this branch of the clan, Alex tracks him down and witnesses him battle Kane. The fight ends when MacLeod's blade shatters (possibly because their fight crossed into holy ground) and Kane flees.

Connor returns to the Scottish Highlands to forge another sword but is unsuccessful. Learning more and concluding that "Nash" is actually the banished Connor MacLeod, still alive, Alex tracks him down and gives him a bar of finely refined steel she found in Nakano's cave. Connor forges a new katana and admits his identity, and the two become lovers. MacLeod then learns Kane has abducted his son John.

MacLeod meets Kane in an old church mission in Jersey City and follows him into an abandoned power plant for their final battle. After a brief battle, the Highlander decapitates Kane and truly wins the Prize, now possessing the full power of all immortals who ever lived. He returns to Scotland with Alex and John to live out the rest of his natural life.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film completely ignores and contradicts the events of Highlander II: The Quickening. The movie specifically states that Brenda Wyatt died in a car crash in 1987 and shows a version of 1994 where Earth's ozone layer is intact, whereas Highlander II depicts the ozone layer as being largely gone by 1994, causing many deaths by cancer and radiation poisoning, including Brenda's.

In a 1996 Cinefantastique interview, Highlander producer William Panzer mentioned that several references to the TV series' continuity were inserted into this film as a means of linking it to the TV universe.

Many of the locations in Scotland from the original film were revisited for this sequel. Several scenes were shot in the province of Quebec[4] in Canada: the medieval Japanese village and the building in which Nakano's cave is found were shot near Montreal. Many sequences in New York were actually shot in Montreal, as well. Other scenes for this film were shot in Morocco.

The U.S. theatrical release was rated PG-13, and a slightly-longer R-rated Special Director's Cut was later released on home video with two sex scenes trimmed from the theatrical release restored. On top of this, additional violence was reinstated, mainly the shot of Kane's head rolling off. The PG-13 theatrical cut originally only showed Kane's head wobbling from side to side, then cutting immediately to the extreme close-up on Connor saying, "There can be only one."

Several enhanced visual effects shots are present in the American version, including Kane's arrival in New York City (via a teleportation portal, instead of stepping off of a freighter in the international version), as well as during the final Quickening sequence (where several additional shots of Connor levitating are seen, complete with new VFX work). The American Final Dimension cut includes alternate musical tracks and cues (including the song "God Took a Picture" during the ending credits instead of Loreena McKennitt's "Bonny Portmore," and a rock-instrumental version of Mötley Crüe's "Dr. Feelgood" during the final battle between MacLeod and Kane).

Music edit

The score was composed and conducted by J. Peter Robinson. The film marks the first use of "Bonny Portmore" in the Highlander films (it was also used in the television series). The soundtrack features the following songs:

Reception edit

Box office edit

The film opened at number one at the U.K. box office but with a disappointing gross of £864,000 ($1.3 million) in its opening week.[7] The film debuted at number 2 at the U.S. box office, grossing $5.6 million.[8] The following week it dropped to 7th place, taking in $2.9 million.[9] Highlander III: The Sorcerer finished its U.S. theatrical run with a gross of $13.7 million[3] and grossed $23 million internationally for a worldwide gross of $36.7 million.[6]

Critical response edit

Stephen Holden of The New York Times remarked, "How could an action-adventure film that cost $34 million, most of which clearly went into pyrotechnics, computerized special effects and scenic locations, end up looking cheap, silly and lifeless? [Highlander III: The Sorcerer is] an incoherent mess [and] has performances that are one-dimensional even by the undemanding standards of the genre."[10]

The BBC's review gave the film a score of two stars out of five, saying: "This is a far superior film to Highlander II [but] it is really a copy of the first one. ... It really feels as if the Highlander story has no more to give us—but that would be very wrong. Perhaps the best thing this third movie did was promote the generally better TV series."[11]

Christopher Null of FilmCritic.com also gave Highlander III two stars out of five, saying: "The third in a line of increasingly perplexing Highlander movies, Highlander: The Final Dimension steals wholesale the plot from the original, just throwing in some fresh faces. ... Ultra-fans will rejoice in the face of the third installment—and it's nowhere near as bad as Highlander II—but most of you can give it a pass."[12]

In retrospective, the film holds a 5% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 20 reviews, the critic consensus says "Borderline unwatchable and unspeakably dull, Highlander III is a sloppy third installment that still somehow manages to mark a slight improvement over its predecessor."[13] On Metacritic the film has a score of 28% based on reviews from 12 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Highlander III (1994)". UniFrance. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved 2016-06-20.
  3. ^ a b "Highlander III: The Sorcerer (1995)". The Numbers. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Shooting set to start on sequel to Au Nom du pere et du fils series". Playback. Toronto. February 14, 1994. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  5. ^ Stack, Peter (January 30, 1995). "'Highlander' Takes Low Road". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  6. ^ a b Klady, Leonard (February 19, 1996). "B.O. with a vengeance: $9.1 billion worldwide". Variety. p. 1.
  7. ^ "International box office". Variety. 5 December 1994. p. 18. $1,347,798; £1=$1.56
  8. ^ "Weekend Box Office : 'Legends' Refuses to Fall Back". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-07.
  9. ^ "Weekend Box Office : 'Legends' Gives a Boost to TriStar". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-07.
  10. ^ Holden, Stephen (January 28, 1995). "FILM REVIEW; An Immortal Scot Travels Through Time". New York Times. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  11. ^ "Highlander III: The Sorcerer (1994)". BBC. October 5, 2000. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  12. ^ Null, Christopher. . FilmCritic.com. Archived from the original on 8 March 2008. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  13. ^ "Highlander III: The Sorcerer (Highlander: The Final Dimension)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  14. ^ "Highlander: The Final Dimension". Metacritic.

External links edit

highlander, sorcerer, also, known, highlander, final, dimension, highlander, final, conflict, 1994, action, adventure, fantasy, film, third, installment, highlander, film, series, alternate, sequel, original, film, final, highlander, film, focus, connor, macle. Highlander III The Sorcerer also known as Highlander The Final Dimension or Highlander The Final Conflict is a 1994 action adventure fantasy film and the third installment in the Highlander film series Set as an alternate sequel to the original film it is the final Highlander film to focus on Connor MacLeod as the protagonist In the film Connor MacLeod is forced to face a new dangerous enemy a powerful sorcerer known as Kane who threatens to win the fabled Prize in order to gain world domination by eliminating MacLeod It grossed 36 7 million worldwide Highlander III The SorcererTheatrical release posterDirected byAndy MorahanScreenplay byPaul Ohl Rene Manzor Brad MirmanStory byBrad Mirman William N PanzerBased onCharactersby Gregory WidenProduced byClaude LegerStarringChristopher Lambert Mario Van Peebles Deborah Unger MakoCinematographySteven ChiversEdited byYves LangloisMusic byJ Peter RobinsonProductioncompaniesHighlander Productions Limited Fallingcloud Initial Groupe Lumiere Pictures TransfilmDistributed byEntertainment Film Distributors United Kingdom 1 Les Films Seville Canada 1 AFMD France 1 Alliance Atlantis Canada 1 Release datesNovember 30 1994 1994 11 30 Philippines December 9 1994 1994 12 09 United Kingdom January 27 1995 1995 01 27 United States Running time95 minutesCountriesUnited Kingdom 2 Canada 2 France 2 LanguageEnglishBudget 26 3 34 4 5 millionBox office 36 7 million 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 5 Reception 5 1 Box office 5 2 Critical response 6 References 7 External linksPlot editSome time after the death of his wife Heather in the 16th century the immortal Scottish Highlander Connor MacLeod travels to Japan to train with an immortal named Nakano a sorcerer said to be a master of illusion and old friend of the Highlander s late teacher Juan Sanchez Villalobos Ramirez In a cave in Mount Niri Nakano teaches MacLeod how to fight with the katana that once belonged to Ramirez He also warns of Kane an evil immortal making his way across Asia with two immortal henchmen named Khabul Khan and Senghi Khan After burning down a village the three reach the cave Kane beheads Nakano taking his immortal Quickening energy and power of illusion The Highlander escapes and Nakano laughs as he dies declaring that Kane will not be present at the time of the Gathering when the last immortals fight and implying he has planned one last trick The release of his energy causes a cave in trapping Kane and his henchmen In 1788 France Connor meets and falls in love with Sarah Barrington a visitor from England During the French Revolution MacLeod is captured and sentenced to death for treason against King Louis XVI of France His immortal friend Pierre Bouchet takes his place claiming he is tired of his immortal life Believing Connor is dead Sarah marries another man By the time MacLeod finds her he discovers she now has a family and decides to let her continue believing he is dead In 1985 the Gathering occurs in New York City and MacLeod is seemingly the last immortal left alive He and his new love Brenda Wyatt move to Scotland and are married She is killed in a car accident in 1987 and he survives without any wounds indicating he has not lost his immortality and may not have won the Prize By 1994 Connor is living with his adopted son John in Marrakesh Meanwhile archaeologist Dr Alexandra Johnson a woman identical to Sarah Barrington is part of a team excavating the legendary cave of Nakano The excavation frees Kane who beheads Senghi to gain a boost in power while his other soldier Khabul leaves to find Connor Sensing the release of the Quickening again MacLeod realizes the Game is not over and that he must return to New York City MacLeod leaves John in the care of his friend Jack Donovan Arriving in New York MacLeod using his old alias of Russell Nash again faces and kills Khabul NYPD Lt John Stenn believes Khabul s headless body is proof that the headhunter killer of 1985 is loose again He concludes the killer is Russell Nash who was a suspect during the original case Alex investigates a piece of kilt cloth found in the cave of Nakano identifying it as branch of the MacLeod family one where a clan member was banished for having unnatural powers Learning that Russell Nash claims to be a descendant of this branch of the clan Alex tracks him down and witnesses him battle Kane The fight ends when MacLeod s blade shatters possibly because their fight crossed into holy ground and Kane flees Connor returns to the Scottish Highlands to forge another sword but is unsuccessful Learning more and concluding that Nash is actually the banished Connor MacLeod still alive Alex tracks him down and gives him a bar of finely refined steel she found in Nakano s cave Connor forges a new katana and admits his identity and the two become lovers MacLeod then learns Kane has abducted his son John MacLeod meets Kane in an old church mission in Jersey City and follows him into an abandoned power plant for their final battle After a brief battle the Highlander decapitates Kane and truly wins the Prize now possessing the full power of all immortals who ever lived He returns to Scotland with Alex and John to live out the rest of his natural life Cast editChristopher Lambert as Connor MacLeod Russell Nash Mario Van Peebles as Kane Deborah Kara Unger as Dr Alexandra Alex Johnson Sarah Barrington Mako as Nakano Martin Neufeld fr as Lt John Stenn Raoul Trujillo as Senghi Khan Jean Pierre Perusse as Khabul Khan Daniel Do fr as Dr Fuji Takamura Jack Ellerton as Staring Drinker Gabriel Kakon as John MacLeod Louis Bertignac as Pierre Bouchet Michael Jayston as Jack Donovan Clancy Brown archive footage cameo from original film as The KurganProduction editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Highlander III The Sorcerer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The film completely ignores and contradicts the events of Highlander II The Quickening The movie specifically states that Brenda Wyatt died in a car crash in 1987 and shows a version of 1994 where Earth s ozone layer is intact whereas Highlander II depicts the ozone layer as being largely gone by 1994 causing many deaths by cancer and radiation poisoning including Brenda s In a 1996 Cinefantastique interview Highlander producer William Panzer mentioned that several references to the TV series continuity were inserted into this film as a means of linking it to the TV universe Many of the locations in Scotland from the original film were revisited for this sequel Several scenes were shot in the province of Quebec 4 in Canada the medieval Japanese village and the building in which Nakano s cave is found were shot near Montreal Many sequences in New York were actually shot in Montreal as well Other scenes for this film were shot in Morocco The U S theatrical release was rated PG 13 and a slightly longer R rated Special Director s Cut was later released on home video with two sex scenes trimmed from the theatrical release restored On top of this additional violence was reinstated mainly the shot of Kane s head rolling off The PG 13 theatrical cut originally only showed Kane s head wobbling from side to side then cutting immediately to the extreme close up on Connor saying There can be only one Several enhanced visual effects shots are present in the American version including Kane s arrival in New York City via a teleportation portal instead of stepping off of a freighter in the international version as well as during the final Quickening sequence where several additional shots of Connor levitating are seen complete with new VFX work The American Final Dimension cut includes alternate musical tracks and cues including the song God Took a Picture during the ending credits instead of Loreena McKennitt s Bonny Portmore and a rock instrumental version of Motley Crue s Dr Feelgood during the final battle between MacLeod and Kane Music editThe score was composed and conducted by J Peter Robinson The film marks the first use of Bonny Portmore in the Highlander films it was also used in the television series The soundtrack features the following songs Ce He Mise le Ulaingt The Two Trees by Loreena McKennitt available on her album The Mask and Mirror Bonny Portmore by Loreena McKennitt available on her album The Visit God Took A Picture by Suze DeMarchi with Nuno Bettencourt Bluebeard by Cocteau Twins Dr Feelgood by Motley Crue instrumental riff Dummy Crusher by Kerbdog Little Muscle by Catherine Wheel Boom Boom by Definition Of Sound Honest Joe by JamesReception editBox office edit The film opened at number one at the U K box office but with a disappointing gross of 864 000 1 3 million in its opening week 7 The film debuted at number 2 at the U S box office grossing 5 6 million 8 The following week it dropped to 7th place taking in 2 9 million 9 Highlander III The Sorcerer finished its U S theatrical run with a gross of 13 7 million 3 and grossed 23 million internationally for a worldwide gross of 36 7 million 6 Critical response edit Stephen Holden of The New York Times remarked How could an action adventure film that cost 34 million most of which clearly went into pyrotechnics computerized special effects and scenic locations end up looking cheap silly and lifeless Highlander III The Sorcerer is an incoherent mess and has performances that are one dimensional even by the undemanding standards of the genre 10 The BBC s review gave the film a score of two stars out of five saying This is a far superior film to Highlander II but it is really a copy of the first one It really feels as if the Highlander story has no more to give us but that would be very wrong Perhaps the best thing this third movie did was promote the generally better TV series 11 Christopher Null of FilmCritic com also gave Highlander III two stars out of five saying The third in a line of increasingly perplexing Highlander movies Highlander The Final Dimension steals wholesale the plot from the original just throwing in some fresh faces Ultra fans will rejoice in the face of the third installment and it s nowhere near as bad as Highlander II but most of you can give it a pass 12 In retrospective the film holds a 5 approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 20 reviews the critic consensus says Borderline unwatchable and unspeakably dull Highlander III is a sloppy third installment that still somehow manages to mark a slight improvement over its predecessor 13 On Metacritic the film has a score of 28 based on reviews from 12 critics indicating generally unfavorable reviews 14 References edit a b c d Highlander III 1994 UniFrance Retrieved 23 June 2021 a b c Highlander III The Sorcerer 1995 British Film Institute Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved 2016 06 20 a b Highlander III The Sorcerer 1995 The Numbers Retrieved August 5 2020 a b Shooting set to start on sequel to Au Nom du pere et du fils series Playback Toronto February 14 1994 Retrieved 14 April 2017 Stack Peter January 30 1995 Highlander Takes Low Road San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 14 April 2017 a b Klady Leonard February 19 1996 B O with a vengeance 9 1 billion worldwide Variety p 1 International box office Variety 5 December 1994 p 18 1 347 798 1 1 56 Weekend Box Office Legends Refuses to Fall Back Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2012 06 07 Weekend Box Office Legends Gives a Boost to TriStar Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2012 06 07 Holden Stephen January 28 1995 FILM REVIEW An Immortal Scot Travels Through Time New York Times Retrieved 14 April 2017 Highlander III The Sorcerer 1994 BBC October 5 2000 Retrieved 14 April 2017 Null Christopher Highlander The Final Dimension FilmCritic com Archived from the original on 8 March 2008 Retrieved 14 April 2017 Highlander III The Sorcerer Highlander The Final Dimension Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 14 April 2017 Highlander The Final Dimension Metacritic External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Highlander III The Sorcerer Highlander III The Sorcerer at AllMovie Highlander III The Sorcerer at Box Office Mojo Highlander III The Sorcerer at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Highlander III The Sorcerer amp oldid 1185210487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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