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  • Quicksilver (1986): Kevin Bacon Delivers… Disappointment

Quicksilver (1986): Kevin Bacon Delivers… Disappointment

Posted on June 24, 2025 By admin No Comments on Quicksilver (1986): Kevin Bacon Delivers… Disappointment
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Let’s just get this out of the way—Quicksilver is about Kevin Bacon quitting his job as a hotshot stockbroker to become a bicycle messenger. Yes, you read that right. He ditches Wall Street for handlebars and spandex shorts. It’s basically Wall Street meets Breaking Away, but if both were written during a low blood sugar episode and filmed inside a Mountain Dew commercial.

Bacon’s character, Jack Casey, loses big in the stock market, has an existential crisis, and decides the only logical step is to join the anarchic underworld of urban bike couriers. Because when your life falls apart, obviously the answer is… wheeling packages across San Francisco for minimum wage and possible death via garbage truck.


🚴‍♂️ Pedal to the Meh-tal

Kevin Bacon has charisma. He really does. But even he can’t save a script that thinks “bike messenger” is shorthand for “noble warrior monk with a Walkman.” We’re supposed to believe this guy has a spiritual awakening while dodging buses and beefing with dispatchers. Instead, we get montage after montage of Bacon doing glorified paper routes with the intensity of a man delivering a human kidney.

The movie treats the messenger lifestyle like it’s Fight Club on two wheels, complete with street justice, turf wars, and a gang of cartoonishly angry couriers who look like they got kicked out of The Warriors for being too sweaty.


🕶 The Supporting Cast: Huh?

Paul Rodriguez shows up, probably contractually obligated to deliver comic relief. He does his best, but most of the jokes land like a flat tire. Then there’s Louie Anderson in a rare dramatic role that feels like a deleted scene from The Polar Express. Jami Gertz is here too, as the love interest, barely developed and mostly tasked with looking concerned from behind a chain link fence.

And Laurence Fishburne—yes, the Laurence Fishburne—is wasted in a role where his primary job is to look cool while standing next to a BMX bike.

It’s a cast full of talent, and the movie uses them the way you’d use a $500 blender to make ice water.


🎵 The Soundtrack That Won’t Quit (Even When You Want It To)

You know that synth-heavy, aggressively ’80s music that plays when you enter a roller rink in hell? That’s the Quicksilversoundtrack. It’s so over-the-top, you half expect someone to break into a spontaneous dance-off with a mailbox.

Every time Jack gets serious about riding, the movie cranks up the music like it’s preparing for Rocky to punch Apollo Creed through a cloud of fog and legwarmers. But no—he’s just delivering an envelope to a sweaty accountant.


🔥 The Big Problem: No One Cares About Bike Messaging

Let’s be real. There’s a reason the phrase “bike messenger thriller” never took off as a genre. The stakes are nonexistent. There’s a subplot with gangsters and money and maybe a murder, but it’s so tacked-on it feels like the writers panicked halfway through and said, “Quick—add a villain!”

So now we’ve got this pseudo-crime plot, complete with drug dealers and chase scenes, and it just feels like watching a pizza delivery boy try to stop a mafia war with a set of handlebars and a can-do attitude.


💀 Final Thoughts:

Quicksilver wants to be a gritty urban redemption story. What it ends up being is a deeply confused PSA for helmets. It’s like someone watched Chariots of Fire, took a bong hit, and said, “But what if… bikes?”

Kevin Bacon deserved better. You deserve better. Humanity deserves better.


📼 Verdict:

1 out of 5 Spokes

A low-gear mess that takes itself way too seriously and pedals straight into absurdity.

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