Lemonade Joe
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Oldrich Lipský
Karel Fiala
Milo¿ Kopecký
Kveta Fialová
Olga Schoberová
Rudolf Deyl
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In Arizona, Lemonade Joe, a singing cowboy, rides into the Trigger Whiskey Saloon and rescues Winifred Goodman and her missionary father from a band of hard-drinking gunslingers. A teetotaler who derives his strength from Kolaloka lemonade, Joe establishes Winifred and her father as the proprietors of a rival tavern serving only soft drinks. But their competitors, Doug and Horace Badman, stage a shoot-out, kill the sheriff, and restore normal business at their saloon. After Lemonade Joe has saved Winifred from being ravaged in the cemetery by the lecherous Horace, it is disclosed that Joe is the western sales representative for Kolaloka and Son. Before he can resume his battle against the Badman brothers, he is tricked into drinking whiskey and passes out. The next day Winifred is kidnaped and carried into the desert. Joe gives chase but is once more fooled into mistaking whiskey for lemonade. While he is unconscious, his white attire is spattered with jam by the villains. Shocked by the injustice, local dancehall girl Tornado Lou kills Joe's tormentors and sets him free. The final confrontation occurs in the cemetery, where all but Joe and Winifred meet their deaths. Only then does Joe learn--by means of identical birthmarks--that the Badman brothers and Tornado Lou are his brothers and sister. Suddenly, Mr. Kolaloka (the father of the brood) appears and restores his dead offspring to life with his lemonade elixir. With peace and family unity renewed, Lemonade Joe and Winifred ride off into the sunset.
Director
Oldrich Lipský
Cast
Karel Fiala
Milo¿ Kopecký
Kveta Fialová
Olga Schoberová
Rudolf Deyl
Bohu¿ Záhorský
Josef Hlinomaz
Karel Effa
Waldemar Matu¿ka
Eman Fiala
Vladimír Men¿ík
Jirí Lír
Jirí Steimar
Jaroslav ¿tercl
Oldrich Luke¿
Alois Dvorský
Milo¿ Nedbal
Jaroslav Mare¿
Antonín ¿ura
Rudolf Cortéz
Stanislav Litera
Viktor Ocásek
Ruda Princ
Milo¿ Vavru¿ka
Jan Pohan
Stella Zázvorková
Vlastimil Bedrna
Lubomír Bryg
Stanislaw Navrátil
Ladislav Gzela
Antonín Jedlicka
Jaroslav Klenot
Jirí Jelínek
Jirí Schulz
Jirí Lánský
Václav ¿tekl
Bretislav Dolej¿i
Karel Engel
Vladimír Erlebach
Jirí Hanzl
Václav Havelka
Gustav Jankovský
Jan Kasík
Jaroslav Maran
R. Rademachr
Sobeslav Sejk
Zdenek Srstka
J. ¿tastny
Jaroslav Tetiva
Jaroslav Tomsa
K. Vítek
Ludvík Wolf
Lubomír Zácek
Yvetta Simonová
Jarmila Veselá
Karel Gott
Crew
Vratislav Blazek
Jirí Brdecka
Jirí Brdecka
Jirí Brdecka
Jirí Brdecka
Jirí Brdecka
Bohumír Brunclík
Miroslav Hájek
Vlastimil Hála
Marie Hejzlarová
Emil Hora
Antonín Jedlicka
Jaroslav Jílovec
Jan Knákal
Jirí Knotek
Milo¿ Kohout
Josef Konícek
Pavel Kopta
Jaroslav Koucký
Renée Lavecká
Oldrich Lipský
Ludvík Malý
Sandra Markham
Vladimír Novotný
Vladimír Novotný
Milo¿ Petrolín
Bretislav Pojar
Jan Rychlík
Jan Rychlík
Milo¿ Stejskal
Tomá¿ Svoboda
Tele-net International
Jirí Trnka
Jack Trop Films
Fernand Vácha
Josef Vlcek
Adolf Werner
Karel ¿kvor
Jitka ¿ulcová
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Lemonade Joe - LEMONADE JOE - Czech Filmmaker Oldrich Lipsky's Parody of American Westerns on DVD
In Arizona, Lemonade Joe (Karel Fiala), a singing cowboy, rides into the Trigger Whiskey Saloon and rescues a damsel and her missionary father from a band of hard-drinking, gunslinging goons. A teetotaler who derives his strength from Kolaloka lemonade (actually what Americans would call a soft drink, hence the 'cola' sound in "Kolaloka"), Joe establishes the damsel and her father as the proprietors of a rival tavern serving only soft drinks. But their competitors, Doug and Horace Badman (distant cousins to the Soviet Boris Badenov, perhaps?), force Lemonade Joe to confront the villains in a cemetery shoot-out.
Lemonade Joe opens with the message, "This film is dedicated to the rough diamond heroes of the Wild West who avenged wrongs and defended the law." The entire film is an equally sweet valentine to old-fashioned Westerns, totally unlike what Sergio Leone, Anthony Mann, Sam Peckinpah, and John Ford in his later years were doing with the genre. It is obviously indebted to the B-Westerns of Hopalong Cassidy, the straight-shooting heroics of William S. Hart and Tom Mix, and the singing cowboy movies of Gene Autrey and Roy Rogers. But it also makes many funny allusions to other classic Westerns. There is a villain who bears a resemblance to John Carradine in Stagecoach (1939), and Joe's tasseled, beige outfit brings to mind Alan Ladd in Shane (1953). One of the characters has a scene next to a cemetery plot - a classic John Ford element. And in a sight nod to one of the American Western's most famous shooting locales, Lemonade Joe rides through a "valley of monuments" such as the great pyramids, the Sphinx, the Parthenon and London Bridge. Even John Ford might've cracked a smile at that gag.
The screenplay was written by Jiri Brdecka, who wrote original stories with Lemonade Joe as the hero in the early 1940s, then adapted them into a stage play in 1946. He was also a leading writer and director of animated film and had scripted a puppet Western parody called Songs of the Prairie (1946). There are many cartoon elements in the film; dotted lines showing the trajectory of Joe's bullets; sight gags, such as a sign advertising the Acme Tool Company; smoke rings providing secret clues in a card game; and the absurd change in the speed of the action. Director Oldrich Lipský was a large part of this comic fusion of genres. He was a veteran in comedies, and worked with a number of leading Czech comic writers, including Milos Macourek (Gentlemen, I Have Killed Einstein, 1969) and Zdenek Sverak, author of Kolya (1996), Joachim, Put It In the Machine (1974) and Marecek, Pass Me a Pen (1976). Lipsky also worked with Jiri Brdecka on Adela Hasn't Had Supper Yet and A Mystery Castle in the Carpathians (1981).
Unfortunately for this little-known gem, Facets Video's DVD release is a splotchy mess. The subtitles are scattershot and there is no option to remove them, the transfer is diffused with bad positioning of the letterboxed image make things even worse. The bare-bones menu screen has as the only options "Start Movie" and "Scene Selection," the latter listed on the box as a "Special Feature"! Supposedly, there is an all-region DVD release of Lemonade Joe that is a much better presentation with numerous extra features. Regardless of Facets sub-standard DVD release, Lemonade Joe is unexpected fun.
For more information about Lemonade Joe, visit Facets Multimedia. To order Lemonade Joe, go to TCM Shopping.
by Scott McGee
Lemonade Joe - LEMONADE JOE - Czech Filmmaker Oldrich Lipsky's Parody of American Westerns on DVD
Quotes
Allow me to introduce my collaborators. This is Coyote Kid, and this is Pancho Kid.- Hogo Fogo
I do not care for your kids.- Lemonade Joe
Pah!- Hogo Fogo
Did you say... 'Pah', stranger?- Sherriff
Yes, 'Pah'!- Hogo Fogo
'Pah' to the Kolaloka Lemonade?- Goodman
Yes, 'Pah' to the Kolaloka Lemonade!- Hogo Fogo
I have returned. And with me comes the law!- Lemonade Joe
More like, the Kola Loka.- Hogo Fogo
The Kola Loka is the law.- Lemonade Joe
No, that I do not.- Lemonade Joe
Are nights cold here?- Lemonade Joe
Pardon?- Musician
I ask whether nights are cold here.- Lemonade Joe
Yes.- Musician
Then I ought to take... warm underwear!- Lemonade Joe
Trivia
Notes
Released in Czechoslovakia in October 1964 as Limonádový Joe (alternative title: Konská opera); running time: 99 min.