When Doc West (Terence Hill), a stranger with a mysterious past, arrives in town and winds up in jail after a poker game goes sour, Sheriff Basehart (Paul Sorvino) decides to ask for his help in fighting the vicious local rancher whose gunmen threaten to overrun the community. Filmed in the rocky desert landscapes of New Mexico, this earnest gun-slinging drama pays tribute to the themes and characters of the classic Hollywood Western.
At the height of his considerable popularity, Terence Hill was one of Italy’s highest-paid stars. A tall, handsome blonde of German-Italian heritage, Hill was born Mario Girotti (he used his birth name onscreen until 1968). Hill was born in Venice but spent the WWII years living in Dresden, Germany. When he was 12, Hill was ‘“discovered” during a swim meet by Italian filmmaker Dino Risi who cast him in Vacanze col Gangster (Holiday for Gangsters) (1951). Through the decade, Hill made occasional film appearances to pay for his education and his interest in motorcycles. He spent three years studying literature at the University of Rome before deciding to become a full-time actor working in films ranging from The Wonders of Aladdin (1961) — the first Hill film to reach the U.S., albeit a decade after its European release — and Luchino Viconti’s Il Gattopardo (The Leopard) (1963). Afterwards, Hill made action films and Westerns in Germany until 1967 when he returned to Italy and appeared… read more