Had it been executed with
more clarity and sophistication, the crime picture Special Delivery could have become either a clever farce or a tense
melodrama. As is, it’s a muddle containing a few elements that are pleasant to
watch. The main story hook is pretty good—during his escape following a bank
robbery, a crook dumps a bag of cash into a mailbox, then must wait until the
evening’s last mail collection for the box to be opened so he can reclaim his
cash. Unfortunately for the crook, several people become aware of his plan,
meaning that he must battle his way through assorted schemers and villains.
Unfortunately for the audience, Special
Delivery gets mired in several uninteresting subplots, and even the main
action—a romance involving the crook and a beautiful woman who saw him stash
the loot—fizzles because the second-rate actors playing these characters lack
both individual fire and shared chemistry.
The picture is murky right from the
get-go, because during the very long heist sequence that opens Special Delivery, it takes a few minutes
to discern that Jack Murdock (Bo Svenson) is the lead character. Once Jack and
his buddies stage their wild escape—it involves a grappling hook and a
window-washing platform—director Paul Wendkos unwisely cuts to flashes of
Jack’s combat service in Vietnam. Way to keep things light! Then, after the
momentous dropping of the loot into the mailbox, the movie cuts to several
minutes of action involving a junkie, Graff (Michael C. Gwynne), who saw the
drop and imagines scoring a payday. Thanks to this sort of narrative meandering,
leading lady Cybill Shepherd, playing the woman who saw the drop from her apartment
window, doesn’t show up until half the movie is over.
And so it goes from there.
In one scene, Shepherd and Svenson share bland flirtatious dialogue. In
another, Gwynne delivers a gritty and wired performance that belongs in a more
serious movie. And by the time everything comes together, it’s as difficult to
care about what’s happening as it is to determine whom we’re expected to
follow. Will the real protagonist please stand up? Shepherd looks great,
coasting through a vapid role as a city girl who wants more from life, but
Svenson is serviceable at best, and the flick wastes supporting players
including Gerrit Graham, Robert Ito, and Vic Tayback. That said, if you’ve been
looking for a movie that includes future Real
Housewives star Kim Richards as a kid accusing random men of being perverts—and
also features future soap-opera icon Diedre Hall as a scantily clad masseuse—then
this Special Delivery is for you.
Special Delivery: FUNKY
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