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The Postman (film) - Wikipedia

  • ️Thu Dec 25 1997

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The Postman

Theatrical release poster

Directed byKevin Costner
Screenplay by
Based onThe Postman
by David Brin
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyStephen F. Windon
Edited byPeter Boyle
Music byJames Newton Howard

Production
company

Tig Productions

Distributed byWarner Bros.

Release date

  • December 25, 1997

Running time

177 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80 million[2]
Box office$30 million[3][4]

The Postman is a 1997 American epic post-apocalyptic adventure film produced and directed by Kevin Costner, who plays the lead role. The screenplay was written by Eric Roth and Brian Helgeland, based on David Brin's 1985 book of the same name. The film also features Will Patton, Larenz Tate, Olivia Williams, James Russo, and Tom Petty. Set in a post-apocalyptic neo-Western United States in the then near-future year of 2013, the film follows an unnamed nomad who, after finding a United States Postal Service uniform, unwittingly sparks a movement to restore the United States that challenges the rule of a tyrannical warlord.

Released on Christmas 1997 by Warner Bros., The Postman was panned by critics, who criticized the performances, screenplay, direction, and long runtime. Costner's decision to cast himself in the film was criticized. The film grossed $30 million worldwide against a budget of $80 million. It was nominated for three Saturn Awards and won all five of its Golden Raspberry Award nominations, including Worst Picture.

In the late 20th century, unexplained apocalyptic disasters (implied to be World War III) devastated the world and destroyed modern society; since then, most knowledge and technology from the past has been lost, and the former United States has reverted to an unconnected pre-industrial society. In 2013, an unnamed nomad traveling to St. Rose, Oregon wanders the Western U.S., trading performances of long-forgotten Shakespearean plays for food and water. In one town, the nomad is forcibly conscripted into the Holnists, a neo-feudalist militia with a cult-like obsession surrounding a misinterpreted self-help book that serves as the tyrannical authority in the region, led by General Bethlehem. The nomad, dubbed "Shakespeare" by Bethlehem, faces harassment by the bigoted Captain Idaho, who tells the nomad about Colonel Getty, Bethlehem's second-in-command, and how Getty once challenged him for the right to lead; Bethlehem won the fight and mutilated Getty by cutting out his tongue and castrating him. The nomad and another conscript are sent to kill a lion, but Idaho arrives and forces the nomad and the conscript to fight to the death. Idaho kills the conscript, but before he can shoot the nomad he is killed by the lion, allowing the nomad to escape by jumping into a river. He takes refuge in an abandoned United States Postal Service Jeep DJ, burning letters and wearing the long-deceased postal carrier's coat to stay warm.

Now donning the postal uniform and mail bag, the nomad arrives in the town of Pineview, where he is held at gunpoint by their leader, Sheriff Briscoe. Desperate to avoid execution but lacking any identification to secure his release, the nomad (falsely) claims to be a Postman from the newly-restored U.S. government, presenting a letter addressed to elderly villager Irene March as proof. The Postman inspires a teenager named Ford Lincoln Mercury, who he swears in as a postal carrier and helps reactivate the town's abandoned post office. The Postman also meets spouses Abby and Michael and fulfills their clinical request to impregnate her. When the Postman leaves for the town of Benning, he carries a pile of mail left at the post office by the townspeople.

During a raid on Pineview, General Bethlehem learns of the Postman's claim of a restored government in Minneapolis. Fearing his loss of power if word spreads, Bethlehem has the post office burned to the ground, kills Michael, abducts Abby, and raids Benning looking for the Postman, who he does not know is the nomad. The Postman surrenders, but Abby rescues him and they flee into the surrounding mountains, where they hibernate through the winter in an abandoned cabin. In the spring, they leave and encounter another postal carrier, who reveals Mercury has kept the Postal Service alive by recruiting other carriers and opening more post offices, connecting settlements across the former U.S. and inadvertently forming a quasi-society in the "Restored United States".

Bethlehem, threatened by the rise of the Restored U.S., persecutes and publicly executes postal carriers. Wracked by guilt for their deaths, the Postman, now effectively the Postmaster General, orders the Postal Service to disband and writes a letter to the militia revealing it was formed on a lie, but Bethlehem, dismayed upon learning the Restored U.S. has spread as far as California, redoubles his efforts to hunt down the Postman. The Postman, Abby, and a group of young postal carriers travel to Bridge City, where they escape Holnist scouts with help from the mayor and rally the population to resist Bethlehem. There, the Postman and Abby reciprocate their feelings and fall in love.

The Postman organizes a Restored U.S. Army to face the Holnists in a pitched battle. Unwilling to allow further bloodshed, the Postman reveals to Bethlehem that he is "Shakespeare" and challenges him to a one-on-one duel for power with their troops as witnesses, akin to what Bethlehem did with Getty; per Holnist traditions, Bethlehem accepts. The Postman wins the brutal hand-to-hand fight, but he spares Bethlehem's life to maintain morale. Bethlehem tries to shoot the Postman as he turns away, but is shot dead by Getty, who promptly disarms the Holnists.

Thirty years later in 2043, the Postman dies at the age of 70. His adult daughter Hope speaks at a ceremony unveiling a memorial honoring his efforts in St. Rose, Oregon, part of the Restored U.S., with the implication that modern society and technology have returned.

On his personal website, author David Brin reveals that while studios were bidding for The Postman, his wife decided during a screening of Field of Dreams that Kevin Costner should portray the title character.[5] Brin agreed that the emotions evoked by Field of Dreams matched the message he intended to deliver with his novel. A decade later, after learning Costner would be cast as the lead, Brin said he was "thrilled".[5] Costner discarded the old screenplay (in which the moral message of the novel had been reversed) and hired screenwriter Brian Helgeland; Brin says the two of them "rescued the 'soul' of the central character" and reverted the story's message to one of hope.[5] Costner supposedly passed on the lead role in Air Force One to work on The Postman.[6]

In an interview with Metro before filming began, Brin expressed his hope that The Postman would have the "pro-community feel" of Field of Dreams instead of the Mad Max feel of Costner's other post-apocalyptic film Waterworld. Brin said that, unlike typical post-apocalyptic movies that satisfy "little-boy wish fantasies about running amok in a world without rules", the intended moral of The Postman is that "if we lost our civilization, we'd all come to realize how much we missed it, and would realize what a miracle it is simply to get your mail every day."[7]

The Postman was filmed in Metaline Falls and Fidalgo Island in Washington; central Oregon; and southern Arizona around Amado and Nogales. Metaline Falls is the location for the community of Pineview in the film.

Despite the film performing disastrously at two test screenings, Costner refused Warner Bros.' appeals that he edit it from its three-hour running time.[8]

The Postman (Music from the Motion Picture)
Film score by
ReleasedDecember 23, 1997
Length60:13
LabelWarner Sunset/Warner Bros.
No.TitleWriter(s)Artist(s)Length
1."Main Titles"James Newton Howard 2:13
2."Shelter in the Storm"James Newton Howard 6:23
3."The Belly of the Beast"James Newton Howard 6:49
4."General Bethlehem"James Newton Howard 6:55
5."Abby Comes Calling"James Newton Howard 10:50
6."The Restored United States"James Newton Howard 6:44
7."The Postman"James Newton Howard 9:50
8."Almost Home"Jono MansonJono Manson3:59
9."It Will Happen Naturally"Maria Machado and Jono MansonJono Manson2:18
10."The Next Big Thing"Jono Manson, Joe Flood and Jeffrey BarrJono Manson2:19
11."This Perfect World"John Coinman and Glenn BurkeJohn Coinman3:38
12."Once This Was The Promise Land"John CoinmanJohn Coinman2:06
13."I Miss My Radio"John Coinman and Blair ForwardJohn Coinman2:42
14."Come and Get Your Love"Lolly VegasJohn Coinman3:07
15."You Didn't Have to Be So Nice"John Sebastian and Steve BooneAmy Grant and Kevin Costner3:39
Total length:60:13

The film was a notorious failure at the box office. The first four days after opening brought in only $5.3 million on 2,207 screens in the United States and Canada.[9][10] Produced on an estimated $80 million budget, it grossed $17 million in the United States and Canada and $30 million worldwide.[11][4][3]

The film was subsequently released on VHS and DVD on June 9, 1998 and on Blu-ray Disc on September 8, 2009.

The Postman was panned by critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 14% based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 4.2/10. The site's consensus states: "A massive miscalculation in self-mythologizing by director and star Kevin Costner, The Postman would make for a goofy good time if it weren't so fatally self-serious."[12] Metacritic gives the film a score of 29 out of 100 based on 14 reviews, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[13] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale.[14]

In The New York Times, Stephen Holden criticized the movie for its "bogus sentimentality" and "mawkish jingoism".[15] In the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert described The Postman as a failed yet well-meant effort at a parable, being "goofy", "pretentious", and "way too long", yet "good-hearted". He criticized Costner's putting himself in the lead role, arguing that such roles should be cast against type and that Costner had played too many similar roles in past films.[16] On Siskel & Ebert, Ebert and Gene Siskel gave the film "two thumbs down", and Siskel sarcastically called it "Dances with Myself" (in reference to Costner's film Dances with Wolves) while referring to the bronze statue scene.[17]

Costner defended the film:

I always thought it was a really good movie! I always thought I probably started it wrong. I should have said something like "once upon a time". Because it was just like a modern-day fairy tale—it wraps itself up with a storybook ending with the statue. You know, I thought it was a pretty funny movie set against the idea of a Superman—somebody stepping up. But in this case, it's a very humble guy who's nothing but a liar [laughs]—delivers mail and burns half of it just to stay alive. So, I like the movie.[18]

In 2023, Rolling Stone cited The Postman as one of the fifty worst decisions in film history.[19]

Award Subject Nominee Result
Saturn Awards Best Science Fiction Film Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Will Patton Nominated
Best Actor Kevin Costner Nominated
Razzie Award Worst Actor Won
Worst Director Won
Worst Picture Kevin Costner, Steve Tisch, and Jim Wilson Won
Worst Screenplay Eric Roth and Brian Helgeland, based on the book by David Brin Won
Worst Original Song The entire song selection Won
Stinkers Award Worst Picture Nominated
Worst Director Kevin Costner Nominated
  1. ^ "The Postman (15)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  2. ^ The Postman at Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ a b Hayes, Dade (March 20, 2000). "Bombs away: Biz disavows duds". Variety. p. 7.
  4. ^ a b "The Postman (1997)". The Numbers. Retrieved June 30, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Brin, David (December 1998). "The Postman: the Movie". Worlds of David Brin. DavidBrin.com. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  6. ^ Reed, Michael (26 October 2011). "Looking back at Kevin Costner's The Postman". Den of Geek. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  7. ^ Stentz, Zack (June 12, 1997). "Brin on science fiction, society and Kevin Costner". Metro. Retrieved August 3, 2007.
  8. ^ Goldstein, Patrick (September 15, 1999). "Costner's Feeling a Little Less 'Love". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  9. ^ "'Titanic's' Voyage Is Steaming Ahead". Los Angeles Times. December 29, 1997. Retrieved June 3, 2012.
  10. ^ "Top 10 movies for the weekend of December 26–28". The Times of Northwest Indiana. Munster, Indiana. January 2, 1998. p. 23. Retrieved May 14, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "The Postman (1997)". Box Office Mojo. January 23, 1998. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  12. ^ "The Postman (1997)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 10, 2024.
  13. ^ "The Postman Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  14. ^ "Postman, The (1997) B-". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  15. ^ Holden, Stephen (December 24, 1997). "Movie Review: The Postman – Neither Snow, Nor Rain, Nor Descent to Anarchy..." The New York Times. Retrieved August 3, 2007.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 25, 1997). "The Postman movie review & film summary (1997)". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  17. ^ "Week of December 27, 1997" (1997). Television: Siskel & Ebert. Burbank: Buena Vista Television.
  18. ^ Ryan, Mike (June 5, 2013). "Kevin Costner, 'Man of Steel' Star, Looks Back on 'Bull Durham,' 'Waterworld' and the First Time He Made a Million Dollars". HuffPost. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  19. ^ Greene, Andy (September 25, 2023). "The 50 Worst Decisions in Movie History". Rolling Stone. Retrieved December 23, 2023. the budget for his post-apocalyptic epic Waterworld swelled to absurd heights until it was the most expensive movie in history. The film eventually eked out a tiny profit thanks to overseas markets, but it was still an enormous embarrassment for Costner. The smart move would have been to never make another movie like it ever again. Costner decided to double-down on post-apocalyptic snoozefests just two years later, when he directed The Postman and took on the lead role.
Awards
Preceded by Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Picture
18th Golden Raspberry Awards
Succeeded by