Marshal Flagg, an older lawman who is ready to retire, receives word that his old foe, the outlaw McKaye, has returned to the town and is preparing a heist of the local bank. It is revealed that McKaye has been replaced as the gang's head by the youth Waco, who regards McKaye as nothing more than an aged, decrepit old man. Waco tells Mackaye to shoot Flagg, and when Mackaye refuses, Waco abandons the two of them in the middle of nowhere. Upon returning to town, Flagg discovers that he has been "retired," and upon witnessing the new marshal and city fathers' cluelessness and incompetence he convinces Mackaye that it is up to the two of them to stop Waco and his gang from destroying the town.
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Marshal Flagg, an older lawman who is ready to retire, receives word that his old foe, the outlaw McKaye, has returned to the town and is preparing a heist of the local bank. It is revealed that McKaye has been replaced as the gang's head by the youth Waco, who regards McKaye as nothing more than an aged, decrepit old man. Waco tells Mackaye to shoot Flagg, and when Mackaye refuses, Waco abandons the two of them in the middle of nowhere. Upon returning to town, Flagg discovers that he has been "retired," and upon witnessing the new marshal and city fathers' cluelessness and incompetence he convinces Mackaye that it is up to the two of them to stop Waco and his gang from destroying the town.
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