Simon Pegg: 5 Awesome Performances And 5 That Sucked

By Edward Owen /

4. Sidney Young €“ How To Lose Friends And Alienate People

Some people thought this film was a bit lightweight and throwaway, but I€™m not among them. In my opinion, Pegg€™s role as luckless protagonist Sidney Young €“ a representation of author Toby Young €“ hit the sweet spot of Pegg-related roles, that of endearing ridiculousness. Perhaps it helps that I€™m a writer myself, but watching Pegg affect Sidney€™s misplaced too-clever-for-the-room hauteur was something I find gut-bustingly funny. The masterstroke in this performance was that Pegg managed to find the correct balance between making Sidney a pompous ass without making him seem unlikeable. Though at times he was just absurdly pretensious, he was also able to give off the is-it-just-me impression that a Brit abroad €“ especially one as crass as Sidney €“ must get when confronted with the airbrushed, glamorous world of American celebrity, and this was helped enormously by Pegg€™s persona as just a normal bloke. Through a combination of mannerisms, demeanour and just plain old-fashioned acting, he actually made me care for what could€™ve been throwaway material, ably convincing later on as a renegade writer who abandons his up-yours attitude for success yet still doesn€™t feel comfortable at the top table. It must be noted how big and accomplishment this is €“ if Pegg didn€™t convince, this whole film would€™ve been one colossal misfire. To his credit, it isn€™t.