Highlander backdrop
Highlander

Highlander

There can be only one.

6.9 / 1019861h 56m

Synopsis

He fought his first battle on the Scottish Highlands in 1536. He will fight his greatest battle on the streets of New York City in 1986. His name is Connor MacLeod. He is immortal.

Genre: Adventure, Action, Fantasy

Status: Released

Director: Russell Mulcahy

Website:

Main Cast

Christopher Lambert

Christopher Lambert

Connor 'The Highlander' MacLeod

Roxanne Hart

Roxanne Hart

Brenda J. Wyatt

Clancy Brown

Clancy Brown

Victor 'The Kurgan' Kruger

Sean Connery

Sean Connery

Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez

Beatie Edney

Beatie Edney

Heather MacLeod

Alan North

Alan North

Lieutenant Frank Moran

Jon Polito

Jon Polito

Det. Walter Bedsoe

Sheila Gish

Sheila Gish

Rachel Ellenstein

Hugh Quarshie

Hugh Quarshie

Sunda Kastagir

Peter Diamond

Peter Diamond

Aman Fasil

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

So what - we've got Frenchman (Christopher Lambert) playing a Scotsman; a Scotsman (Sean Connery) playing a Spaniard and an American (Clancy Brown) playing a maniacal Russian - what could possibly go wrong? Well, actually despite the odd casting, this isn't an half bad fantasy adventure that introduces us to a group of immortals who are having to deal with the "quickening" - a process that has driven them throughout history to combat (and decapitate) others of their race in search of the ultimate "prize". Lambert is "Connor McLeod" who has come a bit late to this party and is ostracised from his Highland village after he miraculously survives battle wounds that would have slain an elephant. Luckily, he encounters and gets a bit of training from the thousand year old wily and flamboyant "Ramirez" (Connery) so he can be fit to fight the 'Kurgen" (Brown) - their mightiest (if not brainiest) warrior. The script is pretty dreadful, to be honest - but the story is fun. It's got loads of action, some of the best sword fights since Errol Flynn, and even a soupçon of romance as modern day science tries to explain his longevity. It is infinitely better than any of the derivatives it spawned - and a great Queen soundtrack makes for an enjoyable couple of hours of escapism with some fine Scottish scenery thrown in too.