I caught this film when it played at the Biola Film Festival a couple years back, and I'm happy to see it up on the IMDb. I enjoyed it quite a bit, although the guy behind me couldn't stop laughing during the serious parts (this was super annoying, since the whole movie was one big serious part). In fact, it was my second favorite film in competition that year (I can't remember the name of my favorite piece; it's the one where the guy finds the paper bag full of money and steals the girl's ice cream cone). I thought the visuals had a nice, vivid quality to them (especially the outdoor stuff), and the music was magnificent (love that harmonica!). If the film has a major flaw, it's the confusing storyline. I had no idea what was going on (for example, why the kid wanted to kill his friend or why he wanted to be a gunslinger in the first place). Plus, there was no emotion in it. Maybe if the film had older, more experienced actors to lend it authenticity...
But I thought the gunfight was really well staged and exciting; the director obviously has a flair this kind of thing. If only the film didn't take itself so seriously! Instead of bringing something new or interesting to the western genre, it just sort of recycles a lot of clichés for the sake of an entertaining show. There's nothing wrong with that, really, as long as the filmmakers realize they're borrowing from the best (Sergio Leone and all those guys). My wife liked it more than I did; I think she even cried during the final scene. She's so amusing.