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"Always grab the reader by the throat in the first paragraph,
sink your thumbs into his windpipe in the second, and hold him against the wall
until the tag line."
- Paul O'Neil
All Original Site Content
Copyright © 2003-2004
Phil Elmore, all rights reserved.

There is a reason that successful action movies do not star bland Europeans
driving blue Volvo station wagons. And there is a reason that when most fans of
cinema think of successful action movies, they do not think of director Roel
Reiné. The first reason is that people with French names seldom accomplish much
worth thinking about, except for that whole Pasteurization thing, and maybe the
Statue of Liberty. The second reason is The Delivery.
The existence of this film is proof, all by itself, that Europe sucks. Perhaps
not all of Europe, but certainly, and in no particular order, the Netherlands,
Belgium, France, and Spain. These are the locations in which The Delivery
was shot, and it is here that Roel Reiné's vision of an action movie is set, a
movie interrupted at irregular intervals by a public domain pseudo-techno
soundtrack obviously incorporated so that viewers will understand that this
movie is hip and cool. Hip and cool it actually isn't, but The Delivery is
at times dull, at other times amusing, and throughout teeth-clenchingly, eye-squintingly
disturbing.
Roel Reiné's masterpiece is what you'd get if Go, Pulp Fiction,
and National Lampoon's European Vacation were all assaulted by French
prison escapees and, as a result, had children that birthed mutant creatures who
in turn had incestuous relationships that produced a slathering, drooling
monstrosity they named The Delivery. As the film opens, a van and the
blue Volvo are traveling down a road somewhere in Europe, and the driver of the
van, believing himself to be an American taxi driver, is flying at high speeds
down the wrong side of the road while listening to music through headphones. He
has a minor accident and the van slides down the grassy shoulder of the highway.
The driver exits the van, which, suddenly remembering that it is in a movie,
bursts into flames for no reason at all. The Volvo pulls up and we are
introduced to three people, two of whom we'll be stuck with for the entire film.
There's a guy named Guy, who is so named, I am convinced, because most Europeans
are so bland and unremarkable that any European could play this fellow. The
script probably calls only for "Some Guy," which was shortened to
"Guy" so the other characters wouldn't feel awkward calling him by
name. Even now, scant minutes after watching the film, I find it difficult to
call Guy's face to memory.
There's also Guy's friend, another bland European fellow. He's so dull, in fact,
that even the people who made the movie can't remember his name. He's listed in
the credits as "Alfred," but the box in which the video came packaged
refers to him as "Albert." Characters in the movie refer to him by
both names, struggling as they are to remember why he's even in the movie.
Finally, there's Anna, Albert's or Alfred's Hot French Chick wife. She's no more
remarkable than her fellow protagonists, and mercifully disappears for most of
the movie. But we'll get to that.
It seems that Anna, Albert or Alfred, and Guy lost a lot of money in the Van
Made Of Gasoline-Soaked Wood Apparently Carrying A Cargo Of Nitroglycerin. This
money was owed to a loan shark, who doesn't appear in the movie and has probably
forgotten what the bland Europeans he lent it to looked like. Still, Albert or
Alfred and Guy and Anna are very concerned about paying it back, and it just
so happens that Anna went to college with psychopathic drug peddlers. She
tells Guy, and the husband whose name she can never remember, that all they have
to do is call this old college buddy of hers, and they can get money to do
"a delivery," which, Anna promises, will be "risk free."
This is the point in the movie where viewers nod knowingly as they slowly
realize why the movie is called The Delivery, even as they become
suspicious regarding the alleged "risk-free" nature of the journey to
come.
Accompanied by the throbbing and generic soundtrack, our Eurotrash protagonists
seek out this helpful drug dealer, a charming fellow named "Spike"
whose aide, a sinister-looking scarred Asian fellow with a penchant for swearing
loudly and angrily in Japanese, should have tipped off our protagonists that
Spike is anything but pleasant. After confusing everyone with a long, boring
speech about Europe, Spike is more than happy to invite the trio to transport
his 25 million dollars worth of Ecstasy, but, he apologizes, he must take Anna
hostage to make sure Guy and Albert or Alfred deliver the goods as promised.
Spike is a man who likes elaborate plans. You would think the simple task of
transporting Ecstasy from European Country A through European Countries B and C
to European Country D would be pretty simple. But Spike, who probably insists on
ordering pizza from the Pizza Hut in Southern Wales and having it relayed by
private messenger through Germany, Outer Mongolia, and Yemen before warming it
in a microwave set up on a rolling cart along the median of a highway in
Amsterdam, has composed an elaborate, circuitous route that includes checkpoints
at numerous pay telephones. Guy and Albert or Alfred take the schedule and set
out to earn their pay.
One of the reasons that Europe sucks -- apart from the proximity of the French
-- is that in Europe, Volkswagens full of German men and Belgian hookers FALL
FROM THE SKY with alarming regularity. So it comes as no surprise to the average
viewer when Guy and Albert or Alfred's trip is rudely interrupted by a
Volkswagen that falls from the sky and nearly crushes their vehicle. A German
man exits the car, and Albert or Alfred, doing what any one of us would do, runs
him over. The Belgian hooker, a woman named Loulou in a leopard print blouse and
slutty miniskirt, insists that Guy and What's-His-Name take her and Injured
German Guy along for the ride.
The trio and their bleeding German cargo don't have to travel far before they
encounter Loulou's boyfriend Marc, an angry, rat-faced little man with a car
trunk full of firearms and a knack for shooting people in front of their
children. Marc is busy doing just this -- shooting a woman who was driving by
with her daughter -- when Guy And The Gang happen along. There is a lot of
shooting, and Guy spends a lot of time shouting "Reverse! Reverse!"
Loulou does something to upset Marc, and the Volvo gets ventilated. Our gang
escapes, leaving rat-faced Marc to contemplate his next move.
It turns out Belgian hooker Loulou only looks like a hooker. In reality,
she and Marc are part of an organization called the AAU, which is dedicated to
using terrorism to halt European Unification. Mark and What's-His-Name are
shocked that anyone would care enough about European Unification to write an
angry Letter to the Editor, much less bother executing anyone over it. Lou
insists that Marc is just such a guy, and he's probably not too happy with them.
Lou is a real joy to have around. She has an irritating accent ("Thees ees
boooolsheet!"), but she can hotwire a car and helps Guy and What's-His-Name
break into a medical supply house and steal morphine for Wounded German Guy.
Wounded German Guy responds to the expert medical attention foisted on him by
frothing at the mouth like, as Savage Steve Holland would put it, a giant
dolphin with rabies. He spews all over the Volvo and its occupants before
expiring. The others bury him.
Guy, Marc, and Lou spend most of the middle of the film stealing cars and
running from Marc, from whom they've somehow stolen a detonator that Marc needs
to set off a bomb to kill some European Unification person-or-other. Everyone
seems to have a copy of Spike's Byzantine schedule, and every time our
protagonists stop at a pay phone, Marc lights them up with a Steyr AUG assault
rifle. The gang stays one step ahead of Euro-currency-hating Marc, though. At
one point, they slip through the French border by cunningly disguising their
stolen car full of Ecstasy as a bicycle, surrounded by other European
bicyclists. The French border guards, busy surrendering to passing German
tourists, don't notice.
During this road trip through Europe, we get to see the full depth of our
protagonists. Guy has a philosophical side, it turns out, and in one touching
scene tells Albert or Alfred all about the midget in a pub somewhere in Europe
that Guy almost killed with a beer glass (accidentally), an act that prompted
the angry three-foot midget to place a Gypsy curse on Guy's love life.
"'You will never be lucky in love,'" Guy laments, recalling the
midget's words and holding his palm parallel to the ground at thigh level.
"Cursed by a [bleep]er this high!"
At this point, an already superb film is made superber by the introduction of
Ugly European Interpol Detective Lefty, who, in the words of his more handsome
assistant, is "obsessed" with catching the members of the AAU. Lefty's
hobbies include picking up hookers and stroking little girls with his prosthetic
left hand, vices in which he indulges with alarming frequency in The
Delivery. Lefty is also dragging around a wooden briefcase, Pulp Fiction-style,
and seems pretty attached to it.
During their travels, Lou, Guy, and Albert or Alfred visit a Rave to shop for
guns. It is now my reluctant obligation to warn you of The Delivery's
unsavory fascination with the body's orifices. The Rave features -- and I am not
making this up (oh, how I wish I were) -- a naked woman with a miniature cable
camera who spends her time at the party doing obscene things with the camera.
She pauses in this artistic endeavor long enough to poke the camera in Guy's
direction, and the hapless Guy's amnesia-inducing countenance is projected on a
large Party Screen in the background. Marc, who apparently enjoys the Orifice
Cam and is also visiting the Rave, sees Guy on camera and enlists the help of an
AAU Henchman to once again attempt the murder of Lou and the boys.
What follows is a rip-off of the famous climax of Reservoir Dogs, the
twist being that this one is done with hand grenades. The Rave parking lot gets
blown up, and Marc is foiled again. Later, Guy gets to see Lou naked, and still
later, they Get It On, all of which makes Guy annoyingly happy for the rest of
the movie.
The erstwhile Lefty, who never tires of the hunt for the AAU, does take a break
to check into a cheap motel. He buys a hooker for the night, and gets a discount
on the price (250 instead of 600) when he flashes his badge. Come morning, the
hooker rolls him, steals his wallet, and leaves his prosthetic hand on the night
table with its middle finger pointing skyward.
The same cheap motel also hosts Marc and the AAU Henchman. When Marc is
distracted, Lou sneaks into the room, ties up the Henchman, and -- and again I
wish I was making this up, and please have the children leave the room --
sodomizes him with a Walther P38 until he gives up the location of the
aforementioned bomb. When Marc returns, there is a scuffle, and that Walther
eventually ends up in Marc's face, at which point I shuddered with such severity
that my glasses fell off.
The Delivery starts to make its point at a phone booth in the middle of
nowhere, at which Marc is waiting yet again to kill Lou and the boys. They
accidentally run over the phone booth, crushing Marc, but the phone still works,
so they get their last call from Spike. They end up at a nearby monastery, where
Scarred Asian Person clubs them all and ties them up. They are reunited with
Anna, and Spike joins the party with a chainsaw, intent on turning them all into
pretentious yet chunky European soup.
Spike -- who is forced to delay his murderous rampage when the chainsaw runs out
of "petrol," and who is further delayed while trying to set the saw's
choke -- is confronted by Lefty, who mistakenly believes the lot of them to be
the AAU terrorists he as been obsessively hunting Moby Dick-style. He has
replaced his prosthetic hand with an elaborate bladed weapon, having seen the
Bruce Lee film Enter The Dragon one too many times. Poor Lefty is cut off
in mid-vengeance-speech when Marc's bomb, recovered by Lou and the boys and
placed in the Ecstasy shipment, explodes and turns all the bad guys into a fine
red mist. The suddenly-airborne bladed prosthesis nearly decapitates Guy -- or
maybe it was Albert or Alfred -- but our protagonists all escape.
The movie ends on a happy note, with Guy, Albert or Alfred, Lou, and Anna
discovering that the Ecstasy has somehow survived the blast. Thrilled at the
prospect of becoming full-fledged drug dealers, they ride off into the sunny
European afternoon. During the credits -- over which dissonant rap music plays
incongruously -- we see a small window in which our protagonists drive an
expensive car along the beach. The message? Ecstasy does make you happy,
chain-saw wielding madmen and knife-handed, hooker-buying Interpol agents
notwithstanding.
The Delivery: An hour and forty minutes of my life, gone forever.
The following is a GENUINE e-mail I received from the director of The Delivery.
Date: 9/05/2002 03:11:16 +0200
From: Roel Reiné <roel@rebelfilm.com>
To: Phil
Subject: Regarding PhilElmore.com
> This message is in MIME format. Since your mail reader does not understand
this format, some or all of this message may not be legible.
An interesting review you wrote on you¹re site regarding my movie. I hope you saw the making off on the DVD, or listened to the directors commentary on the DVD, maybe you then understand why I made this movie and in what kind of situation. Maybe it will be an more usefull spending of you¹re time.
I hope you will have the time to watch my next movie, ŒADRENALINE¹. It will be finnished at the end of this year.
.
Grt
Roel Reiné