Brian Kelly is Chad Stark, quick with a gun, quick with a whip and hired to bring a young man named Fidel (Fabrizio Moroni) back home to Mexico.
Fidel has taken up with Maj. Charlie Doneghan, who robbed for a cause during the Civil War and now robs for himself.
Stark makes up a tale about a $2 million gold shipment to get Fidel away from the major, then starts the long trek to Mexico.
He thinks he’s rescuing Fidel from the life of an outlaw. What he doesn’t know is that Fidel is his mother’s bastard son. His mother’s husband wants him returned so he can kill him and wipe out a stain on the family name.
As the trek progresses Stark and Fidel strike up an uncanny friendship, even though Fidel keeps trying to give Stark the slip and Stark is doing his best to hold onto the young man for the $5,000 he’s been offered to complete the job.
The film boils down to a prolonged game of cat and mouse between hired gun Stark and the young man he’s sent to bring home — a young man, by the way, who seems far too kind-hearted to be a bandit.
Some of the twists during their long journey are clever. Most clever of all is the twist once Stark completes his mission. But then the filmmakers go and spoil it for the sake of the most unlikely of happy endings given what has just transpired.
The presence of Keenan Wynn and his gang of not-so-dastardly outlaws doesn’t help matters. They come across as more goofy than cutthroat.
Directed by:
Bruno Corbucci
Cast:
Brian Kelly … Chad Stark
Fabrizio Moroni … Fidel
as Fred Munroe
Keenan Wynn … Maj. Charlie Doneghan
Luigi Bonos … Sgt. Washington Peck
Folco Lulli … Don Hernando Gutierrez
Linda Sini … Dona Sol Gutierrez
as Virginia Field
Rik Battaglia … Maj. Norton
as Fred Austin
Giovanni Pallavicino … York, banker
Erika Blanc .. Sally
Lino Desmond … Londonberry
Also with: Enzo Andronico, Furio Meniconi, Krista Nell, Ignazio Leone as Clive Stancon, Manuel Muñiz as Pajarito, Roland Bartrop, Lina Franchi as Bonnie Miles, Osiride Pevarello, Bruno Arié, Arlene Saunders
aka:
Spara, Gringo, Spara
Shoot, Gringo, Shoot
Rainbow
Shoot, Django, Shoot
Score:
Richard Ira Silver
Runtime: 88 min.
Memorable lines:
Chad Stark, who was about to be hanged before Don Hernando orders his men to cut the ropes: “You’ve changed your mind?”
Don Hernando: “Often providence alters destiny.”
Don Hernando to Stark: “You prefer whiskey or tequila?”
Stark: “What are you having?”
Don Hernando: “Tequila.”
Stark: “Whiskey.”
Maj. Doneghan, explaining his post-war enterprise: “I’m a born soldier, but that drunken Grant wouldn’t even promote me to corporal. I fought one war to make funds for the government. Now I’m fighting another one to make funds for me.”
Sheriff: “Hold your fire, numskulls. You aren’t going to scare a madman.”
Fidel, after Stark shoots holes in their water bag in the middle of the desert: “You’ve gone crazy. Now we’re both going to die.”
Stark: “Well, it’s nice to have the company.”
Trivia:
A couple different names appear in the credits as director of this Spaghetti — Frank Corlish and Billy Michaels. They are pseudonyms for Bruno Corbucci, brother of prolific Spaghetti director Sergio Corbucci.
Brian Kelly, the star here, gained famed as the perfect dad in the Flipper TV series in the mid-1960s. His film career ended a year after this film was released as his right arm and leg were paralyzed in a motorcycle crash.