Methos

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Highlander character
Methos
Alias Adam Pierson, Benjamin Adams, Death, Remus, Caratarix, Haribu, Et-Maru, Metopholus
Race Human, Immortal
Gender Male
Hair color Brown
Eye color Hazel/Green
Age c.5000
Born in c.3000 BC
Immortality c.3000 BC
Affiliations Watchers, Duncan MacLeod, Joe Dawson, Amanda
Past affiliations The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley, Butch Cassidy, The Sundance Kid, Don Salzer, Alexa Bond, Byron, Richie Ryan
Mentors Pharaoh Djer, Donald Salzer
Weapons Ivanhoe sword
Watchers Jesse Benoit1 (??-Apr 1808-??), Timothy Wyatt (1996-??)
Status Alive
Portrayed by Peter Wingfield
First appearance Methos
Movies 4, 5
Seasons 3, 4, 5, 6

Methos is a fictional character from the Highlander movies, Highlander: The Series, and The Methos Chronicles, portrayed by actor Peter Wingfield. He is an Immortal.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

What started as a one-shot part, when he was introduced in the episode "Methos," turned into four years of regular appearances, in which Methos became one of the most popular characters on the series. It was initially intended that he would be killed at the end of season 3 in the "Finalé" two-parter, but the writers saw potential in the character, and kept him. The audience liked the perspective of a cynical five-thousand-year-old man, combined with the complexity of the character's dual roles.1Watching Benjamin Adams

[edit] History

Methos was the mythical "oldest Immortal," who had seen the rise and fall of many civilizations, including the ancient Egyptian, Roman, and modern eras.

Methos, the oldest Immortal
Methos, the oldest Immortal

Methos was approximately 5,000 years old. His birth date and location of birth were lost, because he himself couldn't remember the exact details. However, it seems that Methos was born either in ancient Mesopotamia or ancient Egypt around 3000 BC. He was the second son of three boys and two girls, and he lived with his family. When he was approximately 28 years old, he died when a sandstorm trapped him and his family. His family died, and Methos became Immortal. Afterwards, he roamed the Earth without ever knowing of his immortality. People thought he was a demon, and tried to kill him many times over. Methos learnt how to survive from then on. By the time he was an estimated 603 years old, he took his first Quickening. He then realized that there were many Immortals besides himself, and he started to learn about The Game.

When he was a slave back in Ancient Egypt, an Immortal Pharaoh named Djer took him under his wing, but apparently the ruthless Pharaoh killed his nomad wife during a smiting of Sinai (the killing of all nomads), so Methos buried him alive inside a sarcophagus within a deep tomb, and claimed his throne as a Pharaoh of Egypt. His journey after that is unknown.

He kept many journals, almost since the Sumerians invented writing in approximately 3300 BC. He learned how to write in Egyptian hieroglyphics, Hyksos, cuneiform, Phoenician, and Ancient Greek writing systems. He met Helen of Troy, Socrates, Julius Caesar, and Cleopatra; the English poets Byron and Percy Shelley along with his wife Mary Shelley (author of The Modern Prometheus, better known as Frankenstein), and rode with Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. He also claimed that he knew Alexander the Great, and sarcastically mentioned that Alexander was not that great. In his first meeting with MacLeod, he said not many people can claim to have been on the same stage (either metaphorical or not) as both Julius Caesar and The Rolling Stones.

Methos used the name "Adam" ("Adam Pierson") in most of his aliases as an inside joke, because he was amused that people referred to him as the oldest man. One of his aliases was "Benjamin Adams," or rather, "the good Dr. Adams," as he was known in the 19th century (he majored in medicine in Heidelberg, Germany, in 1453)

The Messenger, Ron Perlman as the fake Methos
The Messenger, Ron Perlman as the fake Methos

He didn't care whether he was the oldest one, as long as people were not looking for him. Even when a fake Methos called The Messenger appeared, he was rather surprised that someone else was using his name. He thought it was flattering, and was happy to let someone else be hunted for a while.

[edit] Life

Methos was one of the Watcher Organization's greatest mysteries. His existence was doubted and questioned for many centuries. During his time at a University in Paris, Methos, under the guise of Watcher Adam Pierson, "uncovered" the "The Methos Chronicles," which documented — with varied accuracy — much of his life.

In order to prevent the discovery of his true existence, he volunteered to study the Chronicles. In so doing, he was able to prevent discovery of the true Methos, and keep tabs on other Immortals that he preferred to avoid. Methos tried to be unseen by pretending to study the Chronicles of Methos, and became somewhat of an off-field agent for the Watchers. Therefore, nobody would suspect that he was actually the legend. That changed when two Watchers died at the hand of Kalas, an evil Immortal. Joe Dawson realized that Kalas was looking for Methos. Duncan MacLeod knew that with Methos's Quickening, Kalas would finally be strong enough to defeat him. Kalas and MacLeod raced to be the first to find Methos. Duncan's search led him to seek out "Adam Pierson." Duncan immediately sensed that Adam was an Immortal, and guessed correctly that he was actually Methos. MacLeod challenged Kalas, nearly defeating him when the police arrived to send Kalas to prison for the deaths of the Watchers. But Methos also vanished.

A few months later, Kalas ended up breaking out of prison, due to the intervention of Amanda. She wanted to take his head, but he escaped instead. A woman named Christine Salzer wanted to reveal the secrets of the Immortals and the Watchers to the press, because her husband, Watcher Don Salzer, had been murdered by Kalas. Methos and Joe Dawson tried to talk her out of it, but she refused. In a desperate attempt, Joe tried to kill her, but accidentally shot Duncan instead. Methos wisely reminded Joe that Duncan didn't try to save Christine, but protected Joe. Ironically, Christine was killed by Kalas. He took the disc containing the information about the Watchers and the existence of the Immortals. Duncan fought Kalas on top of the Eiffel Tower, where he defeated the evil Immortal. The tower, being a giant lightning rod, amplified the Quickening, and shut down the power all around Paris, as well as destroying Kalas's computer and the disc containing all the information. The secret of the Immortals and the Watchers was safe, and Methos secured himself as Duncan MacLeod's friend.

[edit] Dark Past

Methos had a dark past — he was actually a member of The Four Horsemen, who may have inspired the biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Duncan MacLeod learned that the man he trusted had a horrible secret. Cassandra pointed out that the polite and witty Methos was actually Death, and had enslaved her many millennia ago. Methos had ridden with The Four Horsemen, who plundered and raped villages on two continents back in the Bronze Age. Kronos, the leader of the Horsemen, tracked down Methos in order to get to MacLeod. Methos decided to flee, but Duncan caught him leaving, then asked whether Cassandra's accusations were true. Duncan learned the shocking secret that his friend had an unjustifiably evil past. Methos knew that Duncan's moral conscience couldn't stomach this revelation, though he tried to make Duncan understand.

Death
Death

In that confrontation, Methos finally admitted that his past was evil. He told Duncan MacLeod as much, in a chilling monologue:

"I killed. But I didn't just kill fifty, I didn't kill a hundred. I killed a thousand. I killed TEN thousand! And I was good at it. And it wasn't for vengeance, it wasn't for greed. It was because...I liked it. Cassandra was nothing. Her village was nothing. Do you know who I was? I was Death. Death — Death on a horse. When mothers warned their children that the monster would get them, that monster was me. I was the nightmare that kept them awake at night. Is that what you want to hear?! The answer is yes. Oh, yes."

And in that moment, Duncan decided to put an end to their friendship. Methos decided to put the band together again, and both he and Kronos tracked the remaining members. Silas, the brutal but naive one, and Caspian, the insane one. Kronos had a plan to rule the world once again.

In the end, Methos joined Duncan MacLeod to destroy the Horsemen. The two defeated the Horsemen together, resulting in a powerful "Double Quickening". Duncan first killed Caspian and later slew Kronos, while Methos had to kill Silas, the only member of the Horsemen that he really liked. But it was too late to repair the friendship between himself and Duncan.

Although Methos's friendship with Duncan was officially over, it didn't prevent the two from interacting, wherein Methos would talk to Duncan about life. Amanda begged Methos to do something, because Duncan's outlook on life had been shattered by another Immortal named Steven Keane. He shared Duncan's black-and-white point of view, and it affected him in dealing with The Game. Methos wisely told a reluctant Duncan that life was not as simple as good and evil. There were always two sides of the same coin, and also a grey area in between. Methos claimed that he was not a perfect Immortal, and there was no such thing as being perfect. An Immortal should just accept his life, and decide what was best for himself. Immortals also made mistakes, because they are just human beings, and mistakes could be forgiven. And as Immortals, they had their duty to play in The Game.

Duncan's reluctance to compete in The Game affected him in many ways. He accidentally killed his own protegé, Richie Ryan, because he thought he saw an evil being called Ahriman posing as other people. He became more brooding, but in the end, he defeated the evil being. But Methos had disappeared again; not even Joe Dawson could find him.

[edit] Old and Wise

When Methos returned again, the following year, he found himself being chased by an obssesive Immortal named Morgan Walker, who hated him for having had an affair with his slave 200 years ago. Methos had no choice but to hide for the time being, and to look for some information from the Watchers' computer database. Joe Dawson was angry when he found out that Methos was back, only to try to save his own life by trying to hack into Joe's file, instead of explaining his whereabouts one year earlier .

Black and White
Black and White

Methos, in his own clever and manipulative way, reminded Joe about his Watcher oath, and that Joe had broken his own vows to help MacLeod, but not Methos. That offended Joe, and damaged their already-shaky friendship. But Joe couldn't stay mad at Methos any longer, because he needed his help, as a rookie Watcher and Joe's illegitimate daughter, named Amy Thomas, had been kidnapped by Walker. Both Joe and Methos had to escape Walker's henchmen and try to save Amy. In the end, Methos bonded with Joe, and defeated the evil Immortal. Joe patched things up with his daughter, and also patched up his friendship with Methos.

[edit] Alternative Methos

Once, when Duncan MacLeod was killed temporarily, he was thrown into another reality where he had never been born.

Alternate Methos had a lover named Jillian, who was killed by the Watchers. It made him swear revenge to all the Watchers. He gathered back the Four Horsemen and Richie, but the Watchers killed the members. He killed Richie, who couldn't kill Watcher Joe Dawson. Duncan MacLeod saw this, and tried to stop all of it. He fought alternate Methos, and killed him. But in the same instant that Duncan executed the killing stroke, he returned to his original reality, where Methos tried to wake him up. In the end, it was the wisdom of Methos that put Duncan MacLeod back in The Game once more. Methos said that life was about changes, and about accepting who you are, good or bad.

[edit] Spin-Offs

[edit] Highlander novels

Methos appeared in four Highlander Novels: Scotland the Brave, Zealot, The Captive Soul and An Evening at Joe's.

If, in the first two books, he was a secondary character with a role similar to the series, in The Captive Soul, he was the main character, and had to face villain Prince Khyan. In the short story compilation An Evening at Joe's, most of his stories focused in his last days with his lover Alexa Bond.

[edit] The Methos Chronicles

The 2001 The Methos Chronicles, was an animated internet Flash series based on Methos. Peter Wingfield was the voice actor for the main character.

Pharaoh Djer escaped his imprisonment and Methos had to, once again, face him. In the end, Djer escaped and disappeared.

[edit] Highlander: Endgame

In 2000, Peter Wingfield returned to the role of Methos in the fourth Highlander film, Highlander: Endgame, which served as a melding of the Highlander movie universe with the Highlander television series universe.

On the 10th anniversary of Connor MacLeod's disappearance after Rachel Ellenstein's death, Duncan MacLeod came to his house to ask him about visions he was having. In the visions, Duncan saw glimpses of Connor and other Immortals being beheaded. Methos told Duncan that Connor had been in the Sanctuary all that time, until it was destroyed by Jacob Kell. He would later rescue Duncan alongside Joe Dawson, when Duncan was kidnapped by renegade Watchers who wanted to make him a "volunteer" at the Sanctuary to prevent The Game from ever being finished. He would later reveal how powerful Jacob Kell really was by showing Kell's record of Quickenings. Duncan would leave Methos and Joe to search for Connor, not believing him to have died in the Sanctuary massacre.

[edit] Highlander: The Source

Peter Wingfield will reprise the role of Methos in the first installment of a new trilogy of Highlander films. Highlander: The Source, which is due for release in 2007, will follow the exploits of Duncan MacLeod, Methos, and other Immortals and mortals as they search for the origins of immortality.

[edit] Personality and relationships

Being the oldest in the gang, he could be very witty, and have a great sense of humor and an extremely sharp mind, which sometimes could be annoying according to Duncan and Joe. In some ways, he was pretty manipulative towards his friends and foes. Not to mention a bit arrogant. Duncan once compared him to a hammerhead shark. Methos said although he knew most of everything in life, he was a bit weak in pop-cultural matters.

Most people considered Methos to be weak, because he always avoided a battle, or even any Immortals close by, and tended to be paranoid unless there was a good reason to stick around. He even hid his sword under his bed, and sometimes carried a handgun. Some say that his behavior seemed unusual for an Immortal; he would hardly participate in The Game, and just continued his life, travelling around the world, appearing here and there whenever he liked. Whenever there was a great danger nearby, he suddenly disappeared for years until he came back again like nothing ever happened. He preferred, however, to observe rather than fight. This wasn't a sign of weakness. As Methos himself once said, "Just because I don't like to fight doesn't mean that I can't." And when he had to, he was one of the strongest adversaries.

5,000-year-old Immortal
5,000-year-old Immortal

He considered opera music to be boring, and he liked Bruce Springsteen, Queen, and other music, as well. His lifestyle was a bit expensive, because he collected things, mostly antiques and modern art, that many people considered to be junk. He thought some of the "junk" could be his from earlier times. He enjoyed life so much, he considered himself to be a peaceful and regular guy who drinks beer at the bar with his friends. Nobody knew what was in his mind. Very easygoing, but could be serious when needed. Although his loyalty was questionable several times.

Many argued that Methos might be one of the strongest Immortals, albeit not in a physical or fighting-technique way, but more in a strategy-and-survival way. He claimed once he hadn't felt guilt since the 1100s, but he did regret some of the things he'd done in the past. Sometimes, he hardly wanted to help others unless it had some benefit for him, which made his friends and foes angry on occasion.

According to Methos, he got married 68 times — never to an Immortal, however, because according to him, it would be too much of a commitment.

Several important relationships in his life:

[edit] Alexa Bond

Methos and Alexa
Methos and Alexa

He fell in love with a mortal named Alexa Bond, a waitress who worked in Joe's bar, who was terminally ill. At first Alexa refused his proposition of dating, because she didn't want to disappoint him. He was persistent, and waited for her under the rain and asked her out on a date. He mentioned to Alexa that the reason for asking her on a date was "[b]ecause the alternative is unthinkable." Methos had knowledge about the Methuselah's Stone, rumored to be able to make a person Immortal, and tried to steal it (with help from Amanda) to cure Alexa. Methos failed to retrieve the stone, and unfortunately, Alexa died of sickness with Methos remaining by her side until she passed away, becoming one of the true lost loves of his life.

[edit] Amanda

The only person that could match him in his manipulative ways was Amanda. Methos and Amanda sometimes could be very cunning, especially to Duncan MacLeod. Their relationship was more like siblings or good friends. She seemed to know Methos from earlier times. There was a possibility that Methos used to date Rebecca, Amanda's mentor centuries ago. Amanda was also the one who helped him to steal the Methuselah crystal. When he failed to cure Alexa, Amanda gave him a heartfelt hug and words of encouragement. Both Amanda and Methos understood the dilemma of being Immortal. Both of them knew that life was about changes, and about accepting who you were, good or bad.

[edit] Quotes

  • "Mi casa es su casa!"
  • "Live, Highlander. Grow stronger. Fight another day."
  • "I'm someone who was born long before the age of chivalry."
  • "I wasn't thinking. I was improvising."
  • "I haven't felt guilt since the 11th century."
  • "What do you expect? Einstein? Freud?...Buddha? Sorry Joe. I'm just a guy."
  • "Because the alternative is unthinkable."
  • "I'm too old for this."
  • "Whatever you need: lawyer, doctor, Indian chief. I've got the paperwork to cover it all."
  • "I am Methos. You live to serve me. You live because I wish it. And you stay alive as long as you please me."
  • "One of a thousand regrets, MacLeod, one of a thousand regrets."
  • "Contrary to popular belief, time can't heal the deepest wounds. And wisdom is a slave to pain."
  • "I was married once, you know. Come to think of it, I was married 67...no 68 times."
  • "It's good to be a myth."
  • "Hey, some of that "old stuff" could be mine"

[edit] Methos in The Game

Sometime during his life, when realising that for being the oldest Immortal, he was the main target for all the other Immortals, he removed himself from The Game, eventually deciding the best place to hide was within the Watchers, where he was put in charge of locating himself. (As he told Duncan, "And I make sure it never happens.") When Duncan MacLeod met him in 1995, he hadn't taken a head for roughly 200 years. That changed when he had to behead Duncan's obssessive former lover Kristin Gilles, when the latter proved unwilling to do it himself. However, after that, he only fought when it was necessary.

1 - Unknown1, c.3000 BC ("Methos")

2 - Kristin Gilles, 1995 ("Chivalry")

3 - Silas, 1997 ("Revelation 6:8")

4 - Morgan Walker, 1998 ("Indiscretions")

5 - Prince Khyan, 1999 ("The Captive Soul")

1 First beheading. Only mentioned.

[edit] Appearances

Movies - Highlander: Endgame, Highlander: The Source

Episodes - "Methos," "Finalé, Part 1," "Finalé, Part 2," "Chivalry," "Timeless," "Deliverance," "Methuselah's Gift," "Through A Glass, Darkly," "Till Death," "Judgement Day," "One Minute to Midnight," "The Messenger," "The Valkyrie," "Comes a Horseman," "Revelation 6:8," "Forgive Us Our Trespasses," "The Modern Prometheus," "Archangel," "Indiscretions," "To Be...," "...Not To Be"

Animated Series - The Methos Chronicles

Books - Scotland the Brave, Zealot, The Captive Soul, An Evening at Joe's

[edit] Trivia

  • One of his favorite drinks was beer, maybe because the Mesopotamians invented the drink.
  • His car was a Land Rover Range Rover, and his sword was the Sword of Ivanhoe; a rendition of the Sword of Richard the Lionheart.
  • In March 1995, Methos lived in "Rue Mallet-Stevens," house no. 3, in Paris.
  • In the episode "Indiscretions," fans thought there would be a spin-off based on this storyline; presumably a "Methos and Joe Show" kind of series, but the idea of a spinoff never occurred, so it was merely speculation.
  • Because "Indiscretions" was the last Highlander: The Series episode ever filmed, and since the effects team still had massive amounts of fireworks stored up, all of the leftover fireworks were set off for Methos' Quickening, which made for a very impressive scene. Peter Wingfield's face was actually burned by one of the explosions, but he had to keep his composure because this huge shot had to be done in one take.

[edit] External links

 v  d  e 
HIGHLANDER
Movies Highlander | Highlander II: The Quickening | Highlander III: The Final Dimension

Highlander: Endgame | Highlander: The Source

TV Series Highlander: The Series (episodes) | Highlander: The Raven (episodes)
Animated Highlander: The Animated Series | The Methos Chronicles | Highlander: Vengeance
Books The Element of Fire | Scimitar | Scotland the Brave | Measure of a Man | The Path | Zealot | Shadow of Obsession | The Captive Soul | White Silence | An Evening at Joe's
V. Games Highlander: The Last of the MacLeods
Main Characters
MacLeods Connor MacLeod | Duncan MacLeod | Quentin MacLeod | Colin MacLeod
Friends Heather MacLeod | Juan Sánchez Villa-Lobos Ramírez | Rachel Ellenstein | Brenda Wyatt | Louise Marcus | Alex Johnson | John MacLeod | Nakano | Kate MacLeod | Tessa Noël | Richie Ryan | Amanda | Joe Dawson | Methos | Charlie DeSalvo | Anne Lindsey | Darius | Hugh Fitzcairn | Cassandra | Nick Wolfe | Don Vincente Marino Ramírez
Enemies The Kurgan | General Katana | Kane | Jacob Kell | Jacob Kell's Gang | Xavier St. Cloud | James Horton | Kalas | Kronos | Four Horsemen | Ahriman | Pharaoh Djer | Kortan
Fictional Universe
Misc. The Immortals | The Quickening | The Watchers | The Methuselah's Stone | Seacouver
Listings Movie Characters | TV Characters | Immortals | Watchers | Timelines | Screenshots
In other languages