Cameron Mitchell is Minnesota Clay, a former gunman serving a life sentence in a hell-hole of a prison.
He escapes to find Fox, the one man who can clear his name.
But when Clay returns to the town of Mesa Encanada, he finds that Fox has set himself up as sheriff and ruler of the town. And Fox has hired a band of gunmen to back him up.
What’s more, Fox is vying for control of the territory with the Mexican bandit Ortiz, who has his own private army.
The townsfolk are caught between the two, forced to pay Fox for protection, but stuck with Fox because living under Ortiz would likely be more deadly for gringos.
Clay’s situation is complicated by the fact that his grown daughter, Nancy, lives nearby.
She doesn’t know his identity; she thinks Jonathan, the man who raised her, is her father.
Oh, and then there’s the fact that Clay is losing his vision.
This marked Corbucci’s first full-fledged attempt at a Western, and it doesn’t rank among his best, though there’s a very neat Spaghetti-style touch in the final shootout.
The other Spaghetti trademarks are here as well: double crosses, an evil town boss, a hero looking for revenge over a loved one who has died and taking on incredible odds in the process.
Trouble is, Cameron Mitchell, spouting tougher-than-nails one-liners, doesn’t have the flair or charisma of Franco Nero or the other actors who would star in Corbucci’s better films.
Ethel Rojo plays Estella, the pretty bandit girl who’d turn on anyone for a bag of gold. Albert Cevenini is Andy, a youngster full of gumption and little common sense. He has his eyes on Nancy.
Directed by:
Sergio Corbucci
Cast:
Cameron Mitchell … Minnesota Clay
George Riviere … Fox
Fernando Sancho … Domingo Ortiz-Mendoza
Diana Martin … Nancy
Alberto Cevenini … Andy
as Anthony Ross
Antonio Casas … Uncle Jonathan
Ethel Rojo … Estella
Gino Pernice … Scratchy
Jose Canalejas … Francisco
as Joe Kamel
Fernando Poggi … Tubbs
as Nando Poggi
Pietro Tordi … Bartender
Julio Pena … Doctor Stevens
Also with: Madelaine Dehecq, Simon Arriaga, Alvaro de Luna, Angel Menendez, Antonio Jimenez Escribano, Jose Manuel Martín, Guillermo Mendez, Fernando Sanchez Polack, Mario Morales, Jose Riesgo, Alfonso Rojas, Enrique Santiago, Joaquin Solís, Filippo Antonelli, Carlos Villafranca, Toni Fuentes, Manuel Pena
Score: Piero Piccioni
Runtime: 87 min.
Memorable lines:
Doc Stevens: “Tell me, is it true you can kill a man without even looking at him?”
Minnesota Clay: “Yeah, I smell the bad ones.”
Clay to Fox, after Fox suggests they work together: “It hurts when I laugh.”
Fox’s man: “You ask too many questions. A man could get hurt asking too many questions.”
Clay: “I’ve been hurt by the best.”
Andy: “If you could only teach me. Teach me to shoot, Mr. Clay. I could learn.”
Clay: “The cemetery’s filled with guys who learned to shoot.”
Trivia:
Cameron Mitchell appeared in three Spaghetti Westerns, this film and “The Last Gun” in 1964 and “Eye for an Eye” in 1972. In between, he starred as Buck Cannon in the TV series “The High Chaparral.”
Apparently, there were two endings to this film. Most American prints feature the shorter film that ends with the final gunfight. A longer version exists that runs for about another four minutes. In it, according to review at Spaghetti Western database, Clay recovers from his wounds and rides off wearing glasses. Which he then flings into the air, shooting out both lens.
Corbucci and Sancho would become household names to Spaghetti Western fans. Not so for most of the leads in this film. Argentine-born Ethel Rojo appeared in one other Spaghetti, “Massacre at Fort Grant” (aka “Doomed Fort” 1964). So did Diana Martin, in 1966’s “The Taste of Killing” with Craig Hill.