Sabata soon learned that his "mysterious savior" was none other than the killer himself, Jim Sparrow.
At the trial, the four crooked witnesses sealed Sabata's fate. The judge slammed down his gavel, sentencing the innocent rancher to hang. Wanted Sabata (1970)
His friends and family urged him to ride hard for the Mexican border. But Sabata was not a man who ran. He strapped on his gun belt and stayed in Texas to clear his name. 🦅 The Hunter's Twisted Game Sabata soon learned that his "mysterious savior" was
Sparrow's hand twitched. He went for his gun with blinding speed, but Sabata was faster. Sabata's revolver barked twice. The first bullet shattered Sparrow's wrist; the second pierced his chest. His friends and family urged him to ride
Sabata sat in his cell, listening to the carpenters hammer together the wooden gallows outside. But in the dead of night, a shadowy figure crept to the jailhouse window and slipped a heavy iron revolver through the bars. Sabata used the weapon to overpower the guards and escape into the moonlit desert.
As Sparrow lay dying in the dust, the local sheriff—who had been secretly following the trail of bodies and finally witnessed Sparrow's true nature—stepped out from the shadows. Seeing the truth with his own eyes, the sheriff holstered his weapon and nodded at the rancher. Sabata was finally a free man. Wanted Sabata (1970) - Roberto Mauri - Letterboxd
Regretting the sale, Sparrow began poisoning Sabata’s water holes to ensure the rancher couldn't make his final $1,000 payment. When Sparrow's own brother stumbled upon this treachery and tried to stop him, Sparrow didn't hesitate. He pulled his revolver and gunned his brother down in cold blood. Hearing the shots, Sabata rushed to the dying man's side. Before the brother could utter the killer's name, he died in Sabata's arms—just as Sparrow and four paid-off witnesses arrived at the scene. ⛓️ The Setup and The Frame