Sunday, May 4, 2008

Review of Lemonade Joe

In a rowdy Arizona town, Doug Badman runs a seedy whiskey den overflowing with trigger-happy ruffians and all manner of vice. Tornado Lou dances on stage and provides other services upstairs. Outside, in the dusty Old West town, lawlessness prevails. Only a single preacher and his daughter Winnifred, a devout temperance campaigner, attempt to stem the tide. Both Lou and Winnifred pine for a champion on which to bestow their love, much to the frustration of the lustful Badman. The stage is set for a hero to come in a clean up the town in this all-American 1930’s musical western.

[Image: (Top) Doug Badman and (Bottom) his newly arrived nemesis.]

Except that this isn’t America or the 1930’s. It’s Czechoslovakia circa 1964. You’re watching “Lemonade Joe,” a Czech New Wave satire of American westerns!

Lemonade Joe is a yellow-clad cowboy with a good-natured grin, a hunger for justice and a thirst for Kolaloka lemonade. But is his brand of gun-slinging do-goodery literally just a brand? The clear-cut morality of white-hat vs. black-hat westerns is suddenly not as simple as it seems when Joe is revealed to be a sales representative of the Kolaloka Company, ousting their main competitor, whiskey, under the guise of reform.

It hardly bothers Winnifred that her knight-in-yellow-leather is a traveling salesman nor does director Oldrich Lipsky ever flinch from treating Joe as anything but the valorous hero worthy of song that such films require. Joe’s adventures, particularly his battle with Doug Badman and his villainous brother, the magician Hogofogo, are a fair bit more surreal and anarchic than your typical John Ford feature, but Oldritch is hilariously loyal to the outward look and sound of classic-era westerns.

[Images: Hogofogo puts to practice all sorts of parlor room chicanery to outwit Lemonade Joe, including offering artificial arms to be cuffed by the self-appointed Sheriff. After shooting him with his real hand, Hogofogo uses the artificial limb for general creepiness.]

Oldrich lenses the film in slightly-faded black-and-white, color-tinted by the old-school rules of silent cinema: sepia outdoors, blue at night, red for romance, etc. The musical numbers are belted out with over-the-top gusto, lending operatic pomp to even the most trivial remark. The overture theme is particularly amusing, garbling Czech and pseudo-English without regard to grammar or meaning in a shameless acknowledgement that the lyrics aren’t important anyway.

[Images: Note the varying tone for indoor versus outdoor. Unfortunately Facet’s release, from which my screenshots are derived, is in a cripplingly cropped aspect ratio. The original 1:2.45 is itself an object of humor that lampoons the landscape-luxurious Cinemascope westerns of the 1950’s.]

Yet such is the nature of Czech New Wave ambitions that Oldritch indulges in endless virtuosity, investing the tired genre with new life. The film’s exhilarating plot contortions, exaggerated situations and nearly random camera-chaos is like the Marx Brothers meets “A Hard Day’s Night” or something akin to a Wild West version of Godard’s “Pierrot le fou.” An elaborate jump-cut-strewn shootout with Hogofogo playing the trumpet while in blackface and a white suit is particularly memorable.

Oldrich also explores several interesting special effects that link it to “Who Wants to Kill Jesse?” and the circus sequence from “The Cassandra Cat.” (Czech films show an interest in mixed-media possibilities, popular in the static arts of the 1960’s, more so than other countries.) There is a flashback done using cartoon stills, a nested tale using crude blue-screen, a comical fata morgana (mirage) sequence using matte shots and a scene where Doug Badman blows numerical smoke rings to tip off his brother during a poker game.

[Images: Some of the many visual experiments and special effects in “Lemonade Joe.”]

No Czech New Wave film would be complete without a political dimension, and “Lemonade Joe” is no exception. The underlying critique of collusion between capitalist forces and government is central to Oldrich’s satire. Kolaloka is clearly an anagrammed stand-in for Coca Cola, itself a symbol of American consumer culture. Joe’s role as a spokesperson for the beverage often times grinds the action to a halt for commercial-like endorsements, and I can’t help appreciating it as a prescient parody of product placement.

The film intentionally adopts all sorts of moral and ethical contradictions, a frequent complaint of the “vigilante justice” westerns that still stirs debate today. From an outsider’s perspective the “traditional values” on display in any given John Wayne film must have looked downright hypocritical. The East European skepticism leaks through the lining in several exchanges of dialogue: “What’s good for Kolaloka is good for the law” being the most overt example. The incorporation of the American frontier is also skewered by the ultimate punishment: not death, but signing a contract. Near the end, Kolaloka tries to recruit Hogofogo, brushing off his criminal record by telling him that “Our business needs all kinds of talent.”

[Image: It must have really amused Oldrich to cast Playboy model Olga Schoberova (Jesse of “Who Wants to Kill Jesse?”) as the saintly evangelist Winnifred, Joe’s love interest and an exaggerated symbol of virginal goodness.]

[SPOILER paragraph] The ending of the film is in perfect sync with the satire, providing one of the most hilariously overdone happily-ever-after finales. Birthmarks reveal that Lemonade Joe, Tornado Lou, Doug Badman and Hogofogo are all siblings, separated as infants from their father, the founder of Kolaloka, during a hurricane. It seems like little more than tragic irony since they have already killed each other off, but Joe magically reappears in perfect health to reveal that Kolaloka also cures death! With the whole family revived and united, their father gives his blessing to Joe and Winnifred’s marriage, thrusting his cane in the ground with happiness and striking oil. Winnifred discovers gold a few feet away and a man runs in from off-screen to announce that Kolaloca stock has just surpassed a billion dollars.

“Lemonade Joe” may not have the universal appeal of “Who Wants to Kill Jesse?” but it will please anyone with an interest in westerns, an absurdist sense of humor and a taste for technical eccentricity. As a western satire this is far ahead of “Destry Rides Again” or “Blazing Saddles,” though for a viable attempt at revisionism you’ll have to look elsewhere. I’ve been enjoying Spaghetti westerns for a while now, but I’ve had little experience with so-called Osterns (aka, Red Westerns or Eastern Westerns) so I can’t comment on how it stacks up against others. Resorting to comparisons might be misguided anyway, given how unique and free-wheeling this film is.

Walrus Rating: 8.0

[Image: Vladimir Mensik, Czech character actor extraordinaire, pops up yet again, this time as a mustachioed bartender.]

6 comments:

Mad Dog said...

Reading the ending made me laugh out loud at work.

FilmWalrus said...

It is so dead-on about the arbitrary good fortune in light-weight westerns.

And there is still plenty of reason to see the ending yourself, since I left out one more scene the comes after. All I'll say is that it involves animation and portmanteau.

Anonymous said...

"laugh out loud" is what my grandfather used to say when he meant "lol".

Anonymous said...

You watched the pan and scan version.

FilmWalrus said...

I watched the Facets release which is actually not even pan and scanned; it's just outright cropped. I love the movie, but I won't buy it until I can find it in the correct aspect ratio.

Hana - Marmota said...

I grew up watching this film about once a year. As a small child, I took the good vs. bad literally and rooted for Joe like I would for a hero in a fairy tale.
Later I figured it was a parody, and enjoyed it even more.

My favourite character has always been the glass-and-wood-eating gunfighter. Grimpo is his name, I think. I like the absurdity of his character...