It has been pared down to a light comedy with a little romance on the side, and works competently in these terms.
How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:10
Fresh:6
Rotten:4
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: A decent performance from Pegg in a disappointing film. Neither sharp nor satirical, Weide's adaptation relies too heavily on slapstick, and misses the point of the source material in the process.
Theatrical Release:03-10-2008
Synopsis: Toby Young's scathing roman à clef about his stint working for Vanity Fair is rather loosely adapted for the screen in this film of the same name. Young briefly worked for the high-profile magazine... Toby Young's scathing roman à clef about his stint working for Vanity Fair is rather loosely adapted for the screen in this film of the same name. Young briefly worked for the high-profile magazine in the mid-1990s, and upon his dismissal he penned a snarky memoir that went on to become a major bestseller. Now, in the film version, we have Simon Pegg as Sidney Young, a cocky journalist who is hired by editor Clayton Harding (Jeff Bridges) to work for Sharps magazine. Sidney arrives in New York with grand plans to expose the ridiculousness of modern celebrity culture, but Harding forces him to work on puff pieces with fellow writer Alison Olsen (Kirsten Dunst). Sidney refuses to adapt to the glitzy magazine world, and is ostracized for his offensive, sloppy behavior. He and Alison--a frustrated novelist at heart--trade barbs and bond over their terrible jobs, slowly developing a quirky camaraderie. Things take a turn when Sidney meets Sophie Maes (Megan Fox), an ambitious starlet. He becomes determined to get Sophie into bed, no matter the cost, and after several madcap incidences involving crushed Chihuahuas and transsexuals, he finds himself suddenly sucked into the flashy world of Sharps. In danger of losing himself completely, he tries to figure out what it is he really wants, and what he is willing to sacrifice to get it. Bridges puts in an amusing performance as the lackadaisical Harding, and Gillian Anderson is perfect as the icy P.R. queen. Some might feel Pegg, a hugely talented comedian, was perhaps miscast in this rather straightforward comedy; the film is sharp in places, but doesn't come close to capturing the caustic claws of the book. Rather ironically, a story that takes on the nonsense of Hollywood appears to have become a part of the very machine it meant to mock. [More]
Starring: Simon Pegg, Kirsten Dunst, Megan Fox, Danny Huston
Starring: Simon Pegg, Kirsten Dunst, Megan Fox, Danny Huston, Gillian Anderson, Max Minghella, Jeff Bridges
Director: Robert B. Weide
Director: Robert B. Weide
Screenwriter: Peter Straughan
Producer: Stephen Woolley, Elizabeth Karlsen
Composer: David Arnold
Studio: MGM
Reviews for How to Lose Friends & Alienate People
It's silly but mostly entertaining, and Pegg's open, expressive face is always funny. Perhaps without entirely realising it, the movie provides a through-the-looking-glass satirical version of Ugly Betty and The Devil Wears Prada.
The film has none of the self-lacerating pain of Young’s book, but as an exercise in humiliation it is second to none.
It's not a very faithful adaptation, it doesn't make great use of Simon Pegg and Kirsten Dunst has still got those teeth, but there's little here that's offensive and more than enough that's amiable.
For a film about upholding personal ideals, its glossy packaging and derivative ‘will he get the girl?’ narrative sell any credibility down the river in favour of affected screwball larks.
Not as smart or as satirical as you might hope, but an enjoyable and often funny look at a mad, mad, mad, mad world.
The crushingly unfunny and slopped-together How to Lose Friends & Alienate People has neither the ambition nor the intelligence to do justice to its source material.
How to Lose Friends & Alienate People is possibly the best movie that could be made about Toby Young that isn't rated NC-17.
Simon Pegg is likably smart and obnoxious as the fish-out-of-water Brit in high-gloss Manhattan, but he's swimming upstream in a feature that substitutes slapstick for scathing wit.
How to lose friends and alienate audiences is the lesson taught by this cleverly titled but noxious British comedy.
Latest News for How to Lose Friends & Alienate People
February 27, 2009:
A scandal sheet satire that wears its antisocial tendencies on its sleeve, the movie takes aim at the inane gossip rag media world. But more often than not avoids punishment to fit the tabloid grime, that calls for more caustic rather than giddy strokes. ![]()
More...
February 27, 2009:
A scandal sheet satire that wears its antisocial tendencies on its sleeve, the movie takes aim at the inane gossip rag media world. But more often than not avoids punishment to fit the tabloid grime, that calls for more caustic rather than giddy strokes. ![]()
More...
January 04, 2009:
MGM Loses Friends and Alienates People ![]()
Thinking about buying "How to Lose Friends and Alienate People" on DVD? Simon Pegg and director Robert B. Weide say you shouldn't, thanks to some surprisingly sloppy product... More...
October 06, 2008:
Bridges on Tron 2: "Too Good to Pass Up" ![]()
How will the "Tron" sequel be like Peter Jackson's "King Kong"? Read the Guardian's new interview with Jeff Bridges to find out. More...
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