Postman (1995 film) explained

Postman
Director:He Jianjun
Producer:Tian Yan
Shu Kei
Starring:Feng Yuanzheng
Liang Danni
Pu Quanxin
Huang Xing
Music:Otomo Yoshihide
Cinematography:Wu Di
Editing:Liu Xiaojing
Runtime:102 minutes
Language:Mandarin
Native Name:
Child:yes
Hide:no
Header:none
S:邮差
T:郵差
P:Yóuchāi

Postman (Original title: Yóuchāi) is a 1995 Chinese Mandarin drama film directed by He Jianjun and produced by Tian Yan, Shu Kei. It is the story of a shy mailman played by Feng Yuanzheng who steals and reads the letters of people on his route. The film is considered part of China's sixth generation movement.

During the making of Postman the director faced a ban and managed to release the film abroad only after smuggling print outs out of the country and completing the film abroad.[1]

Cast

Plot

Xiao Dou (Feng Yuanzheng) is a shy and naive mailworker living in Beijing with his sister. When a coworker is fired for reading people's correspondences Xiao Dou takes over the same mail route. He soon finds himself indulging in the same curiosity, eventually developing an obsession. Xiao Dou chooses to spend time reading letters instead of socializing with friends or coworkers. As he becomes increasingly tied to the letters, he begins to intervene in the lives of those who write and receive the letters.

As Xiao Dou's amorality and detachment become more severe, his obsessions expand, as he engages in an incestuous relationship to his own sister. By the end of the film, Xiao Dou no longer considers the feelings of anyone else.

Reception

Reception of Postman in the west was marked by shock and praise. Standing in contrast to many of the more polished filmmaking coming from China during the mid-1990s, such as Chen Kaige's Temptress Moon (1996) or Zhang Yimou's To Live (1994) and Raise the Red Lantern (1991), Postman was a contemporary snapshot of modern China. Scholars and critics alike grouped the film as part of the up-and-coming Sixth Generation movement that began with Zhang Yuan, Wang Xiaoshuai, and others. Today, Postman is considered one of the more important works to come out of the early years of the movement. China cinema scholar Shelly Kraicer referred to the film as "one of the most disturbing and important recent films out of China" in her review.[2] Critics found the film "transgressive" in its satire and its unblinking depiction of homosexuality, prostitution, drug-use and adultery.[3]

Further illustrating the film's reputation was its inclusion in the Harvard Film Archive's retrospective on the sixth generation in 2001, "The Urban Generation: Chinese Cinema and Society in Transformation."[4]

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Review:Postman (Youchai). Berardinelli, James. ReelReviews. 2008-10-21. 1995.
  2. Web site: Postman review. Kraicer, Shelly. 1995. 2008-10-18.
  3. News: FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW; A Voyeur in Any Weather . Maslin, Janet . . 2008-10-21. 1995-03-21.
  4. Web site: The Urban Generation: Chinese Cinema and Society in Transformation. Harvard Film Archive. 2008-10-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20171108033019/http://hcl.harvard.edu/hfa/films/2001janfeb/urban.html. 8 November 2017. dead.
  5. Web site: VPRO Tiger Awards Competition. International Film Festival Rotterdam. 2008-10-21.
  6. Web site: FIPRESCI Award. International Film Festival Rotterdam. 2008-10-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20081012223902/http://professionals.filmfestivalrotterdam.com/eng/programme/awards/fipresci_award.aspx. 12 October 2008. dead.
  7. Web site: Awards. International Thessaloniki Film Festival. 2008-10-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20161112064941/http://www.filmfestival.gr/film_festival/uk/awards.htm. 12 November 2016. dead.