D:
Juan Bosch ("John Wood"); B: Ignacio Iquino, Sauro Scavolini; C: Floriano Trenker; M: Enrico Escobar; with: Richard Harrison,
Fernando Sancho, Indio Gonzales, Raf Baldasarre, Tania Alvarado
The rich Rancher James Miller (Raf Baldasarre) controls the small Texan town Tombstone. Only
the land of the old McGovan is still missing to make him completely happy, but the Oldtimer is intractably. Thus he is filled
shorthand with lead. Son Steve (Richard Harrison) kills the murderer but his revenge yields him a voucher for the gibbet.
Together with the bandit Leon Pompero (Fernando Sancho), likewise condemned to death, he succeeds however to escape. Miller
lost understandably his confidence into the authorities and engages the bountyhunter Gregory (Indio Gonzales). But supported
by Violet (Tania Alvarado), Miller's pretty fiance, the two fugitives nevertheless can accomplish their revenge.
The Gunslinger says:
It's hard to believe that such a crap once found it's way into cinema. Pluses are
only the passable score and the equipment. The acting achievements are a disaster, expressly excluded is Fernando Sancho,
who plays his baroque shorty with winkings. A story is undetectable, and the many fights are staged lousy. Most time our heroes
ride aimlessly around, squabbling with Violet, which they picked up on their escape. Horrifying! Juan Bosch ("John Wood")
produced this rubbish in 1971.
Rating: $
Bodycount: 8 Gringos
Explicit brutalities:
Pompero rotates bound on a wheel of a stagecoach, while Gregory shoots at the spokes
Love:
- Violet falls head over heels in love with Steve: 1/10