Highlander: The Source
Highlander: The Source, released in some countries as Highlander 5: The Source, is the fifth and final installment of the Highlander film series, directed by Brett Leonard. Unlike the first three Highlander films, this film and the previous installment, Highlander: Endgame (2000), followed the continuity of Highlander: The Series (1992-1998), continuing the story of immortal swordsman Duncan MacLeod, with actor Adrian Paul reprising his role from the TV show and Endgame. It is the only Highlander film to not feature the original protagonist, Connor MacLeod. Taking place in a future version of Earth that is largely violent and chaotic, the story depicts Duncan and allies seeking out an energy well that may be the "Source of Immortality."
Highlander: The Source | |
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Poster of the television film | |
Directed by | Brett Leonard |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by |
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Story by | Mark Bradley |
Starring | Adrian Paul Peter Wingfield Jim Byrnes Thekla Reuten |
Music by | George Kallis |
Cinematography |
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Edited by | Les Healey |
Distributed by | Lionsgate Films |
Release date |
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Running time |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $13 million |
Highlander: The Source is the first Highlander film not released in American movie theaters. Made for television, it broadcast on the Sci-Fi Channel on September 15, 2007. It was originally intended to be the first film of a planned trilogy of Sci-Fi Channel original movies. Due to overall negative critical reception, no direct sequels have been planned for production. At the Highlander Worldwide Convention in 2009, TV series producer David Abramowitz referred to Highlander: The Source as a "bad dream" Duncan had.
Plot
In the near future, society across Earth has fallen to violence and chaos, with gangs and warlords fighting for control over their territories and many people now living as homeless scavengers and refugees who forage for resources. Some still have resources and access to advanced technology, including a group of immortals that includes the ancient Methos, computer hacker Reggie, warrior and scout Zai Jie, and Cardinal Giovanni, an immortal who represents the Vatican. The group seeks to locate the mysterious "Source of Immortality." Zai Jie believes he has found the location of the Source in Eastern Europe and contacts the group to share the information, but he is then killed by the Guardian of the Source, a monstrous immortal with unnatural speed. Meanwhile, Reggie realizes the planets are unnaturally moving into alignment. Convinced they need help, Methos asks his old friend Joe Dawson to find Duncan MacLeod.
Duncan wanders the wastelands, having recently separated from his mortal wife Anna Teshemka after she decided she could not remain with him if they couldn't produce biological children together and have a family. While wandering, MacLeod is attacked by the Guardian and briefly fights him before Joe Dawson then recruits him. They rendezvous with Methos, Reggie and Giovanni at a monastery to meet with an ancient being known as the Elder so they can locate the Source. At the monastery, they find Anna Teshemka, who reveals she has been having visions related to the Source.
Inside the monastery, the Elder, an immortal whose body continually decays, explains how another group of immortals once found the Source in ancient times. Upon slaying the Guardian, two of the three survivors were cursed, with one of them becoming the new Guardian while another became the endlessly decaying Elder (the third is later implied to have been reincarnated as Anna). The Elder tells them that Anna's visions mean she knows the way. The Elder warns that the closer they get to the Source, the weaker they will become.
The Guardian arrives and attacks Reggie and Joe Dawson on holy ground. In an effort to save Dawson, Duncan throws his katana at the Guardian, temporarily wounding him. The Guardian removes the sword from his neck and breaks it, then mortally wounds Joe with the blade before escaping. After burying Joe, Duncan and the others leave to find the Source, which they have determined to be on an island off the coast of Lithuania in the Baltic Sea, an island ruled by gangs of cannibals. Duncan later replaces his broken katana with a pair of butterfly swords. Talking with Anna, he is surprised she has not started a family with a mortal man she can have children with. Anna remarks she did not simply want children, she wanted children with Duncan.
After fighting locals, Duncan and his allies obtain a van and drive to a deserted house a short distance away from where they believe the Source to be. That night, the Guardian kills Reggie by slashing him to death. Due to their proximity to the Source, his wounds don't heal and he dies of his wounds. After burying Reggie, the group continues. During the journey, Duncan and Methos conclude the expression "there can be only one" does not refer to one immortal becoming the last survivor of their kind and claiming the Prize, the power of all immortals who ever lived, but actually meant to refer to the fact that only one immortal can claim the full power of the Source.
At a road block, the group is captured by cannibals. While the cannibals celebrate, the Guardian frees Anna and forces her to accompany him to the Source. Giovanni then escapes and takes a sword but leaves Methos and Duncan to die, believing it is his destiny to be "the One." Duncan then frees himself and Methos. Methos concludes that Duncan is "the One" due to his incorruptible nature. He rides off on a horse to distract the cannibals, allowing Duncan to chase after Anna. Giovanni is decapitated by the Guardian.
Duncan finds Anna in a clearing by a sandy pit somehow illuminated by starlight. The cosmic convergence is happening directly over them, with multiple planets in view. The Guardian appears and challenges Duncan. Now only a few yards away from the Source, MacLeod matches the speed and strength of the Guardian. Anna seems to commune with the energy well that is the Source of Immortality. When Duncan tries to join her, an energy barrier blocks him. The fight continues and MacLeod uses superhuman speed to bury the Guardian in the ground up to his neck. Now immobilized and defeated, the Guardian demands death. MacLeod refuses and so the curse does not transfer to him. The Guardian vanishes in a blast of light, screaming he is now "cursed forever." Having proved his purity of heart, Duncan then joins Anna and connects to the Source. As they stand together, the film ends with the image of a fetus.
In the DVD release of the movie, dialogue is added at the end when Duncan and Anna stand together in the Source. Anna reveals they will now have a biological son together. Duncan declares "he is the One."
Cast
- Adrian Paul as Duncan MacLeod
- Peter Wingfield as Methos
- Jim Byrnes as Joe Dawson
- Thekla Reuten as Anna Teshemka
- Cristian Solimeno as The Guardian
- Thom Fell as Cardinal Giovanni
- Stephen Rahman Hughes as Zai Jie
- Stephen Wight as Reggie Weller
- Solly Assa as Monk
Production
As early as 2001, producers of the previous film, Highlander: Endgame, were discussing plans for a fifth film with fans at conventions.[1] However, the production of the film was plagued with several problems. The original rights holders, Miramax films, decided to sell the rights back to the producers due to the lackluster performance of Endgame. Also, Adrian Paul refused to reprise his role as Duncan Macleod, as he was disappointed with the previous film. At this point, the producers decided to ask Christopher Lambert to reprise his role as Connor Macleod (despite the character having been killed off), but Lambert demanded more money. The producers were left with no choice but to renegotiate with Paul again, even offering him a producer's credit as well. In July 2005, Lionsgate Films acquired the rights to the film under the title Highlander: The Journey Continues, with director Brett Leonard at the helm as director, and actor Adrian Paul in the lead role as Duncan MacLeod. Leonard said: "Highlander is an amazing ongoing story that I can bring my visual style to. Everything I have done has led me to this kind of mythical fantasy."[2] Filming began in October 2005,[3] and concluded the following December. In June 2006, Adrian Paul revealed that Highlander: The Source had been undergoing editing and visual effects work. The actor said that composer George Kallis had been brought on board to create a film score that was recorded by an 80-piece orchestra.[4] production was originally intended to be filming in Africa before it was decided to film in Europe.
Lionsgate had originally planned to release the film in 2006.[5] When that plan failed to work out, several release dates were listed in various places; for example, February 2007 was listed in some official The Source auctions, as well as on actress Thekla Reuten's own website, and March 2007 was listed on composer George Kallis' website. Eventually, even the official auctions began using simply a broad "First Quarter 2007" release date. As of February 14, 2007, producers Peter Davis and William Panzer of Davis/Panzer Productions, in conjunction with Lionsgate Entertainment, were editing and remixing the film.
Lionsgate finally released the film as a direct-to-TV movie, which premiered on the Sci-Fi Channel on September 15, 2007. Screenwriter Joel Soisson ultimately won a Writers Guild of America screenplay-credit arbitration, and was listed in the final U.S. release's end credits under the pseudonym of "Mark Bradley." Plans to continue the films with The Source being the first of a trilogy have since been abandoned.
In 2008, a short film called "Reunion" was released in the DVD collection of Highlander: The Series. The film, written by series producer David Abramowitz and directed by Don Paonessa, starred actors from the show reprising their roles. The story did not acknowledge the events of Highlander: The Source and seemed to contradict it in some ways, taking place around 2008, roughly ten years after the end of the TV series. At the Highlander Worldwide Convention the next year, TV series producer David Abramowitz referred to Highlander: The Source as a "bad dream" Duncan had, leading many fans to dismiss it from canon.
Early releases
Russian
An early version of Highlander: The Source, which had been shown to distributors in October 2006, was released on DVD in February 2007 in Russia, and was quickly copied and distributed online. These copies of the release began to proliferate across the Internet. The same cut was later released in Brazil, Poland,[6] Romania and Germany.[7][8] After this release, producer Peter Davis stated that the Russian version was not the final producer's version, and that Lionsgate would release the finished film in September 2007.[9] This was the TV premiere, eight minutes shorter than the Russian version, and featuring different opening and closing narration.
Dutch
Another version was released sometime in Spring 2007 as a Dutch DVD.
UK
The Region 2 release was released on January 7, 2008. This is the same version as the Dutch DVD, except in the aspect ratio of 1.78:1.
American premiere
Despite previous announcements and long-standing rumors that a "Producer's Cut" of the film would be released straight-to-DVD and/or theaters in September 2007, the U.S. Sci-Fi Channel aired the film at 9:00 PM and 1:00 AM Eastern, on Saturday, September 15, 2007 as a "Sci-Fi Original Movie".[10]
Reception
Critical reaction to Highlander: The Source has been universally negative. Christopher Monfette of IGN gave The Source a score of 1 out of 10, saying: "The worthwhile days of Connor MacLeod, it would appear, are officially over—dead, decapitated, and depleted of their power. The struggle for an immortal to move through life unchallenged has since mutated into an awkward arrangement of mismatched mythologies, TV-to-movie crossovers, and a steady stream of low-budget, direct-to-DVD cash-cows which may, in the end, prove to be the only truly immortal thing about this series."[11]
Brian Orndorf of DVD Talk gave the film one half star out of five, saying: "The Source is nothing less than a parody of what has come before. If you've seen the previous sequels, you already know that's saying something. There is some relief that this franchise will finally be put out of its misery, because nobody in their right mind would try to keep this series going after watching just how boneheaded Highlander: The Source is."[12] Danél Griffin of Film as Art gave The Source one half star out of four, remarking that "it's bad—cheesily bad, colossally bad, monumentally bad, bad enough to make you never want to watch another movie again bad."[13]
Keith Breese of FilmCritic.com gave the film one star out of five, saying: "Not only will Highlander fans be disappointed by the film's nosedive into nonsense, but the average viewer will be stunned by the backyard quality of this film. The acting is uniformly terrible, the special effects are hideous, the sets are cheap and grubby, and the direction is uninspired. The film is an utter failure. ... Surely this is the final nail in the coffin lid for this film series. If it isn't, then something is truly wrong with the universe."[14]
The Sci-Fi Movie Page gave The Source one and a half stars out of five, saying: "Just when you think that this is a franchise that can't sink any lower, along comes Highlander: The Source. ... One gets the impression that The Source was filmed with theatrical distribution in mind but that no sane cinema distributor would touch it with a ten-foot barge pole. Good for them. Instead it went straight to the SciFi Channel and now the DVD shelves where you should let it stay, collecting dust."[15]
References
- Harry Knowles (2001-09-17). "Highlander 5". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
- Paul Davidson (2005-08-04). "Highlander: Going to the Source". IGN. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- Paul Davidson (2005-10-21). "New Highlander Starts Shooting". IGN. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- Adrian Paul (2006-06-29). "Scoring The Source". AdrianPaul.net. Archived from the original on 2006-12-07. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- Paul Davidson (2005-07-05). "How Many Highlanders Can There Be?". IGN. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- Monolith - DVD Details Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
- "e-m-s - DVD Details". Archived from the original on 2008-02-04. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
- e-m-s - Blu-Ray Details
- Highlander: The Source Official Site Archived 2007-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
- Schedule. scifi.com
- Christopher Monfette, Highlander: The Source Review, IGN, February 14, 2008.
- Highlander: The Source Review, Brian Orndorf, DVD Talk, March 29, 2007
- Highlander: The Source Review, Danél Griffin, Film as Art
- Keith Breese. Highlander: The Source Review Archived 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine, FilmCritic.com, 2008
- Highlander: The Source Review, The Sci-Fi Movie Page
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Highlander: The Source |
- Official "Secret" website (revealed on the OS album)
- Highlander: The Source at IMDb
- Highlander: The Source at AllMovie