33 Postcards

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33 Postcards
33Postcards2011Poster.jpg
Australian film poster
Directed by Pauline Chan
Written by
  • Martin Edmond
  • Philip Dalkin
  • Pauline Chan
Produced by
  • Penny Carl-Nelson
  • Pauline Chan
  • Lesley Stevens
  • Liu Zhijiang
Starring
CinematographyToby Oliver
Music byAntony Partos
Production
company
Portal Pictures Pty Ltd
Distributed by
  • Titan View (Aus.& NZ)
  • Arclight Films International
Release date
  • 9 June 2011 (2011-06-09)(Sydney Film Festival)
Running time
97 minutes
CountriesAustralia
China
LanguagesEnglish
Mandarin
Zhu Lin, Pauline Chan and Lincoln Lewis Zhu Lin, Pauline Chan and Lincoln Lewis 2011 (2).jpg
Zhu Lin, Pauline Chan and Lincoln Lewis

33 Postcards is a 2011 drama film written and directed by Pauline Chan and starring Guy Pearce. [1] It is the first co-production between China and New South Wales. [2] [3]

Contents

Plot

Mei Mei (Zhu Lin) a 16-year-old Chinese orphan who has been supported by donations from her Australian sponsor Dean Randall (Guy Pearce), who sends her postcards that describe his family life. When her orphanage choir travels to Australia to participate in an Australian Choir Festival, Mei Mei takes the opportunity to find Dean with the hope he will make her part of his family. However, Mei Mei discovers the shocking truth – Dean is actually a convict in prison for manslaughter. Seeing Dean as her last chance at finding a home, Mei Mei decides to stay in Sydney until Dean gets his parole, in the meantime becoming naively entangled in the criminal world herself. To save Mei Mei from his own fate, Dean must make an impossible sacrifice.

Development

33 Postcards was developed under the title Mei Mei. [4] In 2009, Mei Mei was one of only two Australian screenplays selected from 475 submissions to partake in the Tribeca Film Institute program, Tribeca All Access. [5] The screenplay also featured as one of only three selected for Dungog Film Festival as part of the in the Raw Program. [6]

Coproduction

33 Postcards is an official film and television co-production in Australia. The co-production is between Australia and China, for which a co-production treaty did not exist prior to 2008. [7] 33 Postcards is only the second film to be produced under this treaty and the first co-production between NSW and China. [8] This opportunity for co-productions to exist between China and Australia is largely unrealised in both countries, but has been identified as a potentially lucrative endeavour. [9] [10]

Production

Lead actress Zhu Lin began production knowing little more than a dozen words in the English language. [11] The film was shot in both Australia and Zhejiang Province, China.

Festivals

33 Postcards has featured and been in competition at the following festivals

Awards

AwardCategoryNominatedOutcome
The Sydney Film FestivalCommunity Relations Commission Award33 PostcardsWon
Shanghai Film Festival ChinaRising Star AwardZhu LinWon
Movie Convention Gold Coast AustraliaMale Star of Tomorrow Lincoln Lewis Won
Mostly British Film FestivalRetrospective Guy Pearce Won
Fiuggi Family Film Festival ItalySocial World Film Festival Award33 PostcardsWon
Chinese International Film Festival (Sydney)Best Director Pauline Chan Nominated
Chinese International Film Festival (Sydney)Organising Committee Special Film Award33 PostcardsNominated
AACTA Awards Best Lead Actor Guy Pearce Nominated
AACTA Awards Best Original Music Score Antony PartosNominated

Future

33 Postcards was anticipated for release in the second half of 2011 in Australia [12] and also in China. [13] The film was released to video on demand on 15 April 2013. [14]

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  12. "IMDb: Upcoming Releases for Australia". IMDb .
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  14. Smith, Nigel M. (6 April 2013). "The 10 Indies to Watch on VOD This April". Indiewire . Retrieved 27 May 2013.