James Coburn is Zach Provo, an outlaw who escapes from a prison chain gang and sets out to settle an old score with former lawman Sam Burgade (Charlton Heston).
More than 10 years earlier, Burgade led a posse that tracked down Provo. In the hail of gunfire that followed, the outlaw was seriously wounded, his young Indian wife killed.
Provo blames Burgade for her death, and he hasn’t escaped alone. He had six hardened criminals with him, and loot from an old robbery to bribe them into doing his bidding.
News of Provo’s escape prompts Burgade to strap on his guns again, though new Sheriff Noel Nye assures him modern technology — from telephones to automobiles — will lead to the outlaw’s swift recapture.
Burgade decides to lure Provo and the other escapees into a trap by leaking news of a large shipment of money arriving in Tucson.
But while Burgade and Nye are waiting to spring their trap, Provo visits the retired lawman’s home and kidnaps his pretty young daughter Susan.
He plans to use her to set a trap of his own.
And while his men are eager to share her as well as the loot, Provo insists she won’t be soiled.
Well, at least not until he has his old enemy present to witness the act.
Another Western in which all sorts of newfangled gadgets are finding their way West, but nothing beats a determined man on horseback.
Heston and Coburn carry the show, of course. Especially the latter, who’s determined to make sure his old enemy dies a slow death, even after witnessing his daughter’s rape.
Barbara Hershey plays said daughter. Western fans might recall her as the Indian girl Glenn Ford rescues in “Heaven with a Gun” (1969).
The supporting cast also includes Jorge Rivereo as Provo’s right-hand man and Larry Wilcox as young Mike Shelby, assigned the job of protecting Susan Burgade’s virtue until Provo decides it shouldn’t be protected any longer.
What will strike you most about the film is the violence, clearly a sign of the influence of Sam Peckinpah and Spaghetti Westerns.
For trivia buffs, Heston and Coburn starred in two other Westerns together — “Major Dundee” (1965) and “The Avenging Angel” (1995).
Directed by:
Andrew McLaglen
Cast:
Charlton Heston … Sam Burgade
James Coburn … Zach Provo
Barbara Hershey … Susan Burgade
Jorge Rivero … Cesar Menendez
Michael Parks … Sheriff Noel Nye
Larry Wilcox … Mike Shelby
Thalmus Rasulala … George Weed
Morgan Paull … Portugee Shiraz
John Quade … Will Gant
Robert Donner … Lee Roy Tucker
Christopher Mitchum … Hal Brickman
Runtime: 96 min.
Memorable lines:
Cesar Menendez: “You know what I’m thinking? When they locked us up, that was 1897. My God, that was another century.”
Grant: “What the hell’s in Tucson?”
Zach Provo: “Samuel Burgade.”
Shiraz: “Kee-rist.”
Tucker: “Oh, shit.”
Sheriff Nye: “Don’t you worry about it, Sam. We’ll get him. Hell, we got automobiles, telegraph, railroad. Ain’t heard of anybody outrun a telephone yet. And the Army tells me next year they’re gonna have some of them flying machines.”
Sam Burgarde to daughter Susan: “Honey, there’s a man comin’ for me. I can’t just sit there on the couch and wait for him.”
Grant, acosting a Mexican woman: “Let me see what you got, honey.”
Cesar Menendez: “She’s carrying!”
Tucker: “What you’ve got to do with these greasers is teach them who’s boss, even before they’re born.”
Susan Burgarde, about her kidnapping: “Having second thoughts?”
Provo: “A man who has to think twice ain’t no man.”
Sheriff Nye: “I know where you’re goin’. You’re goin’ about six feet under. They’ve got seven guns to your one.”
Burgarde: “Everybody’s gotta die. Nobody’s gotta give up.”
Burgarde to Hal Brickman, Susan’s boyfriend: “That’s my ace in the hole. I want to kill him. But he wants to kill me slow.”
Provo: “You don’t die for women. You kill for them.”