The Snow Postman
The Snow Postman
| 01 January 1955 (USA)
The Snow Postman Trailers

On the eve of the New Year, several children write a letter to Father Frost asking him to send them a Christmas tree for the holiday, and then they make a Snowman who should take the letter to the magic forest. When midnight arrives, under the beat of a clock, the Snowman comes to life and, together with a small yard puppy, nicknamed Druzhok, sets off in search of Father Frost.

Reviews
Blaironit

Excellent film with a gripping story!

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Connianatu

How wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.

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BallWubba

Wow! What a bizarre film! Unfortunately the few funny moments there were were quite overshadowed by it's completely weird and random vibe throughout.

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Philippa

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"Snegovik-pochtovik" is a Soviet animated short film from 1955, so this one is already over 60 years old and it is one work from the Eastern equivalent to the Golden Age of Animation brought upon us by Warner Bros. and Disney back then. The names Amalrik and Suteev you will find attached to many other Soviet cartoons from back then and the number of views here tells me that this is not one of the most or least known ones. Anyway, it recently got a bit of a boost because it deals with the subject of winter/Christmas and this is one you don't see as often as you would think in Soviet animation. But the animals are there, the talking animals, who are not as humanized as they were in the USA back then, and those were really frequent in Soviet animation. Still I felt that here we have almost too many characters to be honest. The elaboration on each of these left me pretty unimpressed, it is all quantity over quality. And I also felt that this one looks a lot more American than most other Soviet cartoons from that era where you immediately see which country they were from. This one here not so much. It runs for a bit under 20 minutes and well I must say I am glad it was this short as neither characters nor story never really had me glued to the screen. Even now during the months when the film is set I found this to be an underwhelming watch all in all. I have seen many better Soviet cartoons from back in the day and the moral is also a bit unimpressive here. My suggestion is to skip it.

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