School for Postmen (1947) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Very good comedy short
Jean_do10 August 2003
It is one of the best early work of Tati. You can find all the gags of 'L'école des facteurs' in 'jour de fête' but I think that the timing is better in this one. It is in this piece that you realise how perfectionist Tati was.
12 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Funny short film
LeRoyMarko13 May 2001
Jacques Tati is very funny in this short film. Most of the scenes are used again in «Jour de fête» (1948), a full feature film.

François (played by Tati) is the local postman somewhere in rural France. He wants to be as fast as the American postmen!

Very funny movie that reminded me of some classic Chaplin performances from the 20's.

Out of 100, I gave it 80. That's *** on a four stars rating system.
10 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Tati's way
boblipton11 October 2018
It's the rounds of a bicycle mailman, carrying the letters and small packages the people on his route receive, done the Tati way, with a blithe disregard for the wearying modern methods that bring speed but no pleasure. In other words, it's the sort of movie he would make at feature length.

Tati is usually held in such esteem by those who know his work, that in fairness, I should say I don't find his work funny. That is not to imply it's not good or even great, but his work seems to me more on the order of nostalgic musings, pleas to stop and enjoy the oddities, like a bicycle that knows its rider's habit so well that it can run his route without him, and stop at his favorite cafe.

Tati's work had not reached its later levels here. He's more concerned with the gag and punchline and the reactions of others - although more the youngsters than his nominal superior. Even so, this is a bright, offbeat short that should please Tati's fans and amuse those with twenty minutes to spare.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Astonishing, brilliant, and as singular as Tati himself
tgvittone17 June 2004
While I feel that a knowledge of Tati's entire oeuvre would be necessary to comment appropriately on his genius for physical comedy, this short is a fine introduction to the hallmarks of his style.

His gift for physical comedy is underscored by an understanding of the nuance and rhythm of motion, and how it portrays character. Underneath it all is his unfailing warmth for the beauty and simplicity of the human community -- at least the community where our familiarity with our neighbors carries the sweetness and lyricism so lost in the icy excess of the modern...and post-modern.

The scene where he enters a cafe and dances to jazz music, along with a few other couples who happen to be in the cafe, is masterful. The postman's joy in dance, in motion, and, most of all, in the spontaneous, is the stuff of genius.

What's more, it's great entertainment.

You may also marvel and wonder at just how he technically accomplished the shots of the postman's bicycle riding itself. My opinion is that Tati was a remarkable artist and the 20th century was graced by his presence beyond its merit.

Tati did more in less than half an hour here than most film artists will accomplish in their career.
19 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Touching, amazing, hilarious and witty
maike-120 July 2007
In this short film - a sort of character study for the later full length feature 'Jour de Fete', Tati plays a postman who has to operate more efficiently to meet a new schedule. The way in which he tries to speed up his round while still sticking to all the human interactions that come with being a postmen in the - still rural - setting of a small French village in the mid of the 20th century. Tati's physical slapstick is simply delightful. His humour is never rude or degrading to anyone involved but merely wonders about the intricacies of human interaction. He has an incredible talent for showing us what this is *really* about and is disarming in his directness and honesty. Especially the dance sequence in the café brings my mind to a halt every time I see it ... there are no words to really do it justice.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Elegance in Simplicity
joshg122 June 2013
Most people reading this will have seen Jour de Fête already. L'École des Facteurs is better. In all arts I find paring the subject down its essentials makes a greater impact on the viewer or listener. Whereas Jour de Fête is a nostalgic look at a fading France, L'École is all action of character and his foils. Few moments are left for the foils (or victims) to react, not a moment is wasted. It is a series of sketches seamlessly stitched together into a hilarious narrative- not an easy feat.

But I am of the television generation, to whom 22 minutes makes an hour. I want my entertainment to get down to business, which may explain why I prefer the short format.

Eh bien, vous avez besoin de quelque chose de plus? (What more do you need?)
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Not too good, even for 1947
Horst_In_Translation15 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a Jacques Tati short film from almost 70 years ago and it runs for 15 minutes and tells us how to be a good postman. However, apart from some pretty unfunny slapstick scenes, mostly we see people cycling around. Tati wrote, directed and starred in this and the problem is not at all that it is in black-and-white, but that it's just not really funny and also inferior to the comedy from the United States in the late 1940s. All in all, I was rather disappointed with it. Maybe it's so popular because it's pretty French with the whole atmosphere and also the music, but it's not really popular because it's strong filmmaking or very funny I have to say. Not recommended.
0 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Very Funny
Michael_Elliott14 November 2008
School for Postmen (1947)

*** (out of 4)

Tati short has him playing a postman who will stop at nothing to get the mail delivered quickly. This was my first film from Tati and after hearing many comparisons to Chaplin it's easy to see why. I really loved the way he went for broke when it came to the humor in the film and that includes a wide range of gags ranging from literally riding his bike on the back of a truck to avoiding death by cutting in front of cars. I know Tati remade this with Jour de Fete but this short is still worth seeing. It really does play out a lot like a Chaplin short from the 1920s as Tati's character never says much of anything and him constantly getting into one mess after another makes for a sweet natured character that I really enjoyed. I'm still not quite sure how they got the bicycle to drive by itself but it was certainly a great gag.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed