Highlander II: The Quickening Movie Review
Highlander II: The Quickening Review
"Highlander II: The Quickening" Overview

Rating: R
1991
Cast and Crew
Director : Russell MulcahyProducer : Peter S. Davis,Jean-Luc Defait,Ziad El Khoury,William N. Panzer
Screenwiter : Peter Bellwood
Starring Sean Connery, Virginia Madsen, Christopher Lambert, Michael Ironside, Allan Rich, John C Mcginley
I make no secret of the fact that I think The Highlander is the greatest action
film ever made. Awesome swordfights might awesome score (by Queen, people!),
and a time-bending plotline that only a philistine could dislike.
Today, 18 years, four sequels, two TV shows, and one video game later,
Highlander has become a bit of a joke. And here's where the joke started:
Highlander II: The Quickening -- retitled simply Highlander 2 for what is the
most inexplicable double-DVD release ever to hit video stores.
Urban legend states that Sean Connery had contracted to do a sequel when the
original was released, so the studio would be foolish not to take him up on
that offer. Unfortunately, Connery's character was killed in the first episode
-- along with every other immortal except for Connor MacLeod (Christopher
Lambert). Highlander 2 picks up in the future, with MacLeod's immortality now
at an end, and our beloved Highlander a raspy-voiced old man. Meanwhile, in the
real world, the earth's ozone layer has been destroyed, so a megacorporation
has constructed an "electromagnetic shield" to keep out the radiation.
Megacorporation is evil, of course... and in the last decade or so, the ozone
layer may have gotten all better on its own!
We can't very well have the geriatric Highlander doing battle with the bad
businessmen, so director Russell Mulcahy does the only thing he can do: He
throws logic out the window and flashes back to Ramirez (Connery) and MacLeod
in the past: Turns out they're aliens, exiled, just like Superman II's Zod, to
Earth. While this may explain how a Spaniard has a Scottish accent, it's an
absurd notion. It only gets worse from there, with MacLeod getting younger (and
immortal) again, more bad immortals popping onto the scene, and Virginia Madsen
joining the rush to destroy the archetypal shield machine in the bad business
complex.
Incomprehensible doesn't even begin to explain it. This movie is the equivalent
of the "Hey look over there!" gag. You look, and the guy you wanted to beat up
has run away and hid.
As mentioned, now we have this two-disc DVD business. A lot of work has
inexplicibly gone into cleaning up the movie with digital effects, turning the
old red electromagnetic shield with a laser-ish blue one. Over 100 new effects
have been added or spruced up for the DVD, and sure it looks really good, but
it unfortunately still doesn't make a lick of sense. The primary disc includes
a "jump to behind the scenes" feature, where you can check out outtakes and the
like during the film. Disc two has all the restoration material (non-jokingly
titled "The Redemption of Highlander 2"), featurettes about the music and the
fabric (seriously, the fabric) of the movie, and deleted scenes (listen for the
best line ever: "A dream can live forever in your heart!"). You will have to be
a die-hard fan to invest in this. Either that, or putting together a Showgirls-
Gigli-Highlander II triple feature.
"There can be only one?" You better believe it.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





