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Starbuck (2011)
Starbuck is a 2011 French-Canadian comedy film directed by Ken Scott and co-written by Scott and Martin Petit. It was produced by André Rouleau for Caramel Film and was shot in Montreal. It stars Patrick Huard, Antoine Bertrand and Julie Le Breton. The story follows an irresponsible middle-aged man who unexpectedly faces fatherhood on two fronts: his girlfriend is pregnant, and dozens of adult children born as a result of his youthful sperm donations have filed a lawsuit to have his identity revealed.
Comedy partners Scott and Petit used the premise to explore fatherhood roles, which are the central theme of the film, with the tragicomic protagonist finding redemption through fatherhood. Critical reception to the film was mixed; some praised Huard's performance and the story which mixed comedy with heartfelt moments, while others felt that the film was overly sentimental. It was the top-grossing Canadian film of 2011, won two Genie Awards and numerous audience awards at film festivals, and appeared on best-film lists in Variety and The Globe and Mail. The film was remade in 2013 as Delivery Man and as Fonzy.
Plot
David Wozniak is shown making multiple donations at a Quebec sperm bank in 1988. Twenty-three years later, in 2011, he is a hapless deliveryman for his family's butcher shop, attempting to grow cannabis in his apartment to pay an $80,000 debt to dangerous thugs.[a] He hides this from his police officer girlfriend Valérie, who reveals that she is pregnant with his child and expects nothing from him. David is unsure how to meet his responsibilities and receives conflicting advice on fatherhood from his younger brother and from his best friend. David then meets a lawyer from the sperm bank and is informed that he has fathered 533 children, 142 of whom have filed a class action lawsuit to force the clinic to reveal the identity of "Starbuck", the alias David used for donations.
David's best friend represents him to keep the records sealed, and shares profiles provided of each plaintiff in the lawsuit. Curious, David seeks encounters with several of the young adults, finding moments to be supportive and in the process saving a life and having his own life saved, and determines to act as their guardian angel. One day, he accidentally follows one of them into a meeting of the plaintiffs and becomes overwhelmed in the midst of his progeny. Given the floor, he tells them that he loves them all and that while the focus has been on Starbuck, that it is remarkable that they've found each other as brothers and sisters. Recognized by several of the attendees, he identifies himself as the adoptive father of a disabled plaintiff who could not attend. Inspired by David's words, they have a weekend camping holiday in which David participates.
In the meantime, David reconciles with Valérie, taking her for an ultrasound and bringing her to dinner with his family. It is revealed that he sent his family on a vacation to Venice when his mother was terminally ill, which was secretly funded by his sperm donation fees.[2] The press sensationally report on the class action suit as it goes to court and Starbuck is maligned in editorials. David decides to identify himself, but when the thugs assault his father he agrees with his lawyer to sue the sperm bank for damages. He wins both suits, receiving $200,000 and his identity remains secret.
David has regrets, but revealing his identity would require him to return the money and place his family in danger. However, his father buys out David's share of the family business to pay his debt, and David sends an email to the media identifying himself as Starbuck. He goes to Valérie's house and discovers that she is going into premature labour and rides with her to the hospital, where the healthy baby is born. He proposes to Valérie, tells her that he is Starbuck, and defends himself as a father. Dozens of the donor children gather to see him and their new brother, whom they shower with baby gifts.
Cast
- Patrick Huard
as David Wozniak ("Starbuck"). Huard was a stand-up comic before
transitioning to acting. At the time of filming, Huard was a "superstar"
in Quebec,[3]
having starred in four Golden Reel winning films and having directed
another. Huard's father died 12 days before the film's release,
resulting in his cancelling numerous promotional appearances.[4]
- Maxime Després as 18 year-old David
- Antoine Bertrand as David's lawyer and best friend[b]
- Julie Le Breton as Valérie. Le Breton and Huard had previously co-starred as siblings in the 2009 comedy thriller Cadavres.[6]
- Igor Ovadis [fr] as David's father, an immigrant from Poland.[7]
- Dominic Philie [fr] as Frère sombre
- Marc Bélanger [fr] as Frère sympathique, Paul
Donor children:
- David Michaël as Antoine, a goth vegetarian
- Patrick Martin [fr] as Étienne, an aspiring actor[8]
- David Giguère as a busker and the plaintiffs' spokesperson. A singer-songwriter, he performed an original song for his audition which was used in several of the character's scenes in the film.[9]
- Sarah-Jeanne Labrosse as Julie, a retail clerk and recovering drug user[8]
- Félix Brassard as Julien
- Alex Vallée as Ricardo
- Félix-Antoine Tremblay as Sauveteur (Marcos), a lifeguard at a public pool
- Sébastien René [fr] as Raphaël, a disabled young man. René reprised this role in the Hollywood remake of the film.[10]
Development and production
The film was co-written by Ken Scott and Martin Petit, former members of comedy troupe Les Bizarroïdes.[11] It was their first collaboration in a decade when they began writing the film in 2009.[12] Petit had the initial idea to tell the story of an irresponsible middle-aged man who had made numerous sperm donations for money and was the donor father to hundreds of grown children.[4] They first set the number of donor children at 200, which seemed comedically absurd to them. However, during development, they learned of a man who had 500 donor children by artificial insemination,[c] and increased their number to bring the script in line with reality.[6][16]
Fathers of young children, Scott and Petit saw the absurd premise as a way to explore issues of modern fatherhood and "to look at every possible aspect of paternity."[4][17] In particular, they wanted to look at delayed fatherhood and how father roles had changed in the previous fifteen years.[16][18] Making David a guardian angel to the donor children allowed them to show the character acting as a father in different situations before becoming a father.[17]
The donor children were initially written as stereotypes – the handicapped, the actor, the drug user – and were not fleshed out with names and details until later in the process.[9] These descriptive terms are retained in the film's credits for many of these roles, along with David's brothers and lawyer.[12] Most of the young actors cast for the donor children were relative unknowns, making their first feature film performances.[9]
The title comes from the Canadian Holstein bull Hanoverhill Starbuck, which was prized by the Artificial Insemination Centre of Quebec (Centre d'Insémination artificielle du Québec, CIAQ) for its genetics.[9][19] It sired more than 200,000 cows through artificial insemination[6] during its 19-year life.[19]
Starbuck was produced by André Rouleau of Montreal-based Caramel Films[20] on a budget of $6 million.[21] It received funding from Telefilm Canada's Canadian Feature Film Fund[22] and from the Quebecor fund. From financing to the completion of production took two years.[23]
Filming commenced on 15 September 2010.[24] Most of the film was shot in the Mile End district of Montreal, a multicultural neighbourhood which informed the production design.[9] The professional soccer scenes were filmed at Saputo Stadium with the participation of the Montreal Impact soccer club, during their 19 September 2010 match against the Tampa Bay Rowdies.[25]
Pierre Gill served as director of photography with production design by Danielle Labrie and music by David Lafleche. Costume design was by Sharon Scott. The film was edited to 108 minutes by Yvann Thibaudeau.[26][27] Dialogue is in Quebec French with subtitles in other regions and countries, including in France for certain passages.[28]
Themes
Paternity is the central theme of the film.[29] Film critic Jay Stone wrote that Starbuck's David belongs to a new generation of fathers in film, neither an idealized role model nor a bumbling incompetent, but a character who is "both comic and tragic [as he] connects with the children he doesn't know".[30] Meeting the donor children as adults, David must put aside preconceived expectations and accept the children for who they are.[31] There are the talented ones (e.g.: the sports star and the actor), the cool ones (the lifeguard and the busker), and the worrying ones (the drug user, the promiscuous homosexual and the goth).[8][32] As David helps to improve the lives of several of the donor children,[33] the story reveals that David has always been giving, despite this being the cause of many of his misfortunes.[19] This selflessness reveals a talent for being a father[23] and David finds redemption through fatherhood.[33]
While most of the film focuses on ties between David and the donor children, David is surrounded by other fathers: his own, his best friend, and his brothers who both have children.[9] Scenes between David and his father discuss the importance of being present in the lives of one's children,[4] and the perspective of fatherhood improves David's relationship with his father.[34]
Sociologist Margaret Nelson found that, like other popular North American films involving assisted reproductive technologies,[d] Starbuck reinforces the nuclear family. David's numerous genetic children are shown throughout the film to be isolated from other family relationships: no birth mothers, adoptive fathers, or other siblings are shown or referenced. The genetic tie between David and the donor children is shown as an irresistible bond, reaching a climax in the extended group hug after David announces that a new "brother" has joined their family. However, Nelson found that the conclusion places David's heart with Valérie and their new son, while the donor children are reduced to a battalion of babysitters.[33][e] Nonetheless, film critic Roger Moore found Starbuck to be "a most rewarding reinvention of what family can mean."[8]
Release
Starbuck was distributed by Les Films Christal in Quebec and by its parent company Entertainment One in English Canada.[35][36][37] The film had its world premiere on 21 June 2011 at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, hosted by the heritage minister James Moore.[38] The film opened across the province of Quebec on 27 July.[4] The film had a gala presentation at Roy Thompson Hall on 14 September as part of the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).[39][40][34] It then had a limited release in English Canada on 23 September[16] (with subtitles[41]).
In February 2012, Telefilm Canada announced that Starbuck had been sold in 101 countries, making it among their best international performers.[42] Rouleau gave credit for much of the international sales to a press and industry screening of Starbuck at TIFF, where there was enough excitement to generate sales for major markets including bidding wars for France and Spain.[43][18] Further sales occurred at the Berlin International Film Festival.[43]
Starbuck opened in France on 27 June 2012, with a wide release of 190 screens.[44][f] After attracting 100,000 admissions in its first week, attendance unusually held steady at 25,000 to 30,000 admissions per week for the following six weeks. On French cinema website AlloCiné, the film ranked as users' second-favourite movie of the summer, behind The Dark Knight Rises.[45]
Starbuck was shown as part of the Canada Front showcase by Telefilm Canada in association with the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) as its New York City premiere in March 2012.[46] Following appearances on the film festival circuit, Starbuck had a limited US release in New York City and Los Angeles on 22 March 2013.[47][18]
The film was released in China on 12 April 2013[48] on more than 2,000 screens.[49]
The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray in Canada the week of 26 November 2011.[50][51]
Reception
Box office
Starbuck earned $3,399,338 at the Quebec box office[21] with a total Canadian gross of over $3.5 million.[35] The French box office was estimated at $5 million.[43] The worldwide gross was reported as US$6,509,940 by Box Office Mojo[52] and US$6,824,619 by The Numbers.[53]
Critical response
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 65% based on 71 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10.[54] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 49 out of 100, based on 23 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[55] On Allociné, the film has an average rating of 3.4 out of 5 based on 19 reviews in the French press.[56] In the International Film Guide, Tom McSorley called it "one of the most engaging films of the year".[29] Peter Debruge, chief film critic for Variety, called Starbuck "an infectiously appealing Canadian farce" and included it on his list of the ten best films of the first half of 2013.[57] In 2023, Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail named the film among the 23 best Canadian comedy films ever made.[58]
Many critics complimented the writing and direction. Dave McGinn of The Globe and Mail wrote that Scott "deftly balances" the comedy and drama.[59] McGinn and National Post chief film critic Chris Knight agreed that the expressive writing was so genuine as to lend credulity to the more outlandish scenes.[59][19] Bruce DeMara of the Toronto Star wrote that it was full of surprises, alternating between laughs and tenderness, and always intelligent.[60] Bruce Kirkland, of the Toronto Sun called it a "perfect balance [of] crazy comedy and heart-wrenching drama."[51] However, Charlotte O'Sullivan of the London Evening Standard wrote that it lacked momentum and a cohesive tone[61] and Radheyan Simonpillai of Now found the film to be devoid of substance, logic or realism, with an uninspired resolution.[62]

Several critics commented on the emotional tone of the film. Tribute called it "one of the most heartwarming films you could ever see."[64] Maxime Demers of Le Journal de Montréal wrote that the film "touche en plein coeur, en abordant avec délicatesse et originalité" (English: touches the heart, with delicacy and originality).[65] DeMara called it "sweet and poignant".[60] Hertz wrote that it was "as potent as these kind of amiable comedies come", full of sincerity.[58] Rose Pacatte of the National Catholic Reporter called the film "extremely funny [and] heartwarming".[5] A review in The Hollywood Reporter noted that the Caramel Films production was not overly sweet.[26] Kirkland wrote that "the emotional depth is legitimate [and] not overly sentimental".[51] However, also writing for the Sun, Liz Braun called the film "somewhat dopey" and falsely sweet.[41] John Anderson of Variety and Matthew Taylor of Sight and Sound felt that the film suffered from moments of excessively sentimentality.[66][67] Stephen Holden of The New York Times found the film to be "shamelessly sentimental".[1] A review in Le Temps also found it to be overly sentimental, linking this to "la maladresse et les grands sentiments inhérents au cinéma québécois" (English: the strong yet awkward emotionality typical of Quebec cinema).[32] Film critic Roger Moore wrote that the key moment of the film is the meeting of the plaintiffs, where David's overwhelmed emotions resolve into pride. At this point, he wrote, the audience either accepts or rejects the film's tone and all that follows.[68]
Huard's performance was praised by Anderson,[66] Hertz,[58] Knight[19] and Taylor.[67] Stephen Cole of the Globe and Mail wrote that the film succeeded on the performance of the comedian "who can flip, flop and fly off a diving board while maintaining his sex appeal."[69] Steven Boone of RogerEbert.com recommended the film based on Huard's performance, writing that his "warmth and passionate concern ... sell this movie's humanist spirit".[70] Bertrand's performance was also praised. Taylor stated that Bertrand delivered the film's funniest moment in a post-trial scene on the courthouse steps.[67] Carole Milleliri of Critikat wrote that Bertrand's performance was a complimentary blend of Seth Rogen and Jonah Hill[28] while Moore compared Bertrand to Oliver Platt.[8]
Some of the movie's promotional material referenced the works of filmmaker Judd Apatow,[23] a comparison which was validated by critics Boone[70] and Milleliri.[28] Demers and Kelly compared the writing to Scott's previous screenplay for Seducing Doctor Lewis, which also blended comedy and drama.[4][65] Peter Bradshaw stated in his review in The Guardian a belief that Starbuck was based on the same true story as the 2010 documentary Donor Unknown and faulted it for losing "almost all the charm of the real story".[71] Debruge compared the film's comedic tone to that of My Big Fat Greek Wedding.[57] Taylor compared David's "guardian angel" mission to the premise of My Name is Earl, in which the title character tries to redeem himself by performing good deeds for those he previously wronged.[67]
Awards and nominations
Starbuck was nominated for six Genie Awards[72] and seven Jutra Awards,[73][74] winning the Genies for Best Original Screenplay and Best Original Song ("Quelque part" by Carole Facal).[75] Additionally, it was recognized with three awards for being the Canadian film with the largest box office revenue of 2011 in Canada (Golden Reel Award),[35][g] in Quebec (Billet d'Or)[76] and in Canada for a French-language film (Guichet d'Or).[77]
At international film festivals, Starbuck won best film awards at Palm Springs,[36] Seattle[78] and Sonoma,[79] and audience awards at Calgary,[35] Florida,[80] Santa Barbara,[37] Sonoma,[79] Traverse City,[81] and Vancouver.[82] The film won a Special Jury Prize at the L'Alpe d'Huez Comedy Film Festival (France). Huard won for Best Actor at L'Alpe d'Huez[83] and at the Valladolid International Film Festival (Spain).[76] The film was named Best North American Independent Film at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (Estonia).[84] It was a runner-up for the People's Choice Award at TIFF[85] and was named to the festival's Canada's Top Ten list for 2011.[86]
| Award | Category | Recipients | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 32nd Genie Awards | Golden Reel Award[g] | André Rouleau | Won | [87] [35] |
| Best Motion Picture | André Rouleau | Nominated | [72] [75] | |
| Best Original Screenplay | Ken Scott and Martin Petit | Won | ||
| Best Actor | Patrick Huard | Nominated | ||
| Best Supporting Actor | Antoine Bertrand | Nominated | ||
| Best Supporting Actress | Julie Lebreton | Nominated | ||
| Best Original Song | Carole Facal for "Quelque part" | Won | ||
| 2012 Prix Jutra | Billet d'Or | André Rouleau | Won | [76] |
| Best Film | André Rouleau | Nominated | [73] | |
| Best Direction | Ken Scott | Nominated | ||
| Best Actor | Patrick Huard | Nominated | ||
| Best Screenplay | Ken Scott and Martin Petit | Nominated | ||
| Best Art Direction | Danielle Labrie | Nominated | ||
| Best Sound | Pierre-Jules Audet, Arnaud Derimay and Bernard Gariépy Strobl | Nominated | ||
| 2013 Prix Jutra | Most successful Quebec film outside Quebec | Starbuck | Finalist | [74] |
| Telefilm Canada | Guichet d'Or[h] | Ken Scott and Martin Petit | Won | [77] |
| 2011 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) | People's Choice Award | Runner-up | [85] | |
| 2011 Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) | Most Popular Canadian Film | Won | [82] | |
| Vancouver Film Critics Circle | Best Canadian Film | Nominated | [88] | |
| Best Actor – Canadian Film | Patrick Huard | Nominated | ||
| Best Director – Canadian Film | Ken Scott | Nominated | ||
| Calgary International Film Festival | People's Choice Award | Won | [35] | |
| L'Alpe d'Huez Film Festival | Special Jury Award | Ken Scott | Won | [83] |
| Best Male Performance | Patrick Huard | Won | ||
| Palm Springs International Film Festival | Best Narrative Film | Won | [36] | |
| Santa Barbara International Film Festival | Audience Choice Award | Won | [37] | |
| Seattle International Film Festival | Best Narrative Film | Starbuck | Won | [78] |
| Sonoma International Film Festival | Audience Award | Won | [79] | |
| Best Narrative Feature | Won | |||
| Traverse City Film Festival | Audience Award – Best Foreign Film | Ken Scott | Won | [81] |
| Florida Film Festival | Audience Award for Best International Feature | Starbuck | Won | [80] |
| Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival | Best North American Independent Film | Won | [84] | |
| Valladolid International Film Festival | Best Actor | Patrick Huard | Won | [76] |
| Quebec Council on Tobacco and Health | Oxygen Prize | Won | [89] |
Controversies
The comedy's treatment of its subject matter sparked controversy over anonymous sperm donation, which protects the donor but can lead to harm for the donor children.[90][91] In particular, when there are large groups of donor children with the same biological father in a community, there is risk of overrepresented genetic diseases and of accidental incest.[c] At the time, there were no legal prohibitions in North America limiting the number of children conceived through artificial insemination from a single man.[91]
Guillaume Cochin, author of the 2007 novel Spermatofolie, and publishers Editions Jean-Claude Gawsewitch alleged plagiarism against the authors of Starbuck. The filmmakers denied this or being aware of the novel.[92] In September 2012, the publisher's lawyer filed for copyright infringement in the French high court, claiming 3 million Euros.[93][94][i]
Remakes and legacy
A French remake, Fonzy, was released in France on 30 October 2013. José Garcia played the lead character.[95]
A Hollywood remake by DreamWorks Pictures, Delivery Man, unusually retained Scott as writer and director and Rouleau as producer.[20] Begun in 2012 on an "accelerated production schedule",[96] it starred Vince Vaughn and was released on 22 November 2013.[97] Variety described it as a scene-for-scene remake.[31]
Adaptation rights were sold for a Bollywood remake in Hindi, to be dubbed into Punjabi and six other languages. Producer Ajay Virmani of Toronto-based First Take Entertainment was attached to the project.[21][j] Some sources incorrectly identified Vicky Donor as this remake.[64][98] The project was apparently abandoned.[k]
The artwork The Commerce of Infertility (2013) by Andi Arnovitz was inspired by Starbuck and the events on which the film is based. It consists of 400 plastic babies with price tags, each encased in resin to resemble ice cubes, arranged in a grid. According to the artist, the piece questions the enormity of the fertility business and the need for oversight in the profitable industry.[100]
Delivery Man (2013)
Delivery Man is a 2013 comedy-drama film written and directed by Ken Scott, produced by DreamWorks Pictures and Reliance Entertainment.[6] It is a shot-for-shot remake of the 2011 Canadian film Starbuck,[7] and stars Vince Vaughn, Chris Pratt, and Cobie Smulders.
It was released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (through the Touchstone Pictures banner) on November 22, 2013, received mixed reviews and grossed $53.1 million against a $26 million budget.
Plot
David Wozniak is a deliveryman for his family's butcher shop, pursued by thugs to whom he owes $80,000. His girlfriend Emma, an NYPD officer, is pregnant with his child. One day, David returns from work to find a lawyer representing a sperm bank (where he gave 693 donations and earned a sum of $24,255 during his student years) who tells him that the clinic gave his samples to women in the clinic and that he has fathered 533 children. Of those, 142 have joined a class action lawsuit to force the fertility clinic to reveal the identity of "Starbuck," the alias he had used.
David's friend and lawyer Brett represents him as he tries to keep the records sealed. He provides him with profiles of each party to the lawsuit; David searches for them, finding moments for random acts of kindness. He covers for a struggling actor at his job so he can audition for a role. He pretends to be a pizza delivery man when he sees his daughter fighting with her boyfriend and saves her life as she ODs on drugs. He considers identifying himself but, after the thugs assault his father, he allows Brett to counter-sue the sperm bank for punitive damages. He wins the lawsuit, receives $200,000, and keeps his identity a secret.
David has regrets and thinks about revealing his identity. However, if he chooses to do so, he would lose the $200,000 that he won in the countersuit. Revealing to his father that he is Starbuck, his dad pays off David's debt. David finally reveals his identity on Facebook. Going to Emma's, he finds that she is going into premature labor. At the hospital, his baby is born, he proposes to Emma, and many of the children show up to see them.
In the closing sequence, David is shown to maintain contact with many of his children.
Cast
- Vince Vaughn as David Wozniak
- Chris Pratt as Brett
- Cobie Smulders as Emma
- Andrzej Blumenfeld as Mikolaj Wozniak
- Simon Delaney as Victor
- Bobby Moynihan as Aleksy
- Dave Patten as Adam[8]
- Adam Chanler-Berat as Viggo
- Britt Robertson as Kristen
- Jack Reynor as Josh
- Madison McGrew as Rachel
- Amos VanderPoel as Taylor
- Matthew Daddario as Channing
- Jessica Williams as Tanya
- Damian Young as Williams
- Richard Poe as Loan Officer
- Bruce Altman as Mass Action Attorney
- Alexander Flores as Teenage Clerk
- Glenn Fleshler as Coffee Shop Owner
- Jay Leno as himself
- Bill Maher as himself
- Stephen Ellis as 18th Century Professor
Production
The film is a shot-for-shot remake of the 2011 French-Canadian film Starbuck,[7] which was also directed by Ken Scott; Starbuck was also the working title for the English-language production.[9]
Filming began in October 2012 in the Hudson Valley of New York. Filming then moved to New York City locales, in Brooklyn[10][11] and Manhattan.[12] Concerning the number of extras as the children, actor Dave Patten said, "There were ten of us who were constants on the sets so we didn’t really bond with the others who were extras. But the ten of us became a huge pack of friends and it was really nice. There are usually a lot of egos on set when it comes to a big cast which causes people not to get along but we didn’t have that issue."[8]
Release
Delivery Man was released worldwide in November 2013 by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures through the Touchstone Pictures label, except for India and most international territories, where the rights are sold by Mister Smith Entertainment to other independent distributors, including Entertainment One in the UK and Ireland. DreamWorks' financial partner, Reliance Entertainment released the film in India.
Reception
Delivery Man received mixed reviews from critics. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a score of 40% based on reviews from 148 critics with an average score of 5.00/10. The site's consensus says: "It has an undeniably sweet charm, and Vince Vaughn is eminently likable in the lead role, but Delivery Man suffers in comparison to Starbuck, the hit Canadian comedy that inspired it."[13] At Metacritic the film received a score of 44/100 based on reviews from 33 critics.[14] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[15]
Alonso Duralde of The Wrap gave the film a negative review, stating that "Delivery Man offers comedy and sentimentality in equal doses and, unfortunately, equal efficacy—the jokes, the characters and the situations aren't very funny, and the would-be heart-tuggery is mostly embarrassing."[16] Peter Debruge of Variety wrote, "Delivery Man is virtually nothing like a [typical] Vince Vaughn movie, but rather a heartfelt celebration of the act of parenthood presented under radically exaggerated circumstances... the director demonstrates the good sense not to mess with success, engineering what amounts to a scene-for-scene remake of that earlier feel-good outing—with the notable addition of Chris Pratt in his funniest supporting performance yet."[7] Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that "it's nice to see Vaughn moving out of his fast-talking comfort zone in a role that requires him to be more quietly reactive; while Parks and Recreation’s Pratt comically raises the second-banana bar as a put-upon dad itching to get back into the courtroom. While Smulders, unfortunately, isn't given the same opportunity to show off her comedic chops regularly on display on How I Met Your Mother, acclaimed Polish actor Andrzej Blumenfeld (in his American debut) makes a more empathetic impression as the warm Wozniak family patriarch."[17]

