The experienced screenwriter and director Ivo Novák added to the number of films in the 1980s that returned to the era of the First Czechoslovak Republic in a light-hearted fashion. Like Anděl s ďáblem v těle (Angel Devil, 1983) and its sequel Anděl svádí ďbla (Angel Seduces Devil, 1987), Fešák Hubert (Hubert, the Smart Boy) is crowd-pleasing entertainment that relies on the attractive evocation of the “good old days.” The titular protagonist of this film, which was released in the cinemas in 1985, is Hubert Hrabě, known as Fešák (Smart Boy), a Žižkov dandy who is always skirting the edge of the law. Like every likeable rogue, he has a worthy adversary – Police Inspector Mourek, who has long been trying in vain to put him behind bars. However, this defender of justice, who is constantly trying to outsmart his “own” criminal, ends up becoming the victim of his own zeal while hunting forgers that are as good as any in Europe, as Hubert, the smart boy, sets a trap for Mourek. He becomes a popular prototype of a criminal who, in his own peculiar way, punishes injustice on his own “turf.” Hubert’s world is the Prague district of Žižkov and the filmmakers do a wonderful job of recreating this milieu through costumes and locations. Set in the lean years of the Great Depression, the story happily avoids any forced modernisation with its sparkling retro atmosphere. In the style of the American film The Sting (1973) and freely inspired by the Threepenny Opera, Novák and his screenwriter Pavel Hanuš create an old-fashioned idyll in which a dude with Švejk-like qualities must always prevail over a chronically amoral “nobility.” The mainstay of this concept is the man in the title role – Karel Heřmánek, who was then 37 years old (and who appeared in the aforementioned Angel films by Václav Matějka). In the role of Hubert, the much-loved actor created one of his most popular characters. Petr Kostka is a successful foil in the role of Inspector Mourek, and a number of well-known actors and actresses played smaller roles as the distinctive denizens of Žižkov.
The fop Hubert Hrabě nicknamed Adonis, from the Prague downtown lower-class neighborhood of Žižkov, shares a flat with the short mortician Eman Wurm and the hotel Nepraš sleazy doorman, Karel Myšička. He does not work, earning his living in various ways. He has an established "alibi office"; he can gatecrash any wedding as an unknown relative and thus get food and booze for his friends. Inspector Mourek from the police headquarters is after him, but Adonis is very careful. The private detective Špirk asks Hubert to help him follow the philandering young wife of Kropas, the director of the Union Bank. Hubert finds out during the enterprise that Mrs Kropas has become a victim of the moneylender Lón. He punishes Lón in a peculiar way and moreover rips him off at the same time. The vengeful Mourek forces the mortician Eman to report on Adonis, but Eman confesses to Hubert. Mourek casts around two famed counterfeiters wanted all over Europe. Adonis seemingly lets himself be forced by Mourek to collaborate but in fact sets a trap for the unpleasant policeman. He tells him that the counterfeiters can be found in the Žižkov hotel Nepraš. Mourek arrives there with a police escort and indeed arrests two men. It turns out later that one of them is the banker Kropas and the other one is Franz, the valet of Baroness Bramberg, who successfully passes himself off as a schizophrenic. Mourek faces big disgrace. He is punished and transferred as far as to the East of the republic, to the Sub-Carpathian Mukachevo. He wants to catch Adonis before his departure, but fails. Friends transport Adonis in a coffin to a safe place.
The part of the valet Franc was initially assigned to Jiří Sovák. When he withdrew due to illness, the part was taken over by Lubomír Lipský.
žižkovský frajer Hubert Hrabě zvaný Fešák
policejní inspektor Mourek
funebrák Eman Wurm
hotelový portýr Karel Myšička zvaný Kadlouš
Voice by Eva Hudečková
Růža Nejedlová, Hubertova dívka
policista Holendr
policista Skákal
Franta Pašek, majitel zápasnické arény
Pašková, Frantova manželka
ředitel banky Union rada Bohumil Kropas
Kropasova manželka Irma
soukromý detektiv Láďa Špirk
komorník Franc
masérka Madlenka Čuříková, Emanova milá
děda Pašek
baronka Bramberková
lichvář Osvald Lón
komisař, Mourkův nadřízený
zloděj Eda
řezník Hrych
ženich Karel Čerepatka
nevěsta Helenka Sojková
sousedka Merenda
matka ženicha Čerepatky
otec ženicha
strýc na svatbě
teta na svatbě
matka nevěsty
otec nevěsty
bytná Růži
Pepík
kluk
zvědavá žena s kukátkem
Ferda-Sirky-Evropa
milenec paní Kropasové
skořápkář
zápasník Švarc
služka
kamelot
kamelot
číšník
kuchařka
šenkýřka
flašinetář
hudebnice
hudebník
hudebník
hudebník
hudebník
hudebník
hudebník
opilec
zápasník
zápasník
zápasník
zápasník
rozhodčí
číšník
chodec kupující noviny
rváč
rváč
rváč
rváč
svědek
svědek
tajný
tajný
tajný
tajný
tajný
tajný
uniformovaný policajt
uniformovaný policajt
homosexuál
homosexuál
policajt
policajt
policajt
policajt
policajt
policajt
policajt
sousedka
svatební host
dubl za Lubomíra Kostelku
Lubor Červa, Jan Hodný, Jaroslav Česal, Bohumil Kadlec, Jan Klíma, Jiří Libánský
František Čížek, Miroslav Buhr, František Kléma, Vlasta Hájková
Václav Dobeš, Zdeňka Černá, Václav Petr
Zuzana Hojková (klapka), Alena Červená (fotografka)
Petr Hapka, FISYO (Music Conducted by Mario Klemens)
Song Composer Petr Hapka
Writer of Lyrics Michal Horáček
Singer Laďka Kozderková
Song Composer Jaroslav Jankovec
Writer of Lyrics Alois Aust
Singer Jarka Budil
Song Composer Vladimír Eddy Fořt
Writer of Lyrics Vladimír Eddy Fořt
Singer mužský sbor
Song Composer Eduard Ingriš
Writer of Lyrics Eduard Ingriš
Singer mužský sbor
Song Composer Vladimír Eddy Fořt
Writer of Lyrics Vladimír Eddy Fořt
Singer mužský sbor
Song Composer Jára Beneš
Writer of Lyrics Karel TobisVáclav ŠpilarVáclav Mírovský
Singer Karel HeřmánekLaďka Kozderkovásbor
Song Composer lidová italská píseň
Singer Lubomír Lipský
Song Composer Jiří Eliáš
Writer of Lyrics T. R. Field
Singer Lubomír Lipský
Fešák Hubert
Fešák Hubert
Hubert, the Smart Boy
film
featuretheatrical distribution
comedy
Czechoslovakia
1984
1983—1984
literary Screenplay approved 8 June 1983
start of filming 1 August 1983
technical Screenplay approved 27 September 1983
end of filming 12 June 1984
projection approval 22 June 1984
withdrawal from distribution 30 June 1990
premiere 1 June 1985 /suitable for youths/
1. dramaturgicko-výrobní skupina, Jiří Blažek (vedoucí 1. dramaturgicko-výrobní skupiny)
feature film
86 min
2 457 meters
16mm, 35mm
1:1,37
colour
sound
mono
Czech
Czech
without subtitles
Czech
Festival: 7. festival české a slovenské filmové veselohry Nové Město nad Metují
1985
Nové Město nad Metují / Czechoslovakia
Ivo Novák