Tab Hunter is Durango, a sheriff who always gets his man, and leaves him behind dead if he resists arrest.
He returns home looking forward to his impending wedding with Lucy McLaine.
But when he goes to visit, he finds her and her family dead. His only clue: A watch he finds by one of the bodies.
And so he sets out in search of the killers, only to discover that they’re otherwise respectable men, including a doctor and a banker.
After they die at his hands without revealing their accomplices — one hung, one tied to a tree and left for the crows — their remaining partners decide to turn the tables.
Saloon girl Joanne (Erika Blanc) is willing to give Durango a place to hide and a pretty shoulder to cry on.
But businessman John Kildare (Piero Lulli) and rancher Jack Owen (Mimmo Palmara) can afford hired guns to keep the vengeance-seeking lawman at bay.
Sure, the deaths are violent, but this film brings little new or fresh to the same ol’ revenge for murdered loved ones story. And given how Durango wound up on the trail of the first of his fiancee’s killers, the twist at the end makes no sense.
One of the more original scene comes when Piero Lulli’s character decides he needs to relieve some stress by playing guess-the-saloon-girl.
So, blindfolded, he begins feeling one up to see if he can guess her identity. When his partner shows up, he reluctantly joins in, trying to guess saloon girls by a glimpse of their leg, their behinds and, finally, their silhouettes.
Erika Blanc, a redhead in this outing, plays the saloon girl who has eyes for Durango and would prefer he remain a scoundrel than settle down with someone else. Of course, given the doozy of a song she sings for him, it’s understandable why he might head in another direction.
Directed by:
Roberto Mauri
Cast:
Tab Hunter … Durango
Erika Blanc … Joanne
Piero Lulli … John Kildare
Mimmo Palmara … Jack Owen
Daniele Vargas … Dr. Frank Decker
Renato Romano … Fred Mulligan
Dada Gallotti … Mary, Mulligan’s fiance
Ugo Sasso … James McLaine
Alfredo Rizzo … Curly, piano player
Alos with: Solveyg D’Assunta as Maria D’Assunta Solvey, Bernardo Solitari, Guglielmo Bogliani, Franco Pasquetto, Elio Angelucci, Osiride Pevarello, Lina Franchi, Gaetano Scala, Gilberto Galimberti, Claudio Ruffini, Fortunato Arena, Bruno Arie, Marcello Bonini Olas, Neal Noorlag
aka:
La vendetta e il mio perdono
Vengeance is My Forgiveness
Score: Giancarlo Rizzi
Runtime: 86 min.
Memorable lines:
Durango: “I’ll be back this evening.”
Joanne: “Promise?”
Durango: “I give you the word of a scoundrel.”
Old man: “I remember many a day when the women had babies while the wagon’s were rolling.”
His son: “Yeah, I know. And there was probably a whole bunch of Indians attacking the wagons at the same time.”
Durango, tying up Decker in order to force him to divulge the names of his partners in crime: “The buzzards will come down and eat that rotten flesh right off of your bones.”
Durango to Decker: “I’d be doing you a favor if I killed you right away. You’re going to pay for it. You’re going to pay slowly.”
Kildare to his men: “We’ll have to wait for Owen. He’ll want to be in on the kill. So just mangle him up good. I’ll be back later.”
Trivia:
Dubbed the “Sigh Guy” for his beefcake good looks early in his career, Tab Hunter came out as gay in his 2005 memoirs. This marked his only Spaghetti Western outing, though he followed it up with two other Italian films — “The Last Chance” (1968), a spy film; and “Bridge Over the Elbe” (1969), a World War II outing.
This marked yet another Spaghetti Western that became a Django film in Germany. The U.S. title is a bit of a mystery, since our hero uses a six-gun when he encounters each of the four men responsible for his lover’s death.