The evil Immortal Quentin Barnes is very evil, indeed. He kills the good Immortal Michael Moore's wife, among others, and is executed via the electric chair.
Oops. Quentin Barnes escapes from his tomb and begins a process of revenge against those folks who were responsible, more or less, for his being executed. Michael Moore is apparently on Barnes' list o' death and Duncan tries to help by going after Barnes while leaving Michael with Tessa and Richie. Michael gives a convincing portrayal of a Good Man Being Stalked by an Insane Stalker
On a "happier" note, we meet Charlie DeSalvo for the first time. Charlie is not evil, but he is annoying. Unfortunately, he has no insane alter ego for Duncan to whack ... and he's mortal, not Immortal, so we have to wait for someone else to kill Charlie down the road a ways. Oh, that last bit was editorial comment. It won't be on the exam. Then again, it might be. I've decided that a split personality or a large dose of insanity is helpful when studying certain aspects of HL:TS.
Questions:
1. Does Duncan MacLeod carry the seeds of his friends' insanity or do they get like that all by themselves?
2. What was your Very Favorite Moment of this episode? (extra credit is offered if it involves Charlie being thrown to a mat)
3. Would a trip to the Holy Hot Tub have helped Michael/Quentin, had he/they known about it? Would he/they have had to buy 2 seats on the plane to get there? If Amanda had been around, would dating him/them have gone against her personal rule of serial monogamy?
4. If Barbra Streisand had played Michael/Quentin, which of them would have been female? Explain.
5. Rate the Duncan's hair/pants combination in this episode.