Lemonade
Lemonade
| 24 April 2015 (USA)
Lemonade Trailers

So begins an entertaining road story where we witness two brothers with different cultural backgrounds, who don't even know each other, have similarities, differences and even their fights.

Reviews
AshUnow

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

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Orla Zuniga

It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review

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Kien Navarro

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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Sabah Hensley

This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama

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efffigie

I really, really liked this movie. I caught it on Netflix (USA) in the category of Turkish comedies, but it's actually anything but Turkish or really a comedy, although parts of it are an absolute riot. It's a road movie about the Balkans in general and Macedonia in particular, and although not 'sweeping' or pretentious, is one of the best movies about the Balkans I've ever seen. It initially seems to feature a kind of nervous, awkward, almost child-like guy trying, with a notable lack of any social skills, trying to transport his long-lost, drunken, profane, and violently recalcitrant brother to their father's deathbed from Istanbul to Macedonia. The road part is diverting and often screamingly funny, involving a Gypsy wedding, outsized tires, and, in a sequence that almost put me out my chair, the 'Turkish' brother's inability to read Cyrillica road signs getting them lost in such an absurd way I just couldn't handle it at all. I had to stop the movie to catch my breath. The sense of absurdity that permeates the Balkans is on full display, here, and if it's not your thing, then it's not your thing: but it is my thing, and I loved it all. Funny, funny stuff. It's the second part of the movie that took me totally by surprise and that I found deeply moving. I was expecting a kind of more-or-less typical Turkish-style comedy overdone 'family reunion' (not that those kind of movies aren't funny), but instead got something much more meaningful. It was going somewhere I couldn't quite figure out, and then came the scene where the two newly-met brothers eat a meal in a local restaurant and learn about each other, and I was just... blown away. I'm not sure I've ever before seen anything quite like it. The 'awkward' brother is revealed as a deeply responsible, moral, decent, and terribly damaged guy trying to truly do the right thing. The sense of the 'Turkish' brother being a kind of missing piece of the family puzzle was extremely moving; his homecoming to a place he's never been before is so perfect and understated it's stuck with me in a way few movies do. Maybe I'm the only one who found the messy, troublesome, but genuinely heartfelt reunion of this family emotionally devastating; I hope not. This movie would make an interesting double bill with BEFORE THE RAIN, it's that good. A lot of it's comedic but when it gets powerful, it's really powerful. Also, the early scenes of what you might call a 'mosque-crawl' are well worth the price of admission; it's some funny material: "I'm prune-y from ablutions!"

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Rebeltune

Limonata is a movie you will enjoy a lot if you have sympathy for road trip movies . It contains drama and mostly comedy . Fantastic cinematography!I think that as a director Ali Atay is very promising and just wanted to congratulate him for his good work in his first movie and contribution to the Turkish cinema.

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umuturkel

According to me it is a movie that you can watch it without bored or looking the how many minutes it has left. I kinda like it because i am not totally stranger to the this movie and its atmosphere, the relationship between people, the middle class people who have both happiness and sadness in their heart. The movie contains both drama and comedy but we mostly see the comedy side, even in the sad scenes the director lets us to be happy, lets us to see part be smiling at. But deep inside let us to feel dramatic.besides that we see in the movie we also see how Balkans are, how they treat other people. of course it is not about that but for me it is important detail. anyway. good cast, good acting.Good cast, good acting.

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ilker korkutlar

An old long-distance truck driver Suat lives in Macedonia was waiting to die due to a fatal sickness. He asked his son Sakip to find his bastard son from his previous relationship in Istanbul as his last wish. However he hasn't seen his son Selim since he left him while he was a baby. His last wish is seeing his bastard son before his death and asking his forgiveness. Sakip takes his fathers old car and hits the road to Istanbul to find Selim with only an old address and his brother's name with him. You can't help but you feel happy while you're watching this film. The traditional marriage scene in the middle of the movie is fun. Selim is an underachieved man and acceptance that he finds in Macedonia makes you happy.

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