Postman Blues
Postman Blues is a 1997 Japanese criminal action comedy-drama film directed and written by Hiroyuki Tanaka under the name Sabu. The film features Shin'ichi Tsutsumi, Keisuke Horibe, Ren Ohsugi and Kyōko Tōyama in the lead roles. It tells the story of a postman who is mistaken by the police as a criminal.
The film was released in Japan in 1997 and later in Italy in 1999 and Brazil in 2003. Hiroyuki Tanaka won the New Blood award at the 1999 Cognac Festival du Film Policier for the film.
Plot
Sawaki is a bike-riding postman in Yokohama seeking a purpose in life. A month before Christmas, Sawaki delivers a promotional flyer to his former schoolmate Noguchi who, unbeknownst to Sawaki, had become a yakuza under police surveillance. Noguchi places a packet of amphetamines in Sawaki's mailbag, into which Noguchi's newly severed pinky accidentally rolls. The police note Sawaki's visit and begin tailing him.After getting home, Sawaki gets drunk and dumps the contents of the bag over his floor. Ignoring the rest, he finds a suicide note written by a terminally ill cancer patient to her estranged aunt. He rushes to the hospital the next day to see the woman, Sayoko, and falls in love with her. He meets an aimless middle-aged hitman named Joe, who tells him he desires to return to a hitmen's tournament and reclaim his true identity before he dies.
After some time writing letters to each other, Sayoko and Sawaki go shopping, and play with toy guns in the harbor, while two police detectives sneak into Sawaki's apartment and discover the pinky and amphetamines, taking photos and leaving the contraband behind. They consult a profiler who comes to the false conclusion that Sawaki is a serial murderer. Meanwhile, Noguchi discovers that the finger he had cut is no longer in his house, and panics. Sawaki finally discovers the severed pinky, stuck to a card by the tournament organizers addressed to Joe, who has been catching up with a childhood friend at the docks.
The police launch a public manhunt for Sawaki. In a race against time, Sawaki delivers the pinky to Noguchi's yakuza boss, sparing him from punishment. He gives Joe the tournament card on the shore of Tokyo Bay, not realizing Joe had already figured out he had not qualified, before biking off to the hospital to visit Sayoko. The detectives corner Joe, but a fellow contract killer shoots the two and professes her love for Joe, restoring his will to live.
Upon hearing of the manhunt, Joe and Noguchi realize they have evidence to clear Sawaki's name. They steal bicycles and catch up to a now-aware Sawaki, but as the three cross over the last bridge, they discover a large police blockade. The police shoot Sawaki, who falls to his death, as Joe and Noguchi charge at them holding the exculpatory evidence. The just-deceased Sayoko's spirit appears, and helps Sawaki's spirit rise up. They smile and walk off together, hand in hand.
Cast
- Shin'ichi Tsutsumi as Sawaki
- Kyōko Tōyama as Sayoko Kitagawa
- Ren Osugi as Joe
- Keisuke Horibe as Noguchi Shuji
- Shimizu Hiroshi as Detective Domon Taizo
- Takizawa Ryoko as Ran
- Tomorowo Taguchi as Profiler
- Akaji Maro as Hanta
Reviews and reception
The film received negative reviews from a few foreign film critics. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian called the film a "chaotic Yakuza thriller, which has a lot of energy and pace, but is let down by uncertain, and slightly callow, undertones of comic sentimentality". French critics said that "Postman Blues could have been an intelligent extension of his first film that surprised many people". It was even called a disappointment and an innocent black comedy.
Home video release
DVD of the film was released by Asian Film Network.Awards
| Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
| Bangkok Film Festival, 1998 | Audience Award for best feature film - Asian Cinema | Won | |
| Cognac Festival du Film Policier, 1999 | 'New Blood' Award | Hiroyuki Tanaka | Won |