Owen Wilson Doesn't Worry About Deliveries, Thanks to Wolt
But everyone goes berserk anyway

It’s a destructive day in the neighborhood. A freaky day for a neighbor.
Society’s inhibitions run amok in a campy spot from DoorDash sub-brand Wolt. Owen Wilson’s understandably dismayed.
Things start out chill, as Owen explains that his Wolt+ membership eliminates worries about grocery delivery. But everyone misses the point—and they all go cray. Movers let a picture window smash to the ground, the letter carrier tosses everyone’s mail into the street, some woman vandalizes a random vehicle and the elderly lady next-door opens her bathrobe and flashes Wilson for all she’s worth.
“It was important to allow Owen to be Owen and to protect the tone of the script with authentic casting, measured performances,” says Nat Prisco, who wrote and directed the vignette through Arts & Sciences.
“I have been wanting to work with cinematographer Dion Beebe for years, so to collaborate with him and Owen on this project was an absolute dream,” she says. “I would say I could die now, but that’s a stupid thing to say. Why would someone want to die after something really great happens to them?”
The team tapped Wilson for his “easygoing, relatable” comic vibe, adds Fredrik Lucander, VP of growth, brand and advertising at Wolt. “It’s about telling the broader story of how we fit into people’s everyday lives—from food and groceries to so much more—in a way that feels useful, personal, and distinctly local.”
Indeed, the hometown vibe and good-natured mayhem set this one apart from most romps. Wilson keeps the action centered, and Prisco’s storytelling delivers the message with wild style.
Helsinki-based agency MacWell led creative development and the work breaks this week in 25 countries across TV, cinema and digital platforms.
