Tequila Joe

1968
5.9| 1h30m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 05 April 1968 Released
Producted By: CR Cinematografica
Country: Italy
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A young deputy tries to sober and revitalize a washed up, alcoholic sheriff to take down a pair of warring gangs of criminals in the Old West.

Genre

Western

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Director

Enzo Dell'Aquila

Production Companies

CR Cinematografica

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Tequila Joe Audience Reviews

Supelice Dreadfully Boring
ThedevilChoose When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
Joanna Mccarty Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
Logan By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Leofwine_draca I found this spaghetti western a bit slow and a bit hard work at the same time. It's certainly serviceable enough by genre standards, but it doesn't really do much in the way that's new and everything you see is quite familiar. The best spaghetti westerns have suspense and tension throughout, along with fast-paced plots that give you little time to reflect on the familiarity of what you're watching. Not so here.The one twist the film has is that the two main character roles are switched. The hero of the piece is a young and inexperienced guy while the old sheriff is washed up and past it. Usually we see the old guy teaching the young guy the ropes, but not here. The plot plays out quite as you'd expect through till the end, with some YOJIMBO-style rival gang action to fulfil the action quotient. The acting is quite average but Enzo Dell'Aquila stages the climatic action with aplomb.
nedeljkodjukic88 First to notice - Dragomir Bojanić Gidra is from Serbia, not Croatia, as written in one otherwise very good review of this movie. He had a good role in this one, but from other spaghetti westerns in which he had a leading role, I would recommend 'Ballata per un pistolero' and 'The Last Killer'. Here as Tequila Joe, skillful lawman who lost his sharpness and courage (and faith in law) due to partly mysterious event from his past, and now all he tries to do is find peace of mind by being constantly drunk. Gidra still shows more than in his other westerns because here his character has to slowly transform back to righteous, resolute, adamant sheriff, or at least close to it, at the very end of the movie. Great actor such as Gidra was, suited that much better.
Steve Nyland (Squonkamatic) Once you get down to brass tacks Enzo D'ellAquia's TEQUILA JOE is pretty much an Italiano budget line take on Howard Hawks' RIO BRAVO and more specifically EL DORADO, the 1967 film where the Duke and James Caan ride into town to help drunkard sheriff Robert Mitchum fend off Christopher George and his gang of hired guns as they try to drive chesty Michelle Carey and her family off their land.Italian genre cinema favorite Fernando di Leo essentially pared the plot ideas for EL DORADO down to their bare minimum, compressing the Wayne, Caan, and Carey characters down into Jean Sobieski's Deputy Bert, young and inexperienced but fast on the draw and more idealistic than the man he's trying to help rehabilitate. Which would be Croatian actor Anthony Gidra's "Tequila Joe", a small town sheriff who has given himself up to drink and neglect after a personal tragedy.Things come to a head when it's revealed that the town bosses had a hand in that tragedy, and that Sobieski's character has a very personal stake in seeing them brought to justice that only becomes clear during the final showdown as the two lawmen take on the bad guys in a sprawling, bloody gunfight. Unless of course you've seen more than five of these things and figure it out the minute you see the two standing side by side. Took me about half the first reel.Sobieski is somewhat wooden as the novice but highly skilled younger gunfighter, bearing more than a passing resemblance to John Phillip Law that can hardly be an accident. The real show is Gidra's conflicted and self tortured drunken sheriff. He may not have had the range as an actor that came so natural to Robert Mitchum but he is fabulous as the forlorn, grizzled, regret-filled veteran who completely resents the younger man's efforts to help him. Gidra's face has a kind of quiet hurt to it that is well served by the role: His characters are almost always thoughtful and melancholy, and he shines in some of the scenes of introspection where Joe is forced to concede that he really is washed up & unable to cope with the threat even if he wanted to. It's also interesting to see the reverse of the Lee Van Cleef effect of an older veteran taking a younger gunslinger under his wing to show him the ropes. Rather it's the younger guy who has to show the bewildered older lawman why he should care by putting them both in a situation where they have everything to lose, since all they have left in the world is each other.It's also a far less boisterous film than either of the Howard Hawks movies, with the bulk of the movie set indoors with people talking to each other. Like most Anthony Gidra spaghettis the tone of the film is rather dry if not downright serious with a lack of the paste-in comic relief roles usually found in an Italian made western. Gidra's agent must have had a contract claus forbidding comedy. The movie is still stylishly photographed with that Holodeck look of un-reality that makes 1968 such an interesting year for spaghetti westerns; everybody looks like they are wearing a costume except for Gidra, who looks like he just rolled out of his cot. Fans will be delighted.7/10