Western heroes usually appear with a variety of armament, capes, spurs and wide-brimmed hats. They don't usually ride into town sporting a pink parasol. But that's exactly what happens in The Stranger Returns (1968) though we'd advise keeping any giggles to yourself. As the ads promised, "Trap Him! Tease Him! Trample Him! - but watch out when the stranger gets mad!"

Let's backtrack a bit. As the movie opens, The Stranger (Tony Anthony) finds a postal inspector dead in the desert. Apparently having little else to do, The Stranger adopts the inspector's identity and heads to the local town. In short order he discovers that a gang of quite ruthless outlaws is planning an elaborate stagecoach robbery. The Stranger decides to foil the robbery or at least grab some loot for himself while enlisting a priest for assistance. But even The Stranger doesn't expect what happens next.

The Stranger Returns is more or less a sequel to A Stranger In Town (1966) though you certainly don't need to have seen the other film for this one to work. (Incidentally, the Italian title Un Uomo, un Cavallo, una Pistola translates as A Man, a Horse, a Gun though it was also released under the title Shoot First, Laugh Last.) There were a total of three Stranger films (the third was 1968's The Silent Stranger), all directed by Luigi Vanzi (or Vance Lewis as he's credited in an early version of the film that tried to hide its Italian origins). Though Vance did second-unit work on Antonioni's classic Il Grido (1957), his career was fairly brief with only a handful of credits.

Faring a little better was star Tony Anthony (yes, his real name as far as we can tell). A West Virginia native, Anthony appeared in several Italian films during this period besides the three Stranger films such as the cult favorite, Blindman (1971) with Ringo Starr. He also starred in the 3-D Comin' at Ya (1981) during the brief spurt of 3-D activity in the early 80s that also produced such never-to-be classics as Parasite (1982), Demi Moore's second film. Anthony provided the story for The Stranger Returns, though he would later write a couple of full screenplays.

Producer: Massimo Gualdi, Roberto Infascelli
Director: Luigi Vanzi
Screenplay: Tony Anthony (story), Bob Enescelle Jr., Giuseppe Mangione
Cinematography: Marcello Masciocchi
Film Editing: Renzo Lucidi
Original Music: Stelvio Cipriani
Cast: Tony Anthony (The Stranger), Daniele Vargas (Good Jim), Marco Guglielmi (The Preacher), Dan Vadis (En Plein), Jill Banner (Caroline), Ettore Manni (Stafford), Marina Berti (Ethel).
C-96m. Letterboxed.

By Lang Thompson