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33 Postcards, Movie

33 Postcards 2011

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Drama starring Guy Pearce about a young Chinese orphan who travels to Australia to connect with her sponsor of ten years. More

When Mei Mei (Zhu Lin) travels to Australia to partake in The Australian Choir Festival she takes the opportunity to find Dean (Guy Pearce), a man who has sponsored her stay in the Dong Ying orphange. Far from what was depicted by letters the two shared, she finds Dean - the son of a dodgy car dealer - in jail. Despite this, Mei Mei remains tenacious in her efforts to thank him. Hide

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27 votes / 5 comments The Talk

  • 81 %

    Want to See it

    What say you?

    • alibalibee

      looks good. By the way, its getting a bit boring with this one person saying how no-one has commented yet!

    • ...

      "no-one has commented yet" is the default if no one has commented....

    • ang

      saw this in the melb film festival 2010. Lots of heart, great actors, unique story.

    • Kaf

      good film to warm your heart on a cold winter's night.

    • gav

      i think its a great film,I was in tears at times and im a grown man!

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Flicks.co.nz Review

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Tony Stamp Flicks Writer

After seeing Guy Pearce act in so many films, I'm only just starting to realise how much I like watching him work. He is as consistent as ever in 33 Postcards, giving a haunted, vulnerable performance as convict Dean. I was far less impressed with Zhu Lin as Mei Mei, who initially seemed like a bit of a caricature, but she won me over eventually when showing some emotional range. More

Dean is initially dismissive of a relationship with Mei Mei, but his resolve soon crumbles and we (and she) get to know him better, including the somewhat hamfisted reveal of how he got locked up.

Mei Mei also starts to muck around with Carl, a frosted tip bro who seems like he's just moved out of Summer Bay, and who works in a a garage while harboring dreams of becoming a chef.

When 33 Postcards started I worried that it was going to be like one of those after-school morality tale films from my childhood. It pretty much is, but the moral wasn't what I expected: rather than a lesson about international differences, we get one about how crime doesn't pay.

Dean's looming parole creates a ticking clock for the film, although its resolution is too timid to create any real impact, and totally fumbles an overly saccharine finale. 33 Postcards benefits from Pearce's performance and some restrained direction, but ultimately it's just there, a bit bland and easily forgotten. Hide

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Press Reviews

ABC (Australia)

33 Postcards is not without flaws, but emotionally, thematically and visually, there's a lot to like. Full review.

Australian Film Review

33 Postcards should not be limited to either nationality, it’s a universal story that is sure to please any audience. You many need to take a tissue. Full review.