- When Iolaus is accused of a burglary, Hercules must bring back the real thief, Autolycus, before Iolaus is put to death. Meanwhile, King Menelaos' daughter, the would-be lawyer Dirce, demands that Iolaus be put through one ordeal after another to prove his innocence.—mama.sylvia
- On the road to Scyros, Iolaus singlehandedly saves Autolycus from a robbers gang but finds himself holding his loot-casket when the limber lout disappears in the foliage as soon as royal guards arrive: it's a thief, who kept king Menelaos's prize 'dragon eye' scepter ruby, a royal heirloom. Hercules is told Iolaus will be tried, with a defense lawyer, bumbling Dirce, who points out under Scyros customary law no crime goes unpunished, even if that means executing an innocent man. To save Iolaus, Hercules must now catch the reputed king of thieves, who eluded the royal guards for years, and even when found he slips away into the trees with frightful ease. Meanwhile Dirce tries to win time by lawyer's tricks. Alas the only of her motions the royal judge cannot deny is the ancient, barbaric Erebus test, three torturous witch trial-type ordeals. Hercules catches the king of thieves, who ran into a ruined castle, where they fall into a vast treasury, which however houses a nastier, slippery surprise...—KGF Vissers
It looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to contribute.
Learn moreContribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content