A bandit with a price on his head, is seen this time blind for revenge. He thinks that the British have massacred his people, his family, his wife and child. But he is wrong. Only the little romantic daughter of his enemy, overflowing with pity for him, could open his eyes to the truth.
TV Guide wrote, "it's all chase and melodrama with little care for characterizations."[5]
The Radio Times called it a "very silly Northwest Frontier romp, with Victor Mature in dark make-up as Kasim Khan ... romantic interest from forgotten starlet Anne Aubrey and some wince-inducing comic mugging from Anthony Newley. Quite a lot of money was thrown at it, but this remains a B-movie at heart."[6]
Sky Movies called the film "a fiery 19th century adventure yarn that makes little sense but bulges with action that keeps coming at you."[7]
References
^"'Bandit' Will Screen". Los Angeles Times. 22 April 1959. p. A10.
^"The Bandit of Zhobe". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 1 February 2024.