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Scott 2011 Specialized Catalogue of The United States

Top 10 Movies with Postal Theme

As I was searching for a good film to watch tonight, I stumbled upon a great article written by Nancy Pope on the Postal Museum blog which compiles a list of the 10 best postal movies.

The article is reproduced below.

Note: I added more movie posters and some commemorative postage stamps.

The 10 Best Postal Movies

By Nancy Pope, Historian and Curator

Stepping out of any professional postal museum curatorial role, I have compiled an only moderately arbitrary and completely personal list of the films I would call the 10 best movies with postal themes. Have you noticed how many films have postal themes in them? You will now!
#10 Overland Mail (1942)

overland mail movie 1942
Technically not a movie, but instead a 15-chapter serial, “Overland Mail” told the story of stagecoach company men sent to investigate a series of robberies. The cast includes Lon Chaney Jr. (Jim Lane) and Noah Beery Jr. (Sierra Pete) as the investigators and Helen Parrish as the daughter of the company’s manager. The chapters range from the first, “A Race with Disaster,” to the happy ending of chapter 15, “The Mail Goes Through.” The agents discover that it was not Indians attacking the stages, but white men dressed as Indians, trying to disrupt the mail line. The serial also featured father and son actors Noah Beery and Noah Beery, Jr.

#9 Diva (1981)

Diva 1981 Poster of the Movie
This French film stars Williamine Fernandez as a Paris mail carrier. He lives an eclectic life and is devoted to opera. He secretly tapes an American diva at a concert. His tape is confused with one that ties a police chief to criminals. While the main character is a mail carrier, the postal system is not important to the film.

#8 Air Mail (1932)

air-mail-thriller-postal-theme-movie
Ralph Bellamy plays the owner and operator of an airmail operation. The film looks at the high risk careers of the nation’s early airmail pilots. The film also features Pat O’Brien in the roll of a young and boastful airmail pilot – a depiction that played to many Americans’ thoughts about these wild young (and possibly crazy) men.

#7 The Aviator (1985)

postal theme movie - the aviator
Not to be confused with the more recent film about Howard Hughes, this film stars Christopher Reeve as an early US airmail pilot. He is flying as a contract pilot along CAM-5 (Contract Air Mail route #5) between Elko, Nevada, and Pasco, Washington. Although regulations and Reeve are only interested in carrying the mail, a rich man insists on his daughter (Rosanna Arquette) being carried as a passenger. Of course the pair fight, and are endangered when the plane crashes in a mountainous region. The pair survives the crash (and wolves) with a hint of a romantic future in the end.

#6 Only Angels Have Wings (1939)

Only-Angels-Have-Wings-postal-theme-movie
Cary Grant plays a brave airmail pilot operating in South America, flying mail over the Andes mountains. Jean Arthur and Rita Hayworth make life more interesting (and challenging) for our pilots while they are on the ground. In a nod to real life, the plot revolves around the need for the company to secure a government mail contract in order to survive. In the United States, it was the airmail contracts of the late 1920s and early 1930s that allowed commercial aviation to grow and flourish.

cary-grant-usa-commemorative-stamps

Source: http://www.carygrant.net/stamp

#5 Dear God (1996)

dear-god-postal-theme-movie-with-greg-kinnear
Greg Kinnear plays con man Tom Turner in this late 20th century film. After his latest arrest the court sentences him to getting a real job Tom ends up working at the local post office’s Dead Letter Office where undeliverable mail ends up. He mistakenly sends money to someone who had addressed a letter plea “to God.” The accidental good deed inspires his co-workers, and finally even the con man himself. Before long the workers are doing all they can to answer the “Dear God” letters, helping people and of course, finding the good in themselves.

#4 Il Postino, i.e., The Postman (1994)

Cucccinota IL Postino postal-theme-movie
This amusing Italian film shares the story of an exiled poet who is befriended by a man who is hired as a letter carrier to deliver all the new extra mail following the poet to his new tiny island home. The poet becomes the young postman’s guide to expressing himself, and of course, helps him woo a young woman.

#3 Appointment with Danger (1951)

postal theme movie appointment with danger
One of the few films featuring a US postal inspector hero, “Appointment with Danger” features Alan Ladd as inspector Al Goddard. When a fellow inspector is killed, he has to find and protect the witness, a nun played by Phyllis Calvert. Ladd also infiltrates the criminal gang responsible by pretending to be on the take. One of the amusing side notes of this film is the appearance of Jack Webb and Harry Morgan, later famous as the no-nonsense detectives in “Dragnet” as part of the criminal gang.

#2 Charade (1963)

CHARADE-postal-theme-movie-with-cary-grant
If you haven’t seen this film, then you probably don’t know why it’s on this list. And the last thing I’m going to do is spoil that for you. So let’s just say that any movie that has Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn in it is worth watching, regardless. And if there’s a connection to mail or the post, so much the better!

Audrey-Hepburn-Germany-Mint-Error-Sheet

Audrey Hepburn -Germany -Mint Error Sheet

#1 Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

Miracle-on-34th-Street-Postal-theme-movie

Miracle on 34th Streeet - Maureen O'Hara and John Payne

This quintessential Christmas movie is also a quintessential postal film. The film’s most dramatic point is when Kris Kringle is on trial and under pressure to admit that there is no such thing as Santa. But Santa’s cause is saved by the appearance of workers bearing sack after sack of letters addressed to Santa. His young lawyer argues that “every one of these letters is addressed to Santa Claus. The Post Office has delivered them. Therefore the Post Office Department, a branch of the Federal Government, recognizes this man Kris Kringle to be the one and only Santa Claus.” Faced with such overwhelming evidence, the judge has no choice but to admit that “since the United States Government declares this man to be Santa Claus, this court will not dispute it.”

Although not the topic of this blog, I could not end this blog without mentioning the worst postal movie of all time. It has to be Kevin Costner’s “The Postman.” In which an acclaimed science fiction novel is turned into a mush of a film.

Source: Postal Museum

We are in for a treat!

Happy movie time :-)

Janice



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Personalized Postage Stamp Order Rejected For Contravening Evin’s Law

Timbres-Personnalises-La-Poste-France

Source: timbres.laposte.fr

French Postal Administration, La Poste, refused to process a personnalized postage stamp order from Mr Vincenot,  a resident of Meurthe-et-Moselle, (France) because the submitted photography depicted the customer’s wife with a glass in her hands.

They had recently celebrated their 30 years of marriage and Mr Vincenot wanted to send  a thank you card with personnalized stamps from photos taken during that event.

La Poste explained that they could not go ahead with the order as it contravenes Evin’s law, which intention is to regulate alcohol and smoking advertising.

Scandalized, Mr Vincenot is appealing the decision. As he mentions in the interview below, he would like to know how La Poste can certify alcool is contained in the glass, even though it’s a goblet!

Furthermore, Mr Vincenot points out the fact these stamps will not be seen publicly, other than by the “eyes” of the postman. He also states that once published, you would need a magnifying glass, even a microscope to see the glass.

 

La Poste lui refuse des timbres personnalisés de sa femme un verre à la main

2012-04-18 00:00:00La Poste bureau de poste

Un habitant de Meurthe-et-Moselle qui avait commandé des timbres personnalisés à partir d’une photo sur laquelle apparaissait son épouse un verre à la main, a essuyé un refus de La Poste, selon qui la commande contreviendrait à la loi Evin, a-t-on appris mercredi auprès de l’intéressé.

 

“Je suis scandalisé, ce refus est parfaitement liberticide: je vais saisir le Défenseur des droits, je ne compte pas en rester là”, a indiqué à l’AFP Didier Vincenot, 57 ans, qui ne désespère pas que l’entreprise publique revienne sur sa décision.

“Nous avions fêté notre trentième anniversaire de mariage avec mon épouse et des amis, et je voulais envoyer un carton de remerciement avec des timbres personnalisés à partir de photos de la soirée”, a expliqué le client mécontent.

“J’aimerais que La Poste m’explique comment elle peut savoir que le verre contient de l’alcool. Même s’il s’agit d’un verre à pied! Les citoyens sont confrontés au quotidien à des entraves à la liberté, c’est insupportable!”, s’est emporté le quinquagénaire.

Selon lui, le timbre n’est pas à la vue du public, “si ce n’est celle du facteur”. “Et il faudrait une loupe, voire un microscope pour distinguer le verre une fois la photo imprimée sur le timbre”, a-t-il estimé.

Dans un communiqué, une porte-parole de l’entreprise publique a expliqué que “le visuel que fournit le client doit répondre à un certain nombre d’exigences qui figurent dans nos conditions générales de vente, notamment celle de ne pas contrevenir à la loi Evin”.

 

“Par ailleurs, La Poste se réserve la possibilité de refuser des commandes qu’elle juge non-admissibles pour quelconque raison”, a-t-elle ajouté.

M. Vincenot, dont la commande refusée de 36 euros n’a pas été débitée, demande “la fourniture de (sa) commande”, ainsi qu’un “geste commercial”. “J’exprime un ras-le-bol citoyen”, a-t-il estimé.

Source: Actualites Sympatico

I sincerely think that La Poste overdid it here!!

Absolutely..

absolutely unbelievable

Source: addikson24.over-blog.com

What are your thoughts?

Leave a comment below to share what you think.

Best,

Janice


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