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Derrick Dunn

“Hellfire” review: Stephen Lang burns through a gritty neo‑western

In “Hellfire,” from Saban Films, director Isaac Florentine returns to the muscular, morally complex terrain he knows well, delivering a neo-Western that feels shaped by dust, sweat, and scripture.  Written by Richard Lowry, the film is firmly set in 1988—a deliberate choice that allows isolation to amplify and corruption to spread without the distractions of smartphones or social media.  This is a town sealed off by geography and fear, into which arrives a man who may be more of a reckoning than a resident.

Stephen Lang plays “The Man,” a haunted ex-Green Beret drifter whose arrival disturbs the fragile order maintained by crime boss Jeremiah (Harvey Keitel) and the compromised Sheriff Wiley (Dolph Lundgren).  Lang has always exuded authority, but here he condenses it.  His performance showcases coiled restraint—measured glances, controlled fury, and a voice that seems to have argued with God and survived.

Cinephiles will more than likely see the film.  In the tradition of *Pale Rider* and “High Plains Drifter”, his character exists in a space between the mortal and the myth.  Is he a broken soldier seeking redemption or the frontier’s answer to unanswered prayers?  Florentine wisely allows this ambiguity to persist.

Keitel brings weight to the role of Jeremiah, portraying evil not as flamboyant but as a routine part of daily life.  Lundgren’s Sheriff Wiley embodies brute enforcement, wearing his badge like a knuckle-duster.  Together, they represent a town where justice has been surrendered to intimidation.

Florentine stages the action with clarity and impact, but *Hellfire* is more than just a series of confrontations.  Lowry’s script frames violence as moral arithmetic; every punch and every bullet carries significant consequences.  The 1988 setting heightens that tension; without digital shortcuts, confrontations must happen face to face, and secrets are whispered instead of texted.  It was also a pleasant surprise to see former “Power Rangers” actor Johnny Young Bosch on screen, a nostalgic nod that genre fans will appreciate.

Ultimately, “Hellfire” stands on Lang’s shoulders.  His presence gives the film weight and a sense of inevitability.  In a cinematic landscape filled with noise, this neo-Western opts for something more solid: myth, muscle, and a man who may very well be the last honest thing in a dying town.

Final Grade: B

“HELLFIRE” Is  Available on Digital and On Demand on February 17th

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