Monday, March 30, 2026

Highlander 5x12 - Revelation 6:8

 

And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat upon him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the Earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with the beasts of the Earth.

-The Book of Revelation, Chapter 6, Verse 8

And I heard as if it were the noise of thunder

One of the four beasts saying, "Come and See"

-Johnny Cash, "When The Man Comes Around"

It's Monday night at 7 PM (Pacific Time), you know what that means.

Tonight on Highlanda: The Four Horsemen reunite, like all great rock bands. It's the 100th episode of the show and probably the most well-remembered out of all of them, to boot. Especially after the incredible setup of "Comes A Horseman".

Aired on February 10th, 1997, this was all the buzz online. Mentioned that in the previous episode. In retrospect, 1997 really was a year for "dark" things in media and entertainment. Even things I and people I knew were specifically paying attention to: Sting vs the NWO; Final Fantasy VII's black-clad protagonist and dark steampunk city; Castlevania Symphony of the Night in general.

Before I get going here, I was looking at the series ratings for this show on Seriesgraph.com and it posted some really solid numbers, especially for the era. An overall average series rating of about 7.7, with only a couple of meh episodes.

Wouldn't you know it, the highest user-rated episode in this entire series is Episode 100, this very episode right here, "Revelation 6:8" with a score of 9.1. "Comes A Horseman" landed an 8.8, also very high, making this the highest-rated episode pair in the series. The other 9+ episode is "Homeland" at the beginning of S4. Unsurprising that S3, S4, and S5 are all statistically tied as the best seasons.

The only semi-bad episodes are also completely unsurprising to me: "Deadly Medicine" in S1, "The Zone" and "Bless The Child" in S2, and "Two of Hearts" in S6. I don't know the last one, but I can attest that the other three are BAD. At least the latter two have Charlie, who I like from the War of the Worlds show (also where I first saw Adrian Paul). "Deadly Medicine" is abysmal.

Both of the 9+ rated episodes were directed by Adrian Paul, it's worth noting. The guy really was talented on all levels and a blessing to any production that got him. It's a little difficult to believe that he never really made it big in the movie industry. IIRC he was in the running to play James Bond in the early 2000's (which ultimately went to Daniel Craig). Not sure why he didn't get it, given his well-documented similarities to a young Sean Connery. Maybe he just didn't want to deal with Hollywood and the kinds of people that dwell in it. He was always a bit too genuine for that, and probably not the kind of guy who would go sell his soul on a seedy island.

Here's the set that I refered to as "the best seven episode run in the series"...and judging from this graph, I was right. The only other set of seven episodes that rates this consistently highly is "Chivalry" through "Methuselah's Gift" in S4. Which was a great set as well, and is just to the left (and up one space) of this.

However, the S5 group beats the S4 group in five out of seven matchups ("Stone of Scone" and "Modern Prometheus" are the only ones it drops). So this chart, and the 20k or so user ratings, is completely in agreement with me that this is the best run the series ever had.

The top trilogy of episodes is "Song of the Executioner", "Star-Crossed" and "Methos". Paris episodes are consistently more green than Seacouver episodes which are more yellow, no surprise there. I am surprised that S1 and S6 both did as well as they did. Maybe S6 will be better than I think.

We start with Kronos and Methos traveling through the forests of Ukraine. They were on planes for two days (likely one from Seacouver to NYC and then one from NYC to UKR) and then spent two days going through the woods on horseback. Methos says that Silas, Horseman #3, has been living out here for a thousand years. His Watcher knowledge has made him totally invaluable to Kronos.

Silas, the Master of War, has been totally checked out from immortal life. A thousand years, hanging out with the trees and the birds. He's like Android #16.

They aren't sure if he recognizes them. Well, Kronos thinks he will, Methos is unsure.

His weapon of choice is an axe. We haven't seen that since Kanwulf in S4. Silas could crush Kanwulf like a pepsi can, though.

He might be a thousand years out of combat practice, but...

...he HURLS the axe right into the tree between them. They're not acting here, lol, that wasn't far from Kronos' head.

Silas...still has it. To their relief, he then bellows "BROTHERS"

He crushes Methos. If any of the Four Horsemen had a genuine friendship, beyond just the convenient alliance of leaving a path of destruction, it's probably these two. Methos looks at Silas like he actually likes him and his childlike curiosity.

He may have childlike curiosity, but let's not forget that Silas is also War, and probably slew more people than any of them. At least he generally stuck to slaying men and not kids.

They do the Shield fist pose. Sierra! Hotel! India! Echo! Lima! Delta! Shield.

After all of that intro, we finally check in with Duncan and Cassandra, who can't leave well enough alone. Kronos and friends left the country, their business with Duncan is concluded for now, Kronos probably doesn't even see him as worth worrying that much about at the moment.

There's nothing stopping Duncan and Cassandra from forgetting about all this Horsemen stuff, letting Methos go, and spending a week or so naked. It's pretty clear that Duncan adores Cassandra, probably more than he adores any other woman in this season. Heck, this is probably the closest he's been to a real relationship since Anne left.

In any case, Joe Dawson looks through the Watcher files to try and figure out where they might be going next, with the idea being that he'll likely be seeking out the rest of the faction. There's no data on Silas, but it turns out Caspian has been a busy bee. He's currently imprisoned for life in the dungeons of an insane asylum in Romania, where he murdered countless people and buried them in his backyard.

So that's where our heroes are headed next. They're about a day behind the bad guys, though.

Kronos bribes asylum boss Alan Dershowitz $20k to turn over Caspian to them.

$20k American dollars.

That's basically making the guy a millionaire in Romanian money.

Silas plays a flute (that he carved himself), to the amusement of Methos. It's as much of a smile as Methos can give at the moment, with the dark cloud hanging over him.

Dershowitz brings them down into the asylum basement where the prisoners are kept. He should probably have security with him, bringing a trio of guys he has never met before down into a dungeon. However that would raise questions, and he probably wants to keep this prisoner exchange on the low so he can keep his $20k American and buy a mansion.

Inmate: "The wicked man! THE WICKED MAN IS HERE!"

Dershowitz: "Don't mind him, he says that to everyone."

Kronos: "One day he could be right."

Dershowitz: "Yes, and one day Rumania could be a superpower."

They find Caspian's cell, and Kronos is visibly rattled to see Caspian in a cage like this. "LET HIM OUT."

Dershowitz finally realizes it's probably time to call security. Well, TOO LATE, you already brought a bunch of guys you know nothing about into the dungeon, now you're cornered.

Caspian proceeds to violently strangle the doctor.

He then eats a roach. Because he's Famine, you see.

So Caspian is low-key my favorite of the non-Methos Horsemen. He's basically The Kurgan, he dual-wields a jagged saber and a vicious-looking knife, and he's completely fucking insane.

He was a good choice to have as the cover image for this episode, though it's a little weird that they didn't go with Kronos.

The Donatello of the group sits around and does some reading while listening to Caspian and Silas argue (they still don't like each other). Well, one good thing about all of this for Methos is that he's pretty well-protected now. Nobody's gonna get him as long as he's a Horseman and stays on Kronos' good side. Matter of fact, if it weren't for Duncan, he wouldn't really have a reason to even consider leaving this group.

Caspian and Silas get ready to fight it out over some minor disagreement, and we get a look at Caspian's hooked sword. Thing is vicious, designed to rip pieces out of the target on the way out.

Kind of curious how they recovered Caspian's weapons. He must have stashed them somewhere before he got arrested for all those murders.

Kronos interrupts the fight. As usual he has to keep them from killing each other.


So basically...

-Kronos puts up with Methos because of his intelligence and usefulness, but also bullies him; Tolerates Silas; Actually likes and respects Caspian, likely because Caspian is the one that's as vicious as he is

-Methos is afraid of Kronos; Dislikes Caspian and finds him to be a crude beast; Likes Silas to the extent that he thinks Silas just fell in with the wrong crowd

-Silas follows and defers to Kronos; respects and defers to Methos; loathes Caspian for being a disgusting animal

-Caspian just wants to slaughter people; respects Kronos; isn't particularly crazy about Methos but seems to tolerate him fine; loathes Silas for being a big goofy dolt

Kronos manages to get everyone on the same page. If it broke down into in-fighting, chances are Silas would side with Methos and Caspian would side with Kronos. But since everyone respects Kronos the most, he's the unifying force.

Oh, damn, I almost forgot the Fourth Horseman. Death, come on down!

There we go, now the Four Horsemen are united. Nobody can stand up to this group. I don't care if you're Duncan, Connor, Kurgan, or anybody else. This is the single most destructive force in all of Highlander.

Duncan and Cass aren't far behind the faction, and when they reach Caspian's cell they find a matchbook left by Methos. He's leaving them clues! Or leading them into a trap.

Kronos has something to show everyone in his evil lair. You see, back then, they could only kill a hundred people at a time. In the modern era, there are much bigger weapons.

Here is a super bio-weapon that Kronos managed to get ahold of. It's like Ebola but worse.

Pestilence here is ready to unleash the virus on the world, causing the collapse of society, after which the Four Horsemen will dominate the ashes of the world. At least, I think that's the plan. He definitely wants "a world of anarchy and madness" to begin.

"Tell me, Caspian, weren't you in Europe when the plague hit?"

Caspian likes the sound of that. For him, The Plague is like open windows are for Richie.

Methos wants to put the virus in a fountain and kill a few people. Kronos says he's too soft, then Caspian mocks him further by saying he's afraid to go big.

Methos: "It's a prelude. Have you read Aristotle's Poetics? Of course not, you haven't even seen Casablanca. What's the first rule of great drama? Start small, and build."

Ah, now Kronos gets it. Have the threat get bigger and bigger so that the threat has time to build and build.

Never doubt what chaos a small group of committed psychopaths can wreak on the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that has. -Gandhi

Still on their trail, our heroes arrive in Paris. Cassandra insists that before this is over, Duncan will have to kill both Kronos and Methos. As long as one of them lives, the Horsemen will continue to be a threat.

Naw, I'm pretty sure they just need to kill Kronos

Methos asks Silas if he really wants to keep causing murder and mayhem. Silas already said that he isn't keen on the "killing from a distance" that Kronos is now so eager to unleash. He'd prefer to fight his opponents. Methos takes the opportunity to ask if there's more to life than all this.

Methos: "For 2000 years we have lived without this, without the destruction and the killing."

Silas: "And for 2000 years I have dreamed of the day when we would ride again!"

Silas is hoping Kronos will let him keep a pet lab monkey.

...Methos isn't going to get through to this guy. He tried.

Back at the ranch, Cassandra just took a bath. Duncan brooded in the Cuck Chair instead of getting in there and bathing with her.

I'm guessing nobody here is in the mood for sharing a bath right now. Cassandra won't shut up about how Duncan needs to kill Methos, and Duncan is just confused as hell by everything that's going on. It's like trying to follow current events in the 2020s!

Duncan gets a call from Methos telling him to meet him at a church. He says it's the receptionist, and takes off, leaving Cassandra to comb her luxurious wet hair like the goddess she is.

Duncan meets Methos at the church. This show looks SO GOOD when it wants to (read: when it's in Paris)

...wait, is this the same church from "Deliverance"?

Duncan continues to judge Methos for his past and badger him about things he did IN THE BRONZE AGE.

Duncan: "Why didn't you tell me about this?"

Methos: "Why do you think? I knew how you'd react. Everything I've done, you can't forgive. It's not in your nature. Well accept it."

Methos decides it's time to tell him the rest of the story about Cassandra. As the path of destruction continued across Asia, the Four Horsemen and their nomadic camp started to fill up with female slaves.

Methos is eager to get back to Cassandra, who at this point he has started to actually care about. She's certainly a cut above.

Kronos notices this, and it's an opportunity for him to do what he does best: Fuck with Methos.

Methos and Cassandra share a tender moment in the tent. He hasn't been bad to her (aside from keeping her as his love slave to begin with) and seems to be looking out for her in general. Lord knows Caspian wouldn't be showing her any kindness.

....that is, until Kronos waltzes in.

"So, you've been keeping all of the best fruit to yourself, have you?"

Cassandra isn't particularly cowed by this guy. Probably because she isn't really cowed by anybody, but also because she's got Methos with her.

Kronos says it's time to pass her around. Oof.

Methos just gets up and storms out rather than stand up to Kronos, and Cassandra is shocked that he'd just abandon her.

She yells for Methos, to no avail, as Kronos drags her away. After he's done with her, he'll let Caspian have a turn!

Methos is forced to stay in the Cuck Tent and listen to her yells.

...at least until she stabs Kronos with that big knife she carries around, and sprints away.

Methos could have stopped her from escaping. But he didn't, he let her go. She probably died ten times trying to find civilization, and Methos thinks it was probably worth it just to get away from him.

I mention how incredible the scenery immediately gets once this show moves to Paris every year?

Duncan and Methos' Holy Ground Walk continues, as Methos has some bad news.

He tells Duncan about the virus planted in the local fountain that's set to blow up in the near future. Matter of fact, Duncan has minutes to go diffuse it. White, then black, then red. He has...24 minutes.

No, I'm not kidding. BEEP-KOOSH. BEEP-KOOSH.

Back at the hotel, Cassandra senses someone, and thinks Duncan is back from this bizarrely long trip to the receptionist, but it's actually...

...these guys. They've got unfinished business with her.

"I've waited 3000 years to give this knife back to you!" says Kronos before they kidnap her and drag her back to their lair.

Duncan arrives at the fairgrounds just in time to disarm THE BOMB.

The fountain goes off...and Duncan gets rained on. Well, at least he got to the bomb in time.

Kronos is disappointed that the bomb didn't go off. He gives Methos credit for being such a master chess player, though. Of course Methos warned Duncan about the bomb so it would keep him busy while the rest of the group went and got Cassandra.

Kronos: "That WAS the plan, wasn't it?"

Methos: "....yes"

Kronos figures that Duncan will be showing up soon to retrieve Cassandra, and that's when they'll get him out of the way. Matter of fact, he already has a welcoming party heading out to meet him.

Methos: "Who did you send, Caspian or Silas?"

Kronos: "Both!"

Duncan is on his way to the Horsemen Lair to get Cassandra, when he gets ambushed in the city streets.

Caspian is the first to engage, though both of them attack Duncan in pretty rapid succession. Just not even bothering with the one-on-one rule, at least for a moment there.

Silas: "Kill one of us, the other takes your head!"

Caspian: "IF you kill one of us!"

Caspian catches Duncan off-guard with his vicious off-hand knife outta nowhere...

...landing a solid and nasty hit with it that has Duncan reeling.

It's wild to see Duncan running away from opponents like this.

He smartly moves the fight to a nearby bridge, and the bad guys stupidly fight him on it. Now he has an avenue of escape.

This guy by himself would be an above-average villain of the week, he's a real threat.

The dual-wielding is the main thing going for him, because he can do some serious damage with that knife out of nowhere.

Duncan gets a sudden and semi-lucky SHIIIIIIING, taking off Caspian's head. Damn. Caspian deserved more episodes.

He then immediately freaks out because Silas is barreling towards him.

Duncan attempts to leap off the bridge as the Quickening begins. The electricity actually stalls him out enough that he just barely falls in time.

Silas' axe misses him by INCHES.

He picks up Caspian's sword and goes off to rummage in the water for a few hours, to no avail.

Duncan pulling the Connor Vs Slan escape tactic here. Can really feel the weight of the Horsemen being down a man already. They should have stayed far, far away from Duncan, though Cassandra's involvement in all of this is what really put them on the path to ruin.

Speaking of which...she still hates Methos, despite his efforts to tell her why he does what he does.

Her being in a jail cell probably doesn't help either. Methos is really in a corner in this episode; nobody wants to hear him, and he is making the best of an impossible situation.

....Well, I'm just glad that Kronos didn't pick up RIGHT where he left off with her, back at the hotel.

Silas returns with the devastating news that Duncan killed Caspian and this wasn't immediately followed by Silas taking him out. They had ONE JOB.

And they're out of time, because Duncan is here.

Kronos tells Methos to go kill Cassandra, since Duncan refuses to lay down his weapon and surrender. Methos obliges. "I always go with the winner" he says.

He's playing both sides right up to the end, damn.

We get Duncan vs Kronos, ROUND 3. Kronos is basically up 2-0 (some would say it's tied and this is the rubber match, but I wouldn't) so this is the deciding fall.

Meanwhile, Silas drags Cassandra out to behead her, and Methos...gets in the way. He REALLY doesn't want to fight Silas, either because he likes Silas or because he thinks he'll probably lose. Or both.

Silas is more than willing to let Methos have Cassandra's head, he doesn't need the Quickening. Then as he realizes Methos really is actually defending her and turning against the group, he flies into the kind of rage that only betrayal can produce.

Methos and Silas then battle it out! This fight has the LONG awaited return of sword sparks. When was the last time we saw that? "Till Death" I think? Not sure where they've been. These are more like "sword static" though, with little ripples of electricity on the weapons of the combatants at random times. Duncan and Kronos also have some minor sparks. None of it is to the degree that we saw in the old episodes, though.

Duncan and Kronos continue to clash all over the lair, as the scene switches between them and the Methos/Silas fight. I'm actually more interested in seeing the latter; it's a rare Methos fight, and Silas is an absolute beast.

Duncan/Kronos on the other hand, their fight is also great, but it isn't as good as their INFERNO MATCH in "Comes a Horseman" on any level. Mainly because it's so damn dark! I can barely see a lot of the time.

While he's still struggling and still taking a real beating, Duncan does seem to have an easier time with Kronos here than the previous episode. Part of that might be because now he's seen how Kronos fights and can adapt to it, part of it might be because he now has Caspian's power. Have there been any other situations where Duncan fought the same opponent two episodes in a row, while absorbing a Quickening between the fights? Highlander Endgame is the only time I can think of and I'm not sure if he actually fought Kell twice.

Silas is basically Dian Wei from Dynasty Warriors, and has some pretty agile moves considering that he's swinging a giant vicious axe. He especially likes spinning attacks. He can be such a friendly oaf, but once he goes into "kill mode" he goes completely berserk. Doubt Methos could say anything to slow him down now.

Nice electric effect on Methos' sword here. Interesting how in this fight they aren't really sparks so much as just energy.

Some great shots during this fight. Actually, this entire episode is full of awesome cinematography. I just wish it wasn't so DAMN DARK.

Duncan struggles to keep going; the fight is 55/45 at this point in Duncan's favor. I'll say this, Kronos has insane cardio. He also fights with his sword reversed / upside-down a lot, too, which seems to work really well for him.

The Methos/Silas fight breaks out into the main area, and the two pairs of fighters see each other.

Kronos is crushed by the betrayal, which distracts him from a fight he's already pretty close to losing.

Methos realizes that the jig is up. If Kronos wins...he's dead meat.

Imagine if that did happen. Methos could be the main character for the remaining two and a half seasons (because it would go to seven seasons bay-beee!)... have him on the run for a bit while everyone processes the loss of Duncan. Then, he fights Silas at the end of S5, fights Kronos at the end of S6 (season-long arc?) to avenge Duncan, and then can spend S7 just kinda doing whatever Methos Adventures they can think of.

Methos is enraged at how everything is falling apart. "I AM THE END OF TIME!" he bellows. It's like he feels entitled to not be challenged.

Methos gets the drop on Silas...

...Duncan gets the drop on Kronos...

...and we get a big ol DOUBLE SHIIIING as both guys win their fights. Surprisingly, Methos gets the focus here, and the fading-into-Quickening. Nice to have Duncan share the spotlight. I'd almost think that they were setting up a Methos spinoff anyway! They don't NEED to kill Duncan to have a spinoff.

Huge Quickening, basically two in one. It's pretty damn awesome. One of the best Quickenings of all time.

While Methos gets most of the focus, Duncan gets even more power. I don't know how power scaling actually works in this series, even after all this time, but it's safe to say Duncan is probably the strongest of all immortals at this juncture. Spoiler Alert: There is only one more immortal that poses a threat to him from now until the end of the show, and we'll see him soon.

Most memorable thing about this Double Quickening is this spiral energy effect that goes between Duncan and Methos for a few moments. Not sure what's happening here but it's pretty wild. Maybe they're sharing the power of the guys they just defeated? That would be an idea, give Methos a power level boost. ...whatever that means.

But wait! Cassandra appears, looking straight out of the "woman yells at cat" meme.

She demands vengeance!

Meanwhile, Methos is on the ground crying, not even looking at her. His ordeal is over, but at a cost. He just slew Silas, someone he didn't want to fight at all much less slay. I think he saw Silas as someone who wouldn't be such a bad guy if he could get him away from Kronos and around a better crowd. Silas was basically Android #16 from Dragonball Z, I've said it before.

Duncan screams at Cassandra not to do it. The desperation in his voice is palpable, right now he's as close to helpless as he ever gets, and there's so much bass in his voice that he might actually challenge Cassandra right here if she goes through with it. I wouldn't put him above killing her. I'm probably completely wrong.

Cassandra finally relents, and storms out. That...is the last time we will ever see her. An unceremonious ending for her. She just up and takes off. Did she ever get over her need for vengeance? Who knows. She could have used an episode in Season 6, the female-focused season, that dealt with her forgiving Methos or at least moving on by dealing with a similar situation / another immortal.

We leave with our heroes going for another Holy Ground Walk to talk about what exactly Methos was doing this whole time. Was he really on Duncan's side? How prepared was he for a Kronos win? One thing that is surprising is that the Cassandra Hotel Room Kidnapping actually WAS intentional on his part. At least, it sounds like it. He did lure them to that hotel to begin with by dropping a matchbook in Caspian's cell. He wanted Duncan and Kronos to be on a collision course, hoping Duncan would defeat the guy he couldn't.

Basically, Methos was doing what he always does...

...surviving. Because he's good at it.

Duncan asks if Methos worried about Kronos finding him, all this time. Methos says he just tried not to think about it. Maybe that's why he's so secretive and low-key all the time. It isn't just that he wants to avoid fights / attention...it's that he doesn't want to show up on the Kronos Radar.

Duncan: "What about Cassandra?"

Methos: "One of a thousand regrets, Macleod. One of a thousand regrets."

They then walk off into the distance, in one of my favorite endings to an episode in the entire series. Never mind that they're walking into a corn field for some reason.

In short, this massive, formative event for Cassandra was just another week for Methos, and just another of many many many mistakes that he can't take back.

-----

That concludes the longest post in this entire post series, clocking in at around 110 images (even the most verbose episodes up to now only reached around 80-90 images, with most around 60). Also the highest-rated by fans episode in the series. It's the landmark 100th episode and one people still talk about.

So...thoughts on it? Well, it's really damn good, especially when combined with the previous episode to form a single movie. I would put that movie up against any of the HL movies. It would trounce 4 out of 5 of them and it would be real competitive with the first movie. It's the highest-rated (by fans) two-parter in the series, with only the trio of episodes ending with "Methos" and the Evil Duncan duology coming close to topping it.

The only problem with it is that way too much of this episode is TOO DARK. It's hard for me to say that this duo are the top episodes in the series, between the dark aesthetics and the general linearity of it. Like so many other great episodes, it needed more parts. More twists and turns. More "but whose side is he on?" with Methos (it's pretty obvious he's always on Duncan's side and just trying to keep Kronos from murdering him).

As a kid, I always saw Caspian as the "least" of the four. Like he was the weakest or something, just because he had such a short tenure of screen time. He really needed his own episode. Heck, both him and Silas could have had their own episodes. Make it a four-parter, with "Comes A Horseman" focusing on Kronos, the next two focusing on Silas/Methos' relationship / Caspian stalking Duncan, culminating with the two-on-one from this episode.

...I like rebooking things too much.

In any case, Caspian is one of the more bad-ass immortals in this series, and his two weapons are vicious. He's a threat right up there with any immortals in the show.

Silas' watcher is SASSY. While I don't think that Silas could have carried an episode as main villain that well (not as well as I think Caspian could have anyway) he is a great supporting character.

Silas and Methos' friendship is covered more in one of the stories in "An Evening At Joe's". It's a short story collection written by people involved with this show. Even Peter Wingfield wrote a story for it. Might even be the same one. I believe it covers the train ride from Kiev to Budapest, where Methos and Silas had time to catch up. This is where Silas worked on carving the flute that he plays during this episode, as a way to pass some time. I should track down that book.

The Big Dog. The toughest opponent Duncan ever had in all 119 episodes, probably.

How old WAS this guy, anyway? He was at least 3200, and probably quite a bit older than that. He might even pre-date Methos; we really have no way of knowing.

The Four Horsemen aren't done either. Kronos returns (sort of) in several episodes, including the series finale where he gets the band back together. How is that possible? Alternate timelines and stuff. It'll make sense later.

Also, in 2011 there were some official Highlander audiobooks released, four of them, each focused on one of the Four Horsemen:

Not gonna lie, this looks awesome. I've tried to track these down just to do a review, but no avail. Couldn't find them for sale anywhere, couldn't even find them on Youtube, nada.

Next up: I might actually keep this train rolling and do more of these while I've got some momentum. It took me long enough to get the Horsemen episodes done, seizing the moment seems like a good idea.


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