Contents



The Year Is 2013. One Man Walked In Off The Horizon And Hope Came With Him.

1997



The Postman (1997)  

Directed by 
Kevin Costner    
  
Writing credits (in credits order) 
David Brin   (novel) 

 
Eric Roth   and 
Brian Helgeland    
  
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete  
Kevin Costner ....  The Postman  
Will Patton ....  Bethlehem  
Larenz Tate ....  Ford Lincoln Mercury  
Olivia Williams ....  Abby  
James Russo ....  Idaho  
Daniel von Bargen ....  Sheriff Briscoe  
Tom Petty ....  Bridge City Mayor  
Scott Bairstow ....  Luke  
Giovanni Ribisi ....  Bandit 20  
Roberta Maxwell ....  Irene March  
Joe Santos ....  Getty  
Ron McLarty ....  Old George  
Peggy Lipton ....  Ellen March  
Brian Anthony Wilson ....  Woody  
Todd Allen ....  Gibbs  
Rex Linn ....  Mercer  
Shawn Hatosy ....  Billy  
Ryan Hurst ....  Eddie  
Charles Esten ....  Michael  
Annie Costner ....  Ponytail (as Anne Costner)  
Ty O'Neal ....  Drew  
Kirk Fox ....  Gangly Recruit  
Ken Linhart ....  Disappointed Recruit  
Korey Scott Pollard ....  Thin Recruit  
Kayla Lambert ....  Shakespeare Girl  
Austin Howard Early ....  Shakespeare Boy  
Ellen Geer ....  Pineview Woman  
Randle Mell ....  Villiage Mayor  
Cooper Taylor ....  Tony  
Dylan Haggerty (I) ....  Slow Recruit  
Michael Milgrom ....  Holeist Projectionist  
Keith C. Howell ....  Holeist Scout  
H.P. Eveetts ....  Holnist Soldier (as H.P. Evetts)  
Jeff Johnson (I) ....  Rope Bridge Soldier  
Jeff McGrail ....  Rope Bridge Soldier  
Lily Costner ....  Lily March  
Gregory Avellone ....  Pineview Man  
Susan Brightbill ....  Pineview Woman  
Elisa Daniel ....  Pineview Woman  
Jenny Buchanan ....  Pineview Woman  
Ann Manning ....  Pineview Woman  
Andy Garrison ....  Pineview Sentry  
Rusty Hendrickson ....  Pineview Minister  
Marvin Winton ....  Pineview Old Man  
Jono Manson ....  Pineview Band  
John J. Coinman ....  Pineview Band  
Vernon T. Williams ....  Pineview Band  
Mark Clark (II) ....  Pineview Band  
Blair Forward ....  Pineview Band  
Robyn Pruitt-Hamm ....  Pineview Band  
Michelle Ramminger ....  Pineview Band  
Tom Novak ....  Benning Gatekeeper  
Richard Joel ....  Benning Gatekeeper  
George Wyner ....  Benning Mayor  
Brooke Becker ....  Benning Woman  
Eva Gayle Six ....  Benning Woman  
Todd Lewis ....  Benning Man  
Joe Costner ....  Letter boy  
Kathi Sheehan ....  Mother of Letter Boy  
Amy Weinstein (II) ....  Elvis Woman  
Betty Moyer ....  Elvis Woman  
Joseph McKenna ....  Holnist Captain  
Neal Preston Coon ....  Bridge City Boy  
Rick Wadkins ....  Bridge City Man  
Shiree Porter ....  Bridge City Woman  
Anthony Guidera ....  Bridge City Guard  
Jade Herrera ....  Carrier  
Greg Serano ....  California Carrier  
Derk Cheetwood ....  Carrier Twelve  
Mark Thomason (I) ....  Adult Letter Boy  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Lester Berman ....  Cook (uncredited)  
Mary Stuart Masterson ....  Hope (Postman's Daughter)
(uncredited)  
Brandon Tyler ....  Postal Recruit (uncredited)  
  
Produced by 
Lester Berman   (line)  
Kevin Costner    
Steve Tisch    
Jim Wilson (I)    
  
Original music by 
James Newton Howard    
  
Cinematography by 
Stephen F. Windon   (as Stephen Windon)  
  
Film Editing by 
Peter Boyle (II)    
  
Casting 
Mindy Marin    
  
Production Design by 
Ida Random    
  
Art Direction 
Derek R. Hill   (supervising) (as Derek Hill)  
Scott Ritenour    
  
Set Decoration 
Ronald R. Reiss   (as Ron Reiss)  
  
Costume Design by 
John Bloomfield    
  
Production Management 
Lester Berman ....  production manager  
Donna E. Bloom ....  production manager: second unit (as Donna Bloom)  
  
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director 
Michael H. Anderson ....  first assistant director: second unit
(as Michael Anderson)  
Kevin Duncan ....  second assistant director  
Eric Fox Hays ....  second assistant director: second unit  
Joe Lotito ....  second second assistant director  
Dennis Maguire ....  first assistant director  
Jayson Merrill ....  second assistant director  
Nick Satriano ....  second second assistant director  
Charles Simmers ....  additional second assistant director (as
Chuck Simmers)  
Alexander Witt ....  second unit director  
  
Sound Department 
Paul Aulicino ....  assistant sound editor  
Lance Brown ....  sound designer  
David E. Campbell ....  re-recording mixer (as David Campbell)  
Kevin E. Carpenter ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Zack Davis ....  adr editor  
Kirk Francis ....  sound mixer  
Jeffrey J. Haboush ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Jay Nierenberg ....  sound editor  
John T. Reitz ....  re-recording mixer (as John Reitz)  
Gregg Rudloff ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Bruce Stambler ....  supervising sound editor  
Becky Sullivan ....  supervising adr editor  
  
Special Effects 
Ted Andre ....  digital compositor (uncredited)  
Sheena Duggal ....  co-visual effects supervisor  
Petra Holtorf ....  visual effects coordinator  
Martin A. Kline ....  visual effects art director  
Jay Riddle ....  visual effects supervisor  
Stephen Rosenbaum ....  visual effects supervisor  
Paul Taglianetti ....  visual effects producer  
  
Stunts 
Julie Adair ....  stunts  
Stan Barrett ....  stunts (as Stanton Barrett)  
Sandy Berumen ....  stunts  
Steve Bland ....  stunts  
Jodi Branco ....  stunts  
Chris Branham ....  stunts  
Troy Brenna ....  stunts  
Joey Bucard ....  stunts  
Richard Bucher ....  stunts  
William H. Burton Jr. ....  stunts  
Shay Calinawan ....  stunts  
John Campbell (III) ....  stunts  
Chase Casson ....  stunts  
Steven Chambers ....  stunts (as Steve Chambers)  
Jeffrey J. Dashnaw ....  stunts (as Jeff Dashnaw)  
Sean Day ....  stunts  
Gil Dean ....  stunts  
Rick Dennis (II) ....  stunts  
Kip Farnsworth ....  stunts  
J.R. Flournoy ....  stunts  
Lance Gilbert ....  stunts  
Kanin J. Howell ....  stunts  
Norman Howell ....  stunt co-ordinator  
Shawn Howell ....  stunts  
Lane Leavitt ....  stunts  
Juddson Keith Linn ....  stunts  
Billy D. Lucas ....  stunts (as Billy Lucas)  
Benny J. Manning ....  stunts  
Dave Powledge ....  stunts  
Darrin Prescott ....  stunts  
Tyler Quigley ....  stunts  
Scott Rodgers ....  stunts  
Rod Rondeaux ....  stunts  
Erik Rondell ....  stunts  
Charlie Sammut ....  stunts  
Charles O. Sampson ....  stunts  
Brooke Sandahl ....  stunts  
George Smith (VI) ....  stunts  
Monty Stuart ....  stunts  
Matthew Taylor (IV) ....  stunts  
Ashlyn Terry ....  stunts  
Jesse Thomason ....  stunts  
Jordan Thomason ....  stunts  
Ryan Weiss (I) ....  stunts  
  
Other crew 
Kirsten Anderson ....  construction accountant  
Chris Bangma ....  spacecam assistant  
Richard Baum ....  assistant property master
property master: second unit  
Thomas Betts ....  set designer  
Shawn Blakeman ....  lighting technician  
Debbi Bossi ....  post-production supervisor  
Mauni P. Caves ....  assistant location manager  
David Crone ....  steadicam operator
camera operator  
Charles Darby ....  digital matte supervisor  
Brad Dechter ....  orchestrator  
Shawn Duchscher ....  lighting technician  
Jeff Duffy ....  lighting technician  
Doug Ednie ....  lighting technician  
Jeff Enneking ....  lighting technician  
Riley Flynn ....  re-enactor co-ordinator  
Thomas F. Ford IV ....  high speed compositing technical co-
ordinator  
James J. Gilson ....  chief lighting technician  
Ben Glass ....  still photographer (uncredited)  
Karen Golden ....  script supervisor  
Ron Goodman ....  spacecam operator  
Anthony Harris (III) ....  timing co-ordinator  
Marty Heinz ....  lighting technician  
James Newton Howard ....  orchestrator  
David Israel (I) ....  location manager  
Artie Kane ....  conductor  
Tim Ketzer ....  computer graphics animator: Cinesite 
(uncredited)  
Samantha C. Kirkeby ....  script supervisor: second unit  
David R. Kohn ....  lighting technician  
John Charles Kohn ....  compositor: cineon
digital compositor  
Todd Lewis ....  production supervisor  
Gregory D. Liegey ....  composite supervisor  
Kal Manning ....  rigging gaffer  
John Martens ....  best boy rigging electric  
Craig Mathieson ....  digital compositor  
Greg McMickle ....  property master: second unit  
Elizabeth Moore (IV) ....  digital compositor  
James J. Murakami ....  set designer  
Sean O'Connor ....  digital compositor  
Corinne Pooler ....  digital artist  
Dave Potter ....  lighting technician  
Damien Quinn ....  costumer  
Mike Revell ....  production accountant  
David Rey ....  digital compositor  
Rick Roesch ....  paymaster  
Margo Romano ....  assistant accountant  
Leonard Romie ....  lighting technician  
Candice Scott ....  digital effects compositor  
Craig A. Simms ....  digital compositor  
Mike Stassi ....  set designer  
Bill Taliaferro ....  set designer  
Philipp Timme ....  cinematographer: VFX  
Jana Treadwell ....  set dresser  
Jeff Verdick ....  picture car co-ordinator  
P.W. Ward ....  wrangler  
Kelly Way ....  lighting technician  
Jim Weidman ....  supervising music editor  
Darrell Wight ....  set designer  
Steven J. Winslow ....  assistant camera: Wescam camera
camera technician  
 


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                              THE POSTMAN
                     A film review by Steve Rhodes
                      Copyright 1997 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  * 1/2

Kevin Costner's latest post-apocalyptic epic, THE POSTMAN, asks the rhetorical question: Is a bad, two hour movie made better by expanding it to three?

Pretentious with a capital P, Costner's POSTAL WATERWORLD delivers such cinematic balderdash that it becomes laughably bad at points. Perhaps with the fat pruned, say an hour and a half or so, the movie could be viewed as a delightful parody of the genre, but as delivered, its pomposity makes laughing at it seem somehow inappropriate, sort of like laughing in church when the priest gets tongue-tied.

"The last of the great cities died when my father was a child," says the Postman's daughter in the opening. Costner in his futuristic Western is known only as The Postman. Set in the year 2013, the country formerly known as the United States consists of a series of disconnected and derelict cities. The government, once way back in Washington, is no more, and acting as a feudal lord, General Bethlehem (Will Patton) rules the land, extracting tribute from each hamlet that his army visits.

Like a religious order, the army has its commandments and its rituals. "Work, and you'll be fed," the general, a copy machine salesman before the war, lectures his newly captured recruits. "Fight, and you'll be respected. Die, and you'll be remembered."

A bad Shakespearean actor and a loner, Costner becomes the Postman after finding a bag of undelivered mail. He travels from city to city delivering the mail and making up stories about a non-existent, new President Richard Starkey (sound familiar?), who now rules from the Hubert Humphrey Astrodome in Minneapolis.

With John Bloomfield's costumes making everyone look like inhabitants of a lost Dickensian novel about the American West, you feel like you should feel sorry for these people. With James Newton Howard's melodramatic music and Stephen F. Windon's sweeping cinematography, you know you are supposed to.

Typical of the ridiculous scenes in the movie is one that involves a Shakespearean contest pitting a conscripted Costner against the general. In a world gone mad, the only intellectual left is the megalomaniacal general, who demolishes our hero in the contest, performed to the grunts and applause of the general's bloodthirsty warriors.

One of the best scenes in the movie -- best in the sense that it is so preposterous that ridiculing it seems appropriate -- happens at an outdoor movie. As the animalistic soldiers get their evening entertainment, the projectionist dares to run something other than their favorite, THE SOUND OF MUSIC. Their reaction is swift and vicious as they try to stone him to death.

The movie flouts realism at every turn. When the Postman and his companion, Abby (Olivia Williams), get stuck in a snow bound cabin for the winter to feast on snow and grass, Amy's coiffure stays immaculate. Somewhere in the cabin, Amy seems to have a hidden blow dryer and a make-up bag.

The story's ending, as rival armies of blue and gold take to the field, combines elements of GETTYSBURG and HIGH NOON. I won't give away who wins, but if you can't figure it out, then you may be part of just the target audience Costner's self-indulgent movie needs.

If you're looking for a patriotic postal service movie for Christmas, then this is your picture. Otherwise, in a season with more good movies that we've had all year, go see one of the many excellent ones instead.

THE POSTMAN runs an incredibly long 3:00. It is rated PG-13 for violence, sex, nudity and dope smoking and would be fine for teenagers.




Have I seen this movie: Yes
And what did I think: In the beginning, The Postman looks very promising. The year is 2013 and the United States no longer exists after war. Kevin Costner plays a drifter who we never learn his name. He finds food wherever he can and sometimes goes to towns to put Shakespeare performances on to eat. After he goes to this one town at the wrong time, he is captured by a rogue army led by ruthless warlord. He manages to excape them and eventually finds an abandoned mail truck with undelivered letters. He gets the idea of acting as a postman to allow different towns to provide him food and shelter. From there, the movie starts going downhill and just drags on and on. It tries to portray a message of hope and does at times, but this movie should have been severely edited. It clocks in just under 3 hours and gets too slow at times. It's also downright laughable at times. it's filled with cliched melodrama and shameful attempts at patriotism that are just plain silly at times. The movie is not supposed to be a joke, but it sure looks that way at times. Don't get me wrong, there are some good parts to the movie as well. I think if this movie had been rewritten it would have been better, I would have liked him to arrive at some of the larger cities that have been decimated by the war so we can see what really happened. We only get a brief glimpse at the beginning of the movie. The rest of it looks like its taking place in the early frontier days. I'm sure the postal service must have been happy with the movie since it made them look like heroes, but in reality its just a pretty pathetic attempt to look like one. I wouldn't really recommend this movie because of the long running time and corniness at times, but it's not unwatchable either. It's a mediocre film of this type of genre, there are plenty of better ones out there, such as the Mad Max films.

I give The Postman 2 out of 5 stars
Review written January 12, 1999.
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