Hellfire is a straightforward 1988-set neo-Western action-thriller featuring a haunted ex-Green Beret drifter (Stephen Lang) who arrives in a corrupt small Texas border town dominated by a ruthless crime boss (Harvey Keitel) and buffoonish sheriff (Dolph Lundgren), ultimately delivering brutal retribution to liberate the oppressed locals. The storytelling adheres rigidly to classic tropes of the mysterious stranger avenger, homaging Eastwood's Man With No Name and 1980s action like Rambo and Road House, with a slow-build tension exploding into visceral third-act violence. Casting prioritizes grizzled male action stars in lead roles, with organic supporting diversity (e.g., Johnny Yong Bosch as martial artist Zeke, Maurice Compte as Salvadore) fitting a border town setting without narrative emphasis or justification needed. Themes center on traditional notions of faith, doubt, redemption, Vietnam trauma, and spiritual reckoning through violence portrayed as righteous justice against moral rot and tyranny—no DEI mandates, identity politics, systemic oppression narratives tied to race/gender/sexuality, or critiques of traditional norms. There are no lectures, pronoun usage, LGBTQ+ elements, or activist intent from director Isaac Florentine or writer Richard Lowry; reception praises it as a refreshing no-nonsense gritty throwback unburdened by modern Hollywood preachiness, with zero backlash labeling it 'woke' or citing ideological intrusions.