
The story begins with a regular Joe who tries desperately to seek employment, but embarks on a violent rampage when he teams up with cult leader Uncle Dave. Their first act is to heist an amusement park, only to learn that the Taliban are planning the same heist as well. Chaos ensues, and now the Postal Dude must not only take on terrorists but political figures as well.... (Full plot summary below)
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The story begins with a regular Joe who tries desperately to seek employment, but embarks on a violent rampage when he teams up with cult leader Uncle Dave. Their first act is to heist an amusement park, only to learn that the Taliban are planning the same heist as well. Chaos ensues, and now the Postal Dude must not only take on terrorists but political figures as well.
Leave your thoughts about Postal.
| New York PressEric KohnIt's Boll's knuckleheaded misinterpretation of topical humor that really gets me. |
| Eye for FilmAnton BitelDeliriously tasteless Postal may be, but it is also, to borrow a phrase from one of its minor characters, 'the place where laughter died.' |
| I.E. WeeklyAmy NicholsonTwice as violent and half as funny as anything resembling a good movie, it's still a hell of a ride |
| ColeSmithey.comCole SmitheyUwe Boll is the epitome of a hack director who thinks that putting an Osama impersonator and a George Bush lookalike together in a scene will automatically make some comic impression. It just made me sleepy. |
| Film Journal InternationalFrank LoveceIt all plays out as satirically transgressive as a high-school freshman mooning you from the passenger seat of a car. |
| San Francisco ChroniclePeter HartlaubNot only less than horrible, but actually occasionally enjoyable. |
| Combustible CelluloidJeffrey M. AndersonI guess you could call it a "satire," but it doesn't particularly care to take the time or energy to spin the satire in any meaningful way; it merely thunders over all its ideas like a rabid elephant. |
| TV GuideMaitland McDonaghPostal'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. |
| Bloody DisgustingBrad MiskaIt is funny at times and shows that even he has a sense of humor about himself. It's just a shame what direction he chose to take the film because I feel had he taken in seriously, instead of trying to shock us, he might have actual touched on something |
| CinematicalScott WeinbergFrom the scoring and lighting to the acting and editing, the thing wouldn't earn a passing grade from even the most lenient film professor at the chintziest community college. |