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This
movie should heed its own slogan. "There can be only
one" there should have been only
one one Highlander film, that is. Each sequel
drives another vapid nail into the bottomless coffin that
has become the Highlander franchise. Highlander
was a magnificent film and, quite obviously upon viewing,
a completed story; there was never any question of a sequel
- until the advent of Mongoloid Marketeers, All Budget,
No Brains.
And
a shameful pity that in favoring the original Highlander
movie, one must add qualification these days - There
was nothing like Highlander when it first appeared;
directed by an Australian former music-video director (Russell
Mulcahy), featuring a kinetic soundtrack driven by Queen,
a story involving Immortals all hiding in plain view amongst
earth's populace, congregating for The Gathering, to battle
for The Prize the gift of foresight and mortality
and to be The One; featuring newcomer Christopher
Lambert, suitably ingenuous as the Scottish Highlander Connor
MacLeod, and Sean Connery aggressively fey as his swashbuckling
tutor, Ramirez.
Highlander
was engaging, humorous, poignant, original, well-written
and well-filmed. Each successive sequel has been exactly
the opposite.
Regarding
The Sorcerer (aka The Final Dimension), it
is quite pointless reviewing or in any way even describing
the plots of movies which do not adhere to their own internal
logic. In this case (barring the first exceptional installment),
this whole series has been battling against itself, in reneging
on its own oft-repeated slogan: "There can be only
one". Well, obviously not...
The
disjointed characters move through The Final Dimension's
listless plot with no regard to continuity or semblance
of purpose they just end up where they need to be
for a scene to play itself out all those scenes which
were obviously pitching points for the producers to lay
on the money-men. Now, how to join those scenes? It mattered
not, as long as the money was green and the picture was
green-lighted.
Also
directed by a former music-video director, Andy Morahan,
Final Dimension displays none of the art and eye
that Mulcahy brought to Highlander, though Morahan
has no qualms in plagiarizing Mulcahy's film at every turn,
inserting "flashback" scenes to gird the storyline
and attempt poignancy, copying scenes (such as the villain
Kane's pale impression of The Kurgan, when he mocks MacLeod's
son in the car) and just blatantly repeating scenes
from Highlander.
The
movie's early sequences display more than enough chinks
in its feeble armor, where we catch up with MacLeod sometime
after Highlander, but before Highlander II:
The Quickening, which, according to this film, apparently
never happened. Then the illusion of plot collapses completely
when MacLeod gets shot in a New York alley and in the next
scene is being frantically dollied to an Emergency Room.
Now: who in New York would look twice at a shot guy in a
deserted alley, let alone ring it in?
Then
it gets even more idiotic. Fast.
Upon
awakening on the hospital dolly, his wounds healed, MacLeod
becomes violent and the obviously unfit-to-practice doctor
diagnoses him as "insane" in three seconds of
fighting interns, drugs him and sends him to the lunatic
ward. The only apparent reason for this seems to be to execute
one of those screenwriter pitch scenes: Kane's medieval
henchman stalking MacLeod through modern hospital corridors
(how he located him in this facility - with no time for
even an efficient hospital's paperwork to be processed
- is beyond comprehension) and, though MacLeod is randomly
trying to find an exit and the henchman is stalking purposefully,
somehow both end up in the same basement laundry room. After
all that setup - the shooting, the dollying, the lunatic
ward, the stalking MacLeod beheads the henchman with
no fanfare and the movie moves on, into further contrived
plot-less-ness.
The
swordplay was choreographed by Young Billy from the sixth
grade. A suitable nomenclature would be "air-guitar
sword-fighting", i.e. rather than actually trying to
slice and dice each other's bodies, the opponents slash
at the AIR above each other's heads and parry these strokes
as if they were vital. In one sequence, Kane (played by
Mario Van Peebles, a talented actor/director, heinously
miscast here) slashes at MacLeod, who parries Kane's stroke,
only to have his sword shatter under Kane's blow. Kane's
follow-through, which should have then neatly severed MacLeod's
head, doesn't go anywhere near it what then, was
Kane slashing at?
Sultry
Debra Unger plays The Chick and - like Roxanne Hart from
"Highlander" is aroused uncontrollably
by the concept of Immortality, her foreplay also being the
sight of MacLeod getting stabbed. Guess immortality is a
magnet for sexual loonies
.
Stereotypical
moron cops, whose gratuitous swearing seemed unfamiliar
to their untrained-actor mouths, hound MacLeod, whilst Kane
kidnaps MacLeod's child, setting up the conundrum where
The Hero can't kill The Villain because he alone knows where
The Hero's child is.
But
MacLeod kills Kane anyway. So much for strategic conundrums.
After
the explosive climax not describing the level of
excitement, but rather, that there were many gratuitous
explosions set off - when MacLeod is once again levitated
with the electric ecstasy of being The Last Immortal Ever
ahem, again his son walks nonchalantly down
some stairs and reunites with him as if he's just walked
in from the kitchen.
To
put the weak capper on an altogether limp movie, an impotent
rock song sings us out over the end credits.
Where's
Sean Connery when he's least needed?
END
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