Duel of Fire

1962·Italy·85 min.
Duel of Fire
Non rated
Available on
None platform

The young sister of protagonist Fernando Lamas rejects the advances of a middle-aged baron (who boasts of having had every girl in the village!) and leaves her home on a stagecoach, which is then waylaid by outlaws – the passengers are all killed but not before she has been gang-raped! Lamas, knowing the reason why she had tried to start a new life elsewhere, sets out on his revenge by first eliminating the lecherous nobleman (after literally playing a game of hide and seek with him during a religious procession!). His plan to get even with the desperadoes, however, is more elaborate – as he determines to infiltrate the outfit and learn the names of every man responsible for his sister's violent death; to this end, he finds an unexpected ally in British lady journalist Lisa Gastoni (less showy than either of the other roles for Lenzi that I have just watched her in, namely QUEEN OF THE SEAS {1961} and MESSALINA VS. THE SON OF HERCULES {1964}) intent on interviewing – and, by extension, bestowing celebrity upon – the group. Anyway, the hero's baptism of fire sees him single-handedly liberate one of their number from the gallows; besides, he falls for the redheaded sister (played by Liana Orfei) of another member. Before long, the true nature of both Lamas and Gastoni are discovered: the latter is shot dead in cold blood, but he is hounded all over the plains by his would-be cohorts (the title presumably refers to his showdown with the mob leader) and, unsurprisingly, the girl sides with her lover in the matter (even if he is forced to kill her own sibling). The last act, then, acquires Shakespearean overtones (specifically "Hamlet") – as the dusty ground becomes riddled with corpses, including the romantic couple expiring in each others' arms.