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Going Postal

2010

Adventure / Comedy / Fantasy / Mystery / Romance

8
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright83%
IMDb Rating7.7109146

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Claire Foy Photo
Claire Foy as Adora Belle Dearheart 2 episodes, 2010
Charles Dance Photo
Charles Dance as Lord Vetinari 2 episodes, 2010
Ingrid Bolsø Berdal Photo
Ingrid Bolsø Berdal as Sergeant Angua 2 episodes, 2010
David Suchet Photo
David Suchet as Reacher Gilt 2 episodes, 2010
720p.BLU
1.63 GB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
3 hr 2 min
P/S 0 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle6 / 10

weird visual world

In Ankh-Morpork, there are vampires and werewolves. More importantly, the post office is a crumbling mess. Moist Von Lipwig (Richard Coyle) is a petty con man. He gets caught and Lord Vetinari (Charles Dance) hangs him to an inch of his life. Vetinari lets him off to head the defunct post office. Mr. Pump, a golem, is used as his unceasing guardian and parole officer. Groat and Stanley are the only two junior postmen. Their opposition is the Clacks which compost of countless light towers relaying messages run by the ruthless Reacher Gilt. Lipwig tries to modify Pump and goes to the Golem Trust. He finds Adora Belle Dearheart (Claire Foy) in mourning after her brother John Dearheart was killed on top of one of the Clacks towers.

It's a wild, imaginative adaptation of this weird fantasy world. It's a wonder visually considering it's a TV show. I'm not terribly in love with these characters. Lipwig is too dumb at times, and too mean-spirited for too long. His first letter is a missed opportunity. There was no real reason for him to deliver it. There has to be a more compelling reason for a scheming, selfish conman to selflessly deliver the first letter. Inventing stamps is interesting. In addition, I'm uncertain about Adora Belle's character. She's very one dimensional and I would like her to be more. This is a nice wacky world and I would like to like the characters more.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca5 / 10

Third and darkest of the Discworld adaptations

GOING POSTAL is the third and final of Sky One's Discworld adaptations, based on the work of Terry Pratchett. This one sees Richard Coyle playing a new postmaster who finds himself getting to grips with an unusual job, facing the usual magical allies and murderous villains along the way. The look is noticeably different to that of THE HOGFATHER and THE COLOUR OF MAGIC, with darker visuals, less reliance on CGI, and shooting locations in Hungary. The cast is slightly less impressive but the story makes more sense and has a better pace to it. There are still some dodgy moments - like that awful CGI attack that opens episode two - but otherwise this is quite watchable.

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird9 / 10

So far, the best of the Sky/Pratchett adaptations

I did like Hogfather and Colour of Magic too, but what made me like Going Postal best of all was that it was more solid in especially the story, pacing and acting departments. Not that the other two were bad in those categories, but they did have characters that weren't explored as well as they could have been or there were moments of sluggish pacing or forced dialogue.

Going Postal could have easily had those problems but it didn't really. Of all the Sky/Pratchett adaptations it is the best paced overall, while the story even with the changes is compelling and the writing is playful and witty on the whole.

The costumes are colourful and beautiful, and the sets and scenery are also stunning and the effects in general are above average though I wasn't crazy about the Banshee. The photography does very well to capture these lovely visuals, while the music is very good and the direction credible enough.

The cast I feel is the best yet. Charles Dance, Richard Coyle and Steve Pemberton turn in great performances, and Claire Foy is also appealing and David Suchet is an interesting Gilt.

All in all, I thoroughly enjoyed it, and while I liked all three Sky/Pratchett adaptations this one was the best. 9/10 Bethany Cox

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