It's time to dust off the DVDs, access the archives, browse the BluRays and find a film for this week. Tonight we take the short hop back to 2013 for a film starring Vince Vaughn;
Delivery Man
Pleasantly surprised is the initial response. For a more detailed synopsis and review, well dear reader, read on.
Vince Vaughn (Four Christmases) is David Wozniak a New York meat delivery driver, for his father's meat company. David is a lovable underachiever, who tends to make the wrong decisions as he travels through life, he tries to do the right thing, but inevitably gets it wrong. Over the years he has tried many money making schemes but all seem doomed to failure, as a result he is in debt and in trouble. His girlfriend is pregnant, but is going to deny David the rights to see the child.
Not a good situation.
However, one of his money spinners from twenty years ago, rears its ugly head again and not in a good way. It transpires that David made several hundred sperm donations to a fertility clinic, which he got paid for and due to a mix up at the clinic, his donations were used on multiple occasions.
533 occasions to be exact!
And twenty years on 142 of his biological children are now filing a lawsuit to find out who exactly is their biological father, the only thing they know is that he went by the pseudonym of Starbuck.
So there we have it, in a nutshell so to speak. What a brilliant premise for a film. It actually transpires that the screenplay for the film was used on a Canadian film from 2011 called Starbuck, which had limited worldwide release, so the screenplay was reutilised for Delivery Man. Interestingly Starbuck gets a higher IMDB rating than Delivery Man.
Either way the story is really good, the hapless and somewhat irresponsible David, tries to turn his life around when he finds out the personal profiles of the 142 biological children and searches one out, just out of curiosity. When this turns up a real positive, he starts searching for others and while still retaining his anonymity he helps them out where it is needed, as he discovers his biological family in all walks of life.
So David is finding his family, while his friend and lawyer is putting together a counter case to maintain the anonymity and recoup some financial reward via a punitive claim. It might not sound that enthralling but it is a multifaceted story that jumps between the relationships of David and his biological kids, his own tight-knit family, his lawyer and his girlfriend. It is the proximity of these threads that intertwine together that makes a fascinating and fun story. Although classed as a drama / comedy the emphasis is on comedy and obviously the feelgood factor as well. It doesn't take itself too seriously, only when it needs to and you know that at the end, all will be fine and dandy, but how David and his enormous family get there is well worth the 105 minute journey.
The few paragraphs above do not really capture the essence of the film and perhaps does not sell the story as a whole, certainly looking at the IMDB synopsis we weren't expecting much, although the trailer was a tantalising glimpse as to how good the film could or would be. It is not going to be to everyone's liking, but Vince Vaughn is perfect for Wozniak, the surrounding cast and there's quite a few of those, are really rather good too. It's not big names in the cast list, but there doesn't need to be, Delivery Man is all about the story. It is unique, fanciful maybe, but touching, funny and dare one say it; heartwarming in places.
As for the scores, some of the panel liked it more than others and there is a division between the generations. Some comments were issued like; "It was good, but not that good" or "It was alright, but I did drift off for a few minutes"!! It's a good job we're not judging for the Oscars!
TNiFN Rating 78%
IMDB Link
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