Highlander: The Raven#ep16
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{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Infobox television
| image = Highlander raven titles.jpg
| genre = Action/Adventure
Drama
Science fantasy
| creator = Davis-Panzer Productions
| director = Dennis Berry
| developer =
| based_on = {{based on|Characters|Gregory Widen}}
| starring = Elizabeth Gracen
Paul Johansson
Patricia Gage
| theme_music_composer = Axel Belohoubek
| country = United States
Canada{{efn|From Fireworks Entertainment}}
| language = English
| num_seasons = 1
| num_episodes = 22
| executive_producer = Christian Charret
Peter S. Davis
Marla Ginsburg
William N. Panzer
| producer = Denis Leroy
Steve Wakefield
| editor =
| location = Toronto, Ontario
Paris, France
| cinematography = John Berrie
Arthur Cloquet
| camera =
| company = {{Plainlist|
- Fireworks Entertainment
- Rysher Entertainment
- Gaumont Television
- Atlantique Productions and Reteitala
}}
| runtime = 45 minutes
| network = Syndication
| first_aired = {{Start date|1998|9|26}}
| last_aired = {{End date|1999|5|17}}
| related = {{Plainlist|
}}
}}
Highlander: The Raven is a Canadian-American science fantasy action-adventure television series based on the Highlander franchise. It was a short-lived spin-off from the television series Highlander: The Series, continuing the saga of a female Immortal. The series followed the character of Amanda (played by Elizabeth Gracen), a character that originated as a recurring role in the earlier series. The Raven was filmed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and in Paris, France; it was produced by Gaumont Télévision and Fireworks Media in association with Davis–Panzer Productions.
Premise
In the pilot, Immortal thief Amanda meets Nick Wolfe (Paul Johansson), a cop who is investigating a series of robberies. During the course of the investigation, Amanda is framed for murder by a crooked cop from Nick's department. Amanda's name is cleared, but not before Nick's partner Claudia Hoffman (Torri Higginson) sacrifices her own life to save Amanda's. Nick discovers Amanda's immortality when he sees Amanda die, then get up and run away.
Claudia's death has a profound effect on Amanda, and throughout the series (with help from Nick's own strong moral code), she attempts to change and become a good person. She discovers that she caused the deaths of a battalion of soldiers in World War I, which further influences this change. Amanda finds herself facing up to Immortals, even if she does not think she can beat them, when previously, she would have run away.
In the final episode, Nick inhales a deadly poison, and is told he has 24 hours to live. Amanda, trying to do the right thing, shoots him. When he awakens a few seconds later, he discovers that he too is Immortal. The reason behind shooting him was that his immortality could only be triggered by the shock of a violent death. To Amanda's dismay, Nick is none too happy about it. The series ends on a cliffhanger with Nick walking away, angry at Amanda for not telling him that he was Immortal (which she had known all along), and for making the decision for him.
=Narration=
Like the original series, there is an opening montage of scenes from various episodes of Highlander: The Raven, which narrates the series' theme. Nick Wolfe narrated the episodes:
{{Blockquote|She is immortal. A thousand years old, and she cannot die. A creature of legend, like the Raven. A thief who stole the sun and the moon. They sent a warrior to bring her back. He found her. Together, they brought back light to the world. I was a cop. To me, she was just a thief. Another day on the job. But she wasn't. She changed my life. Changed... everything. And both of us knew, from that moment on, nothing would ever be the same.}}
Characters
{{main|List of Highlander characters}}
- Amanda (played by Elizabeth Gracen) – A 1,200-year-old Immortal, a thief and Duncan MacLeod's lover on multiple occasions.
- Nick Wolfe (played by Paul Johansson) – An ex-cop who befriended Amanda and together solved crimes.
Reception
Critical reaction to Highlander: The Raven has been mixed, more so than Highlander: The Series, which has received generally favorable reviews from critics. Rob Lineberger of DVD Verdict praised several episodes of the show ("War and Peace" in particular, for "recaptur[ing] the magic of classic Highlander through carefully staged flashbacks, compelling moral questions, Immortal ethics, and amazing stunt work") and said that "there is something singularly compelling about [the show], something that makes [the DVD set's] $40 street price worth considering," but said of the show overall: "The writing is below the common denominator, using clichés in the blandest ways, ... the chemistry between the two leads is rudimentary at best, with little to no character development, [and] the style of the show is somehow off, the music awkward, the direction formless."[http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/highlanderraven.php Highlander: The Raven DVD review] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090102201444/http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/highlanderraven.php |date=2009-01-02 }}, Rob Lineberger, DVD Verdict, August 3rd, 2005
David Nusair of Reel Film said: "[While] Gracen and Johansson are effective in their roles, ... it's not terribly difficult to see why Highlander: The Raven never took off; the show essentially abandons the sort of elements that made the previous series and all the movies so successful, choosing instead to take a less conventional route. And while all these episodes are entertaining enough, fans hoping for another by-the-book Highlander spin-off will surely be disappointed."[http://www.reelfilm.com/tvhghrav.htm Highlander: The Raven DVD review], David Nusair, Reel Film, July 18, 2005 Peter Schorn of IGN criticized the series for its "weak writing, lame action, and utter lack of chemistry between the stars." Schorn said that while the second half of the show "beg[an] to find its footing" by having a "greater sense of atmosphere" and "balanc[ing] the cast to preserve some semblance of Highlander continuity," the first half "features generic cop show convention exploited to exhaustive effect while the characters undergo rote personality arcs and character development better suited for Moonlighting knock-offs."{{cite web | url = http://dvd.ign.com/articles/631/631201p1.html | title = Highlander: The Raven DVD review | work = IGN | publisher = News Corporation | author = Peter Schorn | date = July 5, 2005 }}
Jeffrey Robinson of DVD Talk also felt that "the second half of the series is more interesting [than the first]," saying: "At first I did not find the show appealing at all. The problem was the show is not Highlander and it tried to move in too many different directions. For the most part it tended to be a cop show with immortals. ... Once the series was about halfway through, my opinion began to change. I found the show was getting more entertaining as it started to fall back to the traditional format of Highlander. By the end of the last episode, I felt cheated there was not more because the finale ends with a cliffhanger that would have been a great lead into a second season." Robinson concluded: "I enjoyed watching Highlander: The Raven, but not enough to recommend it."[http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/16170/highlander-the-raven/ Highlander: The Raven DVD review], Jeffrey Robinson, DVD Talk, June 4, 2005
Episodes
{{Episode table |background=#66CC99|overall=5|title= 20 |director=16 |writer=16 |airdate=14 |prodcode=7 | prodcodeR={{cite video |date=2005 |title=Highlander: The Raven |url=http://www.legendaryheroes.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=H1318%2DPA |medium=DVD |publisher=Davis-Anderson Merchandising Corp., distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment |accessdate=26 February 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080428094525/http://www.legendaryheroes.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=H1318-PA |archive-date=28 April 2008 |url-status=dead }} |episodes=
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1
|Title= Reborn
|DirectedBy= Ian Toynton
|WrittenBy= Karen Harris
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|9|21}}
|ProdCode= 98101-201
|ShortSummary= Immortal thief Amanda is followed by detectives Nick Wolfe and Claudia Hoffmann (Torri Higginson). Meanwhile, rogue detective Stanley Ferris (James Purcell) kills her fence, Immortal Basil Morgan (Julian Richings), and frames her. When Morgan fetches Amanda at the police station, he recognizes Ferris as his murderer. Ferris tries to kill Wolfe, who is saved by Amanda. Ferris then goes for Amanda, but Hoffmann dies in her place. Ferris shoots Amanda and is killed by Wolfe. Wolfe witnesses Amanda resurrecting.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=2
|Title= Full Disclosure
|DirectedBy= Peter Ellis
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|9|28}}
|ProdCode= 98102-202
|ShortSummary= Wolfe and Amanda cannot prevent Navajo code talker Walter (James Kidnie) from being killed by Immortal Mario Cardoza (Carlo Rota). Amanda helped Cardoza in 1952 and Walter found evidence of them being still alive. Wolfe works this out. Amanda admits her Immortality to him. Cardoza kills himself by paying a hitman in order to disappear. The plan works, but Amanda finally beheads Cardoza.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=3
|Title= Bloodlines
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|10|5}}
|ProdCode= 98103-203
|ShortSummary= Wolfe kills Morgan Kenworthy (Cedric Smith), an assassin whose target was media proprietor Denise Grady (Carolyn Dunn). Wolfe realizes Kenworthy is Immortal. Amanda recalls how Denise Grady's ancestor killed Kenworthy's son in 1897 and realizes Kenworthy kills the best of the Gradys of every generation. Despite Amanda's warnings, Wolfe fights Kenworthy, who is beheaded by a falling shard of glass.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=4
|Title= Immunity
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= Karen Harris
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|10|12}}
|ProdCode= 98104-204
|ShortSummary= Myers asks Wolfe to retrieve top secret plans at the Romanian embassy. Amanda agrees to help to escape Immortal Stefan Collier (James Kee). Amanda and Wolfe's attempted robbery is foiled by both Collier and enemy agent Marta Antonescu (Tara Rosling), who takes the plans and flees to the nearest airport. Amanda and Wolfe follow and stop Antonescu. Amanda finally fights Collier and beheads him.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=5
|Title= So Shall Ye Reap
|DirectedBy= René Bonnière
|WrittenBy= Michael O'Mahoney, Sacha Reins
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|10|19}}
|ProdCode= 98105-205
|ShortSummary= FBI agents Martin Foster (Chuck Shamata) and Hewlitt (Frank Pellegrino) kill a scientist. His father, Charlie (Lawrence Dane), asks Amanda and Wolfe for help. After they find genetically modified seeds in another dead scientist's house, they are arrested by the FBI. Foster bails them out to get the seeds, but they reveal the story to the press. Foster walks free after his trial and is killed by Charlie, who is killed by Hewlitt.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=6
|Title= Birthright
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= Frank Encarnacao
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|10|26}}
|ProdCode= 98106-206
|ShortSummary= Simon Clark (Philip Akin) and Riley Del Deegan (John Ralston) steal the jewels of the Maria Rose wreckage. Amanda had helped two freed slaves to get on board the Maria Rose in 1720. Clark, descendant of the freed slaves, wants the deed that freed his ancestors and kills Del Deegan who refuses to retrieve it. A dying Clark asks Amanda for help, and Amanda and Wolfe steal the deed for his children.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=7
|Title= Crime and Punishment
|DirectedBy= René Bonnière
|WrittenBy= Tibby Rothman
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|11|2}}
|ProdCode= 98107-207
|ShortSummary= Convicted murderer Ray Bonita (Mark Humphrey) tries to kill Wolfe, who arrested him. Wolfe discovers that Bonita was innocent and that Bonita's old friend Darryl Keenan (Andrew Jackson) framed Bonita for the crime. Bonita distrusts Wolfe and seeks help by Keenan. Wolfe cannot prevent Keenan from killing Bonita. Amanda blackmails Keenan to get him arrested.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=8
|Title= The Unknown Soldier
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|11|9}}
|ProdCode= 98108-208
|ShortSummary= Amanda meets Immortal John Ray Fielding (Michael Rhoades) in a graveyard and remembers how she stole a pouch of jewels from him in 1917. Fielding wants Amanda's head because inside the pouch was a withdrawal order that never arrived. This caused the death of 120 soldiers. When Amanda realizes this, she offers her head to Fielding, but following persuasion from Wolfe, Fielding lets her live.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=9
|Title= Cloak and Dagger
|DirectedBy= Rene Manzor
|WrittenBy= Frank Encarnacao
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|11|16}}
|ProdCode= 98109-209
|ShortSummary= Myers asks Amanda to break into Ludwig Weiss' (Marc Strange) house with him to retrieve a secret file. Myers is forced to kill Weiss. Myers admits to Amanda and Wolfe that he met Weiss while working undercover in the Stasi. Weiss blackmailed Myers to have Myers kill a diplomat Myers is protecting. When the diplomat arrives in town, Myers, Amanda and Wolfe prevent Weiss' men from killing her.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=10
|Title= Passion Play
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= Morrie Ruvinsky
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|11|23}}
|ProdCode= 98110-210
|ShortSummary= In 1963, Lucy was a successful young actor married to Immortal Marco Becker (Kirby Morrow). Immortal Wilson Geary (Gordon Currie) used Lucy to behead Becker. Lucy has hated Geary ever since and refuses to hear Amanda and Wolfe's advice to grow beyond it. Geary kidnaps Lucy to get Amanda's head. Wolfe frees Lucy while Amanda fights and beheads Geary.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=11
|Title= The Devil You Know
|DirectedBy= Donald Paonessa
|WrittenBy= Durnford King
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1998|11|30}}
|ProdCode= 98111-211
|ShortSummary= Immortal Victor Hansen (Geordie Johnson) asks Amanda to help him steal the Valentino Diamond. Hansen kills security chief Bob Marshall (Richard Fitzpatrick) to get the security plans. Wolfe investigates the murder and suspects Hansen, then is nearly killed when his car explodes. During the robbery, Amanda learns what Hansen did to Wolfe and fights Hansen. Wolfe interrupts them and Hansen flees after being shot into the river.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=12
|Title= A Matter of Time
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= Karen Harris
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|2|1}}
|ProdCode= 98112-212
|ShortSummary= Wolfe meets Joe Dawson and learns about the Watchers. Dawson tells Amanda that her former mentor Andre Korda (Valentine Pelka) is after her. Amanda meets Korda and refuses to join him. Korda goes to Paris and leaves Immortal Chrysta (Ellen Dubin) to fight Amanda. Amanda wins but she and Dawson make Wolfe believe she is dead. A vengeful Wolfe goes to Paris and finds Korda, who shoots him.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=13
|Title= The French Connection
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|2|8}}
|ProdCode= 98113-213
|ShortSummary= A dying Wolfe is rescued by Myers. After a long search, Amanda finds Wolfe. Using Myers hi-tech equipment, Wolfe figures out Korda's plan: counterfeiting money. Amanda and Wolfe follow Korda in the catacombs of Paris and barely escape Korda. Korda's henchman kidnap Myers, who is rescued by Wolfe. Amanda fights Korda and beheads him. Amanda and Wolfe decide to settle in Paris.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=14
|Title= The Rogue
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= Frank Encarnacao
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|2|15}}
|ProdCode= 98114-214
|ShortSummary= Immortal Frank Brennan (Michael Siberry) tries to kill actress Debra Dow (Lysette Anthony), Myers' current employer. Wolfe remembers having killed Brennan four years ago to protect Myers. When Brennan kills Rachael (Glynis Barber), one of the bodyguards working for Myers, Wolfe and Amanda realize Brennan is after Myers. Wolfe and Amanda protect Myers and Amanda finally beheads Brennan.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=15
|Title= Inferno
|DirectedBy= Dennis Berry
|WrittenBy= Elizabeth Baxter
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|2|22}}
|ProdCode= 98115-215
|ShortSummary= Immortal Talia Bauer (Michelle Gomez) steals a briefcase. Its owner, Michael Garrett (Jolyon Baker), asks Wolfe to retrieve it. Amanda remembers how Bauer saved her head from the guillotine in 1792. Wolfe and Amanda search Bauer's flat. Amanda cracks Bauer's safe open and discovers the deadly virus the case contained. Wolfe defuses a bomb designed to disseminate the virus and Amanda beheads Bauer after a fight.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=16
|Title= The Frame
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= Tibby Rothman
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|4|5}}
|ProdCode= 98116-216
|ShortSummary= Immortal Jade (Charlotte Lewis) steals a priceless painting. Jade has been Amanda's rival in love and thieving for centuries. Wolfe and Amanda find Jade and bring the painting back to its owner, Sir Trevor Benton (Ronan Vibert). Sir Trevor had set up the robbery to get the insurance money. Amanda, Wolfe and Jade bring the painting and Sir Trevor back to the museum and leave him there to be arrested.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=17
|Title= Love and Death
|DirectedBy= Gerard Hameline
|WrittenBy= Jocelyne Barque Simmons
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|4|12}}
|ProdCode= 98117-217
|ShortSummary= Myers finds an old photograph of Amanda at the house of kidnapper and Immortal Derrick Markham (Stephen Billington). When Amanda sees the picture, she remembers how Markham killed the boy they had kidnapped in 1867. Markham is after Myers. When Myers witnesses Markham resurrecting, Amanda tells Myers she and Markham are Immortals but Myers does not believe her. Amanda fights and beheads Markham.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=18
|Title= Thick as Thieves
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|4|19}}
|ProdCode= 98118-218
|ShortSummary= Immortal Jeremy Dexter (Stephen Moyer) robs a casino. Amanda had stolen Queen Mary's treasury with Dexter in 1554 and refuses to help Wolfe and Interpol agent Nicolae Breslaw (Jan Triska) chase Dexter. Triska holds an old grudge against Dexter. Amanda vainly tries to help Dexter disappear with Wolfe and Triska in close pursuit. Triska is unable to kill Dexter, so Wolfe does it to end Triska's investigation.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=19
|Title= The Manipulator
|DirectedBy= Brian Grant
|WrittenBy= Andre Jacquemetton
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|4|26}}
|ProdCode= 98119-219
|ShortSummary= Journalist Tim Helfet (Guy Lankester) asks Wolfe and Amanda to retrieve a laptop from Vladimir Rankov (Miles Richardson). Wolfe and Amanda withdraw when they discover Rankov is Immortal. Amanda remembers how Rankov, a war profiteer, had killed her protegee in 1565. Wolfe and Amanda finally retrieve the laptop but Helfet is captured by Rankov. While Wolfe frees Helfet, Amanda fights and beheads Rankov.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=20
|Title= The Ex-Files
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= Karen Harris
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|5|3}}
|ProdCode= 98120-220
|ShortSummary= Wolfe's ex-wife Lauren (Rochelle Redfield) is after Immortal Julius Heller (Julian Wadham), a corrupt scientist, and asks Wolfe for help. Amanda remembers how Heller burnt a midwife at the stake like a witch in 1643. Heller kills Lauren. Amanda fights Heller, but they are interrupted by Wolfe before Heller can behead Amanda. Wolfe chases Heller and finally beheads him.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=21
|Title= War and Peace
|DirectedBy= Brian Grant
|WrittenBy= Catherine Porcioncula
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|5|10}}
|ProdCode= 98121-221
|ShortSummary= Amanda fights Immortal Sean (Benedick Bates) when they are interrupted. Liam remembers how he fought on the British side in the American Revolutionary War, while Sean was on the American side. Liam killed Sean in battle. Liam vowed to become a priest if Sean's stepmother survived her injuries. She died, but Amanda lied to Liam about it. In the present, Liam offers his head to Sean, who relents.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=22
|Title= Dead on Arrival
|DirectedBy= George Mendeluk
|WrittenBy= James Thorpe
|OriginalAirDate= {{Start date|1999|5|17}}
|ProdCode= 98122-222
|ShortSummary= Immortal Evan Peyton (Thomas Lockyer) kills a hacker. When Wolfe and Amanda investigate the case, Peyton visits Amanda. Amanda remembers how Peyton had poisoned a friend of hers in 1610. Wolfe listens to Peyton and Amanda and follows Peyton. Peyton poisons Wolfe. Wolfe becomes increasingly sick but helps Amanda behead Peyton. Amanda shoots Wolfe to trigger his Immortality. Wolfe angrily tells her he cannot love someone whom he will eventually have to behead and walks away.
|LineColor=66CC99
}}
}}
Home media
Anchor Bay Entertainment has released the complete series on DVD in Region 1.
class="wikitable"
!DVD Name !Ep # !Release Date !Additional Information |
The Complete Series
| 22 | June 14, 2005 |
|
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Portal|Television|Canada}}
- {{IMDb title|id=0144714|title=Highlander: The Raven}}
{{Highlander}}
Category:1990s American drama television series
Category:1998 American television series debuts
Category:1999 American television series endings
Category:1990s Canadian drama television series
Category:1998 Canadian television series debuts
Category:1999 Canadian television series endings
Category:1990s French television series
Category:1998 French television series debuts
Category:1999 French television series endings
Category:Highlander (franchise) television series
Category:American television spinoffs
Category:American action adventure television series
Category:Canadian television spinoffs
Category:Canadian action adventure television series
Category:French television spinoffs
Category:French action adventure television series
Category:French drama television series
Category:Television series by CBS Studios
Category:Television shows filmed in Toronto
Category:Television shows filmed in France
Category:American English-language television shows
Category:First-run syndicated television shows in Canada
Category:First-run syndicated television programs in the United States