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Postal (film)

Postal is a 2007 action comedy film co-written and directed by Uwe Boll, and starring Zack Ward, Dave Foley, Chris Coppola, Jackie Tohn, J.K. Simmons, Verne Troyer, Larry Thomas, David Huddleston and Seymour Cassel.

Postal
Theatrical release poster
Directed byUwe Boll
Written by
  • Uwe Boll
  • Bryan C. Knight
Based onPostal
by Running with Scissors
Produced by
  • Uwe Boll
  • Shawn Williamson
  • Daniel Clarke
Starring
CinematographyMathias Neumann
Edited byJulian Clarke
Music byJessica de Rooij
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
  • October 18, 2007 (2007-10-18) (Germany)
  • May 23, 2008 (2008-05-23) (US)
Running time
  • 100 minutes
  • 114 minutes (Director's Cut)
Countries
  • United States
  • Germany
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million[1]
Box office$146,741 (Worldwide)

Like the majority of Boll's previous films, Postal is a film adaptation of a video game, in this case, Postal, though this film draws more heavily from the video game's sequel, Postal 2. Also like Boll's predecessors, it was a critical and commercial failure, grossing less than 1% of its budget.

Plot

The film begins with a prologue, showing Asif and Nabi, a fictional portrayal of two of the Flight 11 hijackers during the 9/11 attacks, debating the number of virgins they get as a reward for carrying out the attacks. After a long debate, they decide to call Osama bin Laden, their leader, to find out the exact amount. Osama tells them that there "are not enough virgins to go around", and upon hearing this, the two hijackers abandon the attack in dismay and happily change their flight path to the Bahamas. At this moment, however, the passengers of the plane storm the cockpit and attempt to retake the plane (this was based on what happened on Flight 93, one of the other hijacked aircraft during 9/11). In the struggle, the terrorists try and reason with the passengers, but to no avail, and ultimately, the plane inadvertently flies into the North tower of the World Trade Center.

Five years later, in the town of Paradise, Arizona (a ghost town in real life), where the volatile Postal Dude, after being mocked at a job interview, kicked out of his local unemployment office and discovering that his morbidly obese wife is cheating on him with various and skinny townsmen, is more than a little angry and is desperate to get enough cash to finally leave his dead-end town. He decides to team up with his Uncle Dave, a slovenly con artist turned doomsday cult leader who owes the US government over a million dollars in back-taxes. With the help of Uncle Dave's right-hand man Richie and an army of big-breasted, scantily clad cult members, the Dude devises a plan to hijack a shipment of 2,000 Krotchy Dolls, a rare, sought-after plush toy resembling a giant scrotum. Uncle Dave plans to sell them online, where their prices have reached as high as $4,000 a doll.

Unbeknownst to them, Osama bin Laden and his group of Al-Qaeda terrorists, who had been secretly hiding in Paradise since the 9/11 attacks, under the watchful eye of bin Laden's best friend President George W. Bush, are after the same shipment, but for entirely different reasons. Hoping to outdo the catastrophe of 9/11, they plan to instill the dolls with Avian influenza and distribute them to unsuspecting American children. The two groups meet at the shipment's destination, German-themed amusement park called Little Germany. A fight between Postal creator Vince Desi and Postal director and park owner Uwe Boll (which ends with Boll being shot in the genitals, confessing "I hate video games"), sparks a massive shootout between the cult, the terrorists and the police, resulting in the deaths of dozens of innocent children. The Dude and the cult are able to get away with both the shipment and the park's opening day guest, Verne Troyer, pursued by Al-Qaeda, the police and a mob of angry citizens.

Upon returning to their compound, which has been overtaken by the terrorists, the Dude, Uncle Dave and the rest covertly sneak into the compound's underground bunker, where Richie reveals that he must now fulfill the prophecy foretold in Uncle Dave's fictional Bible: to bring about the extinction of the human race. As per Uncle Dave's Bible, the event initiating the apocalypse is the rape of a "tiny entertainer" by a thousand monkeys. After Verne Troyer is quickly thrown into a pit of chimpanzees, Richie shoots and kills Uncle Dave, then imprisons the Dude. The Dude manages to escape the compound with a plethora of weapons, deciding to wage a one-man war against al-Qaeda, his uncle's murderer, his cheating wife, the police and the many people who want him dead. On the way to his trailer (where he plans to blow up his spouse), he meets up with an attractive young barista, Faith, who joins forces with him after an explosive gunfight followed later by the Dude's heartfelt but futile monologue about war. The two of them then proceed to kill all the terrorists, all the bloodthirsty townspeople, the remains of the now-mad cult, his wife, and her multiple lovers. In the midst of the shootout, bin Laden is wounded but escapes to a payphone, where he calls Bush for help. Bush sends a helicopter to save him and plans for the two to rendezvous.

Having won their war, the Dude, his dog Champ and the barista drive away in a stolen police car. They casually turn on the radio, only to learn that Bush has blamed the day's shootouts and explosions on China and India, and has been "forced to destroy both countries with extreme nuclear force". The United States then launches thirty nuclear missiles at China and India each. In retaliation, China and India launch thirty nuclear missiles each as well towards America, all missiles are scheduled to hit their targets in under two minutes.

The film's final shot features Bush and bin Laden skipping through a field together, hand-in-hand. As mushroom clouds explode on the horizon, bin Laden laughs and says, "Georgie, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship". At that moment, all of the nuclear missiles hit, and the country, and possibly the world is destroyed.

Cast

Production

According to Uwe Boll, the German fan club for Postal contacted him, offering the possibility of the game being adapted into a film.[2] Intrigued by the game's premise and blatant political incorrectness, Boll contacted Running with Scissors president Vince Desiderio, who sold him the rights under the condition that he would be involved with the script and the production. Supposedly, Desiderio and Postal 2 director Steve Wik pitched a much grittier, darker version of the Postal story, but Boll rejected it, fully intent on turning it into a comedy in order to use the film as a platform for political satire as well as "revenge" against the people who have protested his movies.[2] Boll ended up writing the script with assistant director Bryan C. Knight, who had worked on all of Boll's previous video game adaptations. In an interview for Nathan Rabin's book My Year of Flops, Dave Foley said that Boll did want to make a serious statement about how a cult of heroism had surrounded people who were murdered in the 9/11 attacks, and that he and Boll agreed that being the victim of terrorism makes people victims, not heroes. Foley added that he tried to talk Boll out of including the notorious 9/11 sequence that opens the film where two Al Qaeda hijackers plan to call off their attack when Osama Bin Laden informs them that they will not receive anywhere near 72 virgins for their services, only to have passengers break into the cockpit and accidentally fly the plane into the World Trade Center because the film would have no chance of appearing on many (or any) screens in the U.S.

Postal filmed from September 13 – October 30, 2006 in Cloverdale and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[3]

Release

Box office

Worldwide

The 114-minute director's cut of Postal premiered at Montreal's Fantasia Festival on July 21, 2007. The film made its way along several more United States and European film festivals until finally receiving a limited release in Germany on October 18. It opened at #27 in the German box office, taking in $79,353 from 48 screens and banked $142,761 in its entire run. In Italy, it ended its box office run after two weeks with $3,980. As of August 31, 2008, it has grossed a total of $146,741 worldwide.[4][5]

North America

Despite Boll's announcement that Postal would be given a wide release on October 12, 2007,[6] it was delayed until May 23, 2008. Additionally, on 16 May, theater distributors pulled out of their deal for a wide release of 1,500 screens to a limited release of only four screens.[7][8] Said Boll of the change, "Theatrical distributors are boycotting Postal because of its political content. We were prepared to open on 1,500 screens all across America on May 23rd. Any multiplex in the U.S. should have space for us, but they're afraid... We have even tried to buy a few screens in New York City and Los Angeles, and they won't let us even rent the theaters! I urge independent exhibitors to contact us and book 'Postal'! Audiences have been expecting the film and I don't think exhibitors should censor what gets played in U.S. theaters."[9]

On May 20, the screen count increased to 12 screens. By release, it had grown to 21.[10]

Postal opened one day after Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, which led to video promotions from Boll, jokingly claiming that his film would "destroy" the other film at the box office.[11] A number of Internet promos were made featuring Troyer dressed as Indiana Jones, proclaiming Postal's superiority.[12][13]

Home media

Postal received its North American DVD release on August 26, 2008, in both 102-minute unrated and 100-minute rated versions, as well as a 102-minute unrated Blu-ray release. Both versions feature the film's trailer, a promotional spot featuring Verne Troyer's Indiana Jones, a featurette detailing the filming of the Little Germany scene, footage of Boll's infamous "Raging Boll" boxing matches and an audio commentary by Boll. Some editions come with the full version of Postal 2 (Share the Pain edition) on a bonus disc.[14]

The 118-minute director's cut was released on September 26, 2008, in Germany. It was planned for a North American release on Blu-ray for November 25, 2008, and on DVD for January 6, 2009, but both of these releases were delayed indefinitely.[15] The director's cut is cropped from the original 1.85:1 aspect ratio into 2.35:1.

The film has also been released in Australia as an 89-minute cut with no special features, bearing an MA15+ rating.

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 9% based on 46 reviews, with an average score of 3.6/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "An attempt at political satire that lacks any wit or relevance, Postal is nonetheless one of Uwe Boll's more successful films – for what it's worth."[16] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 22 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[17]

Jeremy Knox of Film Threat gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and stated, "It's such an insanely fun ride that most of its flaws are forgivable."[18] Peter Hartlaub of San Francisco Chronicle gave the film 2.5 out of 5 stars and stated, "Not only less than horrible, but actually occasionally enjoyable."[19] Nathan Rabin of AV Club gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated, "A provocation first, an insult second, a publicity stunt third, and a film a distant fourth." Dennis Harvey of Variety gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated, "This anything-goes exercise isn't dull -- one just wishes the outrageousness were more consistently funny."

Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated, "Postal's touches of wit are lost in the flying body parts, gross-out gags, and the full frontal spectacle of Foley's no-longer-private parts."[20] Michael Harris of The Globe And Mail gave the film 1 star out of 5 and stated, "What Boll gives us is a boring beating over the head." Kyle Smith of New York Post gave the film 1 out of 5 stars and stated, "At last: Uwe Boll has made his first intentionally funny film."[21] Aaron Hillis of The Village Voice gave the film 1 out of 5 stars and stated, "Manages to be as toothless as he (Boll) is tasteless. Poorly framed, tone-deaf, and nonsensical (yet still Boll's best!)" Nathan Lee of The New York Times gave the film 0.5 out of 5 stars and stated, "Infantile, irreverent and boorish to the max, Postal explodes with bad attitude and lousy filmmaking."[22] Elizabeth Weitzman of Daily News gave the film 0 out of 5 stars and stated, "Where Boll's movies were once amusingly atrocious, Postal is so aggressively tasteless and knowingly idiotic, there's just no fun to be had."

Accolades

The film was nominated for three Golden Raspberry Awards:[23] Worst Supporting Actor (Boll as himself), Worst Supporting Actor (Troyer as himself), and Worst Director (Boll). The film ended up winning Worst Director.

Despite critical condemnation, Postal won two awards at the Hoboken International Film Festival: Best Director and the festival's top prize, Best of Festival.[24]

Cancelled sequel

Boll stated shortly after the film's production that he would most likely make a Postal 2, even if it went direct-to-video. In a 2012 interview, Vince Desi commented that they "are in talks at present regarding another movie".[25] On August 28, 2013, Boll announced he was funding production of Postal 2 through Kickstarter. The project was canceled on October 5 due to lack of funding.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ Postal at Box Office Mojo
  2. ^ a b Uwe Boll's Commentary, Postal DVD
  3. ^ Ward, Zack; Foley, Dave; Coppola, Chris; Tohn, Jackie (October 18, 2007), Postal, retrieved March 27, 2017
  4. ^ "Postal (2008) - International Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 23, 2008.
  5. ^ "Postal (2008) - International Box Office Results". IMDb. Retrieved September 23, 2008.
  6. ^ "BD Pick Of The Week: Ghost Projekt Issue #1 - Bloody Disgusting!". Bloody Disgusting!. March 9, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  7. ^ . Geek.com. March 4, 2008. Archived from the original on March 6, 2008. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  8. ^ "Uwe Boll's Postal Denied Theatrical Release - CINEMABLEND". CINEMABLEND. May 16, 2008. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  9. ^ Ashcraft, Brian (May 16, 2008). "Postal Opening On Four Screens (Yes, FOUR)". Kotaku.
  10. ^ . Movieset. Archived from the original on June 3, 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2008.
  11. ^ "Uwe Boll - We Will Destroy Indiana Jones". Kotaku.com. March 11, 2008. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  12. ^ "POSTAL's Mini Indiana Jones takes on Harrison Ford". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  13. ^ "EXCLUSIVE: Mini Indy and Gen. Boll take on Dr. Jones". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  14. ^ Go POSTAL: Official Website of POSTAL 2 June 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Postal [Blu-ray] [Director's Cut]: Amazon.de: Zack Ward, Dave Foley, Chris Coppola, Jackie Tohn, Ralph Moeller, Uwe Boll: Filme & TV". Amazon.de. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
  16. ^ "Postal (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved October 6, 2021.  
  17. ^ Postal Reviews, Metacritic, retrieved April 3, 2022
  18. ^ "Film Threat | Your Independent Movie Guide". July 7, 2021. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  19. ^ Hartlaub, Peter (May 30, 2008). "Movie review: 'Postal' delivers funny madness". SFGATE. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  20. ^ "Postal". TVGuide.com. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  21. ^ Smith, Kyle (May 23, 2008). "CANCEL THIS ONE, POSTHASTE". New York Post. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  22. ^ Lee, Nathan (May 23, 2008). "Anarchy With a Short Attention Span". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  23. ^ John Wilson (January 22, 2009). "RAZZIES.COM 2008 Nominations". Retrieved January 28, 2009.
  24. ^ Contact Brian Crecente: Comment Facebook Twitter (June 16, 2008). "Postal Wins Award... Really". Kotaku.com. Retrieved August 5, 2012. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  25. ^ "Vince Desi von Running with Scissors im Interview". rebelgamer.de. January 20, 2012. Retrieved February 4, 2012.
  26. ^ "POSTAL 2 (Canceled)". Kickstarter. Retrieved March 27, 2017.

External links

postal, film, postal, 2007, action, comedy, film, written, directed, boll, starring, zack, ward, dave, foley, chris, coppola, jackie, tohn, simmons, verne, troyer, larry, thomas, david, huddleston, seymour, cassel, postaltheatrical, release, posterdirected, by. Postal is a 2007 action comedy film co written and directed by Uwe Boll and starring Zack Ward Dave Foley Chris Coppola Jackie Tohn J K Simmons Verne Troyer Larry Thomas David Huddleston and Seymour Cassel PostalTheatrical release posterDirected byUwe BollWritten byUwe BollBryan C KnightBased onPostalby Running with ScissorsProduced byUwe BollShawn WilliamsonDaniel ClarkeStarringZack WardDave FoleyChris CoppolaJackie TohnJ K SimmonsRalf MoellerVerne TroyerChris SpencerLarry ThomasMichael PareErick AvariLindsay HollisterBrent MendenhallRick HoffmanMichael BenyaerDavid HuddlestonSeymour CasselCinematographyMathias NeumannEdited byJulian ClarkeMusic byJessica de RooijProductioncompaniesBoll KGPitchblack PicturesDistributed byKinostar Germany Vivendi Entertainment US Release datesOctober 18 2007 2007 10 18 Germany May 23 2008 2008 05 23 US Running time100 minutes114 minutes Director s Cut CountriesUnited StatesGermanyLanguageEnglishBudget 15 million 1 Box office 146 741 Worldwide Like the majority of Boll s previous films Postal is a film adaptation of a video game in this case Postal though this film draws more heavily from the video game s sequel Postal 2 Also like Boll s predecessors it was a critical and commercial failure grossing less than 1 of its budget Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Box office 4 1 1 Worldwide 4 1 2 North America 4 2 Home media 4 3 Critical reception 4 4 Accolades 5 Cancelled sequel 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditThe film begins with a prologue showing Asif and Nabi a fictional portrayal of two of the Flight 11 hijackers during the 9 11 attacks debating the number of virgins they get as a reward for carrying out the attacks After a long debate they decide to call Osama bin Laden their leader to find out the exact amount Osama tells them that there are not enough virgins to go around and upon hearing this the two hijackers abandon the attack in dismay and happily change their flight path to the Bahamas At this moment however the passengers of the plane storm the cockpit and attempt to retake the plane this was based on what happened on Flight 93 one of the other hijacked aircraft during 9 11 In the struggle the terrorists try and reason with the passengers but to no avail and ultimately the plane inadvertently flies into the North tower of the World Trade Center Five years later in the town of Paradise Arizona a ghost town in real life where the volatile Postal Dude after being mocked at a job interview kicked out of his local unemployment office and discovering that his morbidly obese wife is cheating on him with various and skinny townsmen is more than a little angry and is desperate to get enough cash to finally leave his dead end town He decides to team up with his Uncle Dave a slovenly con artist turned doomsday cult leader who owes the US government over a million dollars in back taxes With the help of Uncle Dave s right hand man Richie and an army of big breasted scantily clad cult members the Dude devises a plan to hijack a shipment of 2 000 Krotchy Dolls a rare sought after plush toy resembling a giant scrotum Uncle Dave plans to sell them online where their prices have reached as high as 4 000 a doll Unbeknownst to them Osama bin Laden and his group of Al Qaeda terrorists who had been secretly hiding in Paradise since the 9 11 attacks under the watchful eye of bin Laden s best friend President George W Bush are after the same shipment but for entirely different reasons Hoping to outdo the catastrophe of 9 11 they plan to instill the dolls with Avian influenza and distribute them to unsuspecting American children The two groups meet at the shipment s destination German themed amusement park called Little Germany A fight between Postal creator Vince Desi and Postal director and park owner Uwe Boll which ends with Boll being shot in the genitals confessing I hate video games sparks a massive shootout between the cult the terrorists and the police resulting in the deaths of dozens of innocent children The Dude and the cult are able to get away with both the shipment and the park s opening day guest Verne Troyer pursued by Al Qaeda the police and a mob of angry citizens Upon returning to their compound which has been overtaken by the terrorists the Dude Uncle Dave and the rest covertly sneak into the compound s underground bunker where Richie reveals that he must now fulfill the prophecy foretold in Uncle Dave s fictional Bible to bring about the extinction of the human race As per Uncle Dave s Bible the event initiating the apocalypse is the rape of a tiny entertainer by a thousand monkeys After Verne Troyer is quickly thrown into a pit of chimpanzees Richie shoots and kills Uncle Dave then imprisons the Dude The Dude manages to escape the compound with a plethora of weapons deciding to wage a one man war against al Qaeda his uncle s murderer his cheating wife the police and the many people who want him dead On the way to his trailer where he plans to blow up his spouse he meets up with an attractive young barista Faith who joins forces with him after an explosive gunfight followed later by the Dude s heartfelt but futile monologue about war The two of them then proceed to kill all the terrorists all the bloodthirsty townspeople the remains of the now mad cult his wife and her multiple lovers In the midst of the shootout bin Laden is wounded but escapes to a payphone where he calls Bush for help Bush sends a helicopter to save him and plans for the two to rendezvous Having won their war the Dude his dog Champ and the barista drive away in a stolen police car They casually turn on the radio only to learn that Bush has blamed the day s shootouts and explosions on China and India and has been forced to destroy both countries with extreme nuclear force The United States then launches thirty nuclear missiles at China and India each In retaliation China and India launch thirty nuclear missiles each as well towards America all missiles are scheduled to hit their targets in under two minutes The film s final shot features Bush and bin Laden skipping through a field together hand in hand As mushroom clouds explode on the horizon bin Laden laughs and says Georgie I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship At that moment all of the nuclear missiles hit and the country and possibly the world is destroyed Cast EditZack Ward as The Postal Dude Dave Foley as Uncle Dave Chris Coppola as Richard Jackie Tohn as Faith J K Simmons as Candidate Eugene Welles Verne Troyer as himself Larry Thomas as Osama bin Laden David Huddleston as Peter Seymour Cassel as Paul Ralf Moeller as Officer John Mann Chris Spencer as Officer Greg Sharp Michael Pare as Panhandler Erick Avari as Habib Lindsay Hollister as Recorder Brent Mendenhall as George W Bush Rick Hoffman as Mr Cornelius Blither Michael Benyaer as Mohammed Uwe Boll as himself Vince Desiderio as Krotchy Himself Carrie Genzel as Gayle The Reporter Mike Dopud as Security Guard 2 Richard Ian Cox as Coffee Customer Julia Sandberg Hansson as MitziProduction EditAccording to Uwe Boll the German fan club for Postal contacted him offering the possibility of the game being adapted into a film 2 Intrigued by the game s premise and blatant political incorrectness Boll contacted Running with Scissors president Vince Desiderio who sold him the rights under the condition that he would be involved with the script and the production Supposedly Desiderio and Postal 2 director Steve Wik pitched a much grittier darker version of the Postal story but Boll rejected it fully intent on turning it into a comedy in order to use the film as a platform for political satire as well as revenge against the people who have protested his movies 2 Boll ended up writing the script with assistant director Bryan C Knight who had worked on all of Boll s previous video game adaptations In an interview for Nathan Rabin s book My Year of Flops Dave Foley said that Boll did want to make a serious statement about how a cult of heroism had surrounded people who were murdered in the 9 11 attacks and that he and Boll agreed that being the victim of terrorism makes people victims not heroes Foley added that he tried to talk Boll out of including the notorious 9 11 sequence that opens the film where two Al Qaeda hijackers plan to call off their attack when Osama Bin Laden informs them that they will not receive anywhere near 72 virgins for their services only to have passengers break into the cockpit and accidentally fly the plane into the World Trade Center because the film would have no chance of appearing on many or any screens in the U S Postal filmed from September 13 October 30 2006 in Cloverdale and Vancouver British Columbia Canada 3 Release EditBox office Edit Worldwide Edit The 114 minute director s cut of Postal premiered at Montreal s Fantasia Festival on July 21 2007 The film made its way along several more United States and European film festivals until finally receiving a limited release in Germany on October 18 It opened at 27 in the German box office taking in 79 353 from 48 screens and banked 142 761 in its entire run In Italy it ended its box office run after two weeks with 3 980 As of August 31 2008 it has grossed a total of 146 741 worldwide 4 5 North America Edit Despite Boll s announcement that Postal would be given a wide release on October 12 2007 6 it was delayed until May 23 2008 Additionally on 16 May theater distributors pulled out of their deal for a wide release of 1 500 screens to a limited release of only four screens 7 8 Said Boll of the change Theatrical distributors are boycotting Postal because of its political content We were prepared to open on 1 500 screens all across America on May 23rd Any multiplex in the U S should have space for us but they re afraid We have even tried to buy a few screens in New York City and Los Angeles and they won t let us even rent the theaters I urge independent exhibitors to contact us and book Postal Audiences have been expecting the film and I don t think exhibitors should censor what gets played in U S theaters 9 On May 20 the screen count increased to 12 screens By release it had grown to 21 10 Postal opened one day after Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull which led to video promotions from Boll jokingly claiming that his film would destroy the other film at the box office 11 A number of Internet promos were made featuring Troyer dressed as Indiana Jones proclaiming Postal s superiority 12 13 Home media Edit Postal received its North American DVD release on August 26 2008 in both 102 minute unrated and 100 minute rated versions as well as a 102 minute unrated Blu ray release Both versions feature the film s trailer a promotional spot featuring Verne Troyer s Indiana Jones a featurette detailing the filming of the Little Germany scene footage of Boll s infamous Raging Boll boxing matches and an audio commentary by Boll Some editions come with the full version of Postal 2 Share the Pain edition on a bonus disc 14 The 118 minute director s cut was released on September 26 2008 in Germany It was planned for a North American release on Blu ray for November 25 2008 and on DVD for January 6 2009 but both of these releases were delayed indefinitely 15 The director s cut is cropped from the original 1 85 1 aspect ratio into 2 35 1 The film has also been released in Australia as an 89 minute cut with no special features bearing an MA15 rating Critical reception Edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 9 based on 46 reviews with an average score of 3 6 10 The site s critics consensus reads An attempt at political satire that lacks any wit or relevance Postal is nonetheless one of Uwe Boll s more successful films for what it s worth 16 Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 22 out of 100 based on 11 critics indicating generally unfavorable reviews 17 Jeremy Knox of Film Threat gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and stated It s such an insanely fun ride that most of its flaws are forgivable 18 Peter Hartlaub of San Francisco Chronicle gave the film 2 5 out of 5 stars and stated Not only less than horrible but actually occasionally enjoyable 19 Nathan Rabin of AV Club gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated A provocation first an insult second a publicity stunt third and a film a distant fourth Dennis Harvey of Variety gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated This anything goes exercise isn t dull one just wishes the outrageousness were more consistently funny Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated Postal s touches of wit are lost in the flying body parts gross out gags and the full frontal spectacle of Foley s no longer private parts 20 Michael Harris of The Globe And Mail gave the film 1 star out of 5 and stated What Boll gives us is a boring beating over the head Kyle Smith of New York Post gave the film 1 out of 5 stars and stated At last Uwe Boll has made his first intentionally funny film 21 Aaron Hillis of The Village Voice gave the film 1 out of 5 stars and stated Manages to be as toothless as he Boll is tasteless Poorly framed tone deaf and nonsensical yet still Boll s best Nathan Lee of The New York Times gave the film 0 5 out of 5 stars and stated Infantile irreverent and boorish to the max Postal explodes with bad attitude and lousy filmmaking 22 Elizabeth Weitzman of Daily News gave the film 0 out of 5 stars and stated Where Boll s movies were once amusingly atrocious Postal is so aggressively tasteless and knowingly idiotic there s just no fun to be had Accolades Edit The film was nominated for three Golden Raspberry Awards 23 Worst Supporting Actor Boll as himself Worst Supporting Actor Troyer as himself and Worst Director Boll The film ended up winning Worst Director Despite critical condemnation Postal won two awards at the Hoboken International Film Festival Best Director and the festival s top prize Best of Festival 24 Cancelled sequel EditBoll stated shortly after the film s production that he would most likely make a Postal 2 even if it went direct to video In a 2012 interview Vince Desi commented that they are in talks at present regarding another movie 25 On August 28 2013 Boll announced he was funding production of Postal 2 through Kickstarter The project was canceled on October 5 due to lack of funding 26 See also EditList of films based on video gamesReferences Edit Postal at Box Office Mojo a b Uwe Boll s Commentary Postal DVD Ward Zack Foley Dave Coppola Chris Tohn Jackie October 18 2007 Postal retrieved March 27 2017 Postal 2008 International Box Office Results Box Office Mojo Retrieved May 23 2008 Postal 2008 International Box Office Results IMDb Retrieved September 23 2008 BD Pick Of The Week Ghost Projekt Issue 1 Bloody Disgusting Bloody Disgusting March 9 2010 Retrieved March 27 2017 Going Postal with Running with Scissors CEO Vince Desi Geek com Geek com March 4 2008 Archived from the original on March 6 2008 Retrieved March 27 2017 Uwe Boll s Postal Denied Theatrical Release CINEMABLEND CINEMABLEND May 16 2008 Retrieved March 27 2017 Ashcraft Brian May 16 2008 Postal Opening On Four Screens Yes FOUR Kotaku UPDATED Is Postal at a theater near you Movieset Archived from the original on June 3 2008 Retrieved May 23 2008 Uwe Boll We Will Destroy Indiana Jones Kotaku com March 11 2008 Retrieved August 5 2012 POSTAL s Mini Indiana Jones takes on Harrison Ford YouTube Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved August 5 2012 EXCLUSIVE Mini Indy and Gen Boll take on Dr Jones YouTube Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved August 5 2012 Go POSTAL Official Website of POSTAL 2 Archived June 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine Postal Blu ray Director s Cut Amazon de Zack Ward Dave Foley Chris Coppola Jackie Tohn Ralph Moeller Uwe Boll Filme amp TV Amazon de Retrieved August 5 2012 Postal 2007 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved October 6 2021 Postal Reviews Metacritic retrieved April 3 2022 Film Threat Your Independent Movie Guide July 7 2021 Retrieved July 7 2021 Hartlaub Peter May 30 2008 Movie review Postal delivers funny madness SFGATE Retrieved July 7 2021 Postal TVGuide com Retrieved July 7 2021 Smith Kyle May 23 2008 CANCEL THIS ONE POSTHASTE New York Post Retrieved July 7 2021 Lee Nathan May 23 2008 Anarchy With a Short Attention Span The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 7 2021 John Wilson January 22 2009 RAZZIES COM 2008 Nominations Retrieved January 28 2009 Contact Brian Crecente Comment Facebook Twitter June 16 2008 Postal Wins Award Really Kotaku com Retrieved August 5 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Vince Desi von Running with Scissors im Interview rebelgamer de January 20 2012 Retrieved February 4 2012 POSTAL 2 Canceled Kickstarter Retrieved March 27 2017 External links EditPostal at IMDb Postal at AllMovie Postal at Box Office Mojo Postal at Rotten Tomatoes Postal at Metacritic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postal film amp oldid 1146848147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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