
The unlucky trio are the first to arrive at the establishment on this night, and they're greeted and served by bartender Razor Charlie, Danny Trejo reprising his role from the first film, not to be confused with Razor Eddie, the bartender he played in part 2. The place that will eventually become The Titty Twister, as seen in the other two movies. A bar/inn/brothel called La Tetilla del Diablo. Eventually, they come to a building in the middle of nowhere. and she is receptive to the idea.Īfter the failed robbery, Bierce and the Newlies take the stagecoach as far as they can go into the desert, but it eventually becomes bogged down in the sand, forcing them to get out and walk. By the time he has gotten back to his gang's hideout, he is obviously looking for her to be a love interest rather than a hostage. Madrid is also deeply smitten with Esmeralda. The fact that Reece saved his life means nothing when she gives an insulting description of his lifestyle, he leaves her hanging by the neck in a cemetery.
#FROM DUSK TILL DAWN 3 DRIVER#
He thinks nothing of killing the stagecoach driver and his partner, guys who were just doing their job and trying to keep their passengers safe, but chooses to let Ambrose Bierce live because of his noble intentions.
#FROM DUSK TILL DAWN 3 CODE#
He has a code of honor, but is willing to kill anyone who gets in his way. As it turns out, the thing of value that Bierce is bringing to Pancho Villa is his own life.Īs portrayed by Marco Leonardi, Johnny Madrid is at turns fun to watch and unnerving. The outlaws kill the coach's driver and shotgun rider, then ransack Bierce and the Newlie's belongings looking for anything worth stealing. Madrid and his gang, with Esmeralda in tow, catch up with the stagecoach, their highway robbery interrupting the debates the missionary passengers and the atheistic Bierce have been having about the merits of religion. Reece wants to be an outlaw, she wants to get into the life by being Madrid's apprentice, and she tries to prove her dedication by tipping him off to the fact that the stagecoach headed Tierra Negra way might be loaded with gold - she overheard Bierce say he was taking something of great value to Pancho Villa. who turns out to be a filthy young woman. While the hangman leads a group out into the desert on Madrid's trail, Madrid takes back control of his old gang from a traitorous cohort and is soon joined by Reece, the filthy young man who saved his life. He'd rather see Esmeralda dead than with Madrid. That stops the authorities from shooting at him, but it doesn't stop the hangman from continuing to fire shots. He steals a horse, and while making his escape from this town, grabs the hangman's daughter and takes her hostage. When Madrid's boots hit the ground, blades pop out from the tips, blades which come in handy as he runs and kicks his way to freedom. But before the rope can snap the outlaw's neck, the scrawny, filthy young man who has been hanging out around the village for the last couple days pulls off an expert sniper shot and shoots the rope in half. He pulls the lever that activates the trap door Madrid stands on. Once the hangman has beaten the pair to his satisfaction, he gets the show on the road and gets the noose around Madrid's neck. When she refuses, he has her brought up onto the gallows for a whipping of her own. Mid-beating, the hangman spots his daughter Esmeralda in the crowd and orders her to go home. When Madrid has a negative response to the hangman's taunts, the executioner delays the hanging long enough to dole out a beating with a whip. Madrid is led to the gallows where the hangman awaits, seeming way too eager to carry out this killing. He joined the army of famed revolutionary general Pancho Villa as an observer, and the last time anyone ever heard from him was a letter to a friend written on December 26, 1913. A 1913 tour of the battlefields he had fought on around fifty years earlier led him to crossing the border into Mexico, a country that was experiencing its own Civil War at the time, the Mexican Revolution. Bierce had served in the military and fought in the Civil War for several years.

Michael Parks, who played ill-fated Texas Ranger Earl McGraw in the opening sequence of the first film, takes the lead of the third as a completely different character - American author Ambrose Bierce, who disappeared in Mexico at the age of seventy-one. Shot back-to-back in South Africa with Scott Spiegel's From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money, From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman's Daughter is a prequel to the original From Dusk Till Dawn, one which takes the interesting approach of tying a real historical figure into its story.
