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How To Lose Friends And Alienate People (2008) Certificate 15

How To Lose Friends And Alienate People
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Rated 3.0 stars
Average rating
(62%)
 
Starring: Megan Fox | Kirsten Dunst | Simon Pegg | Jeff Bridges | Gillian Anderson | Danny Huston | Margo Stilley | Max Minghella
Director: Robert B. Weide
Studio: PARAMOUNT HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 110 mins
Collections: 100 Hot Hits | 100 Most Wanted
Genres: Audio Descriptive | Comedy | Romance
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: March 16, 2009
Also available on: Also Available on: blu_ray

A British writer struggles to fit in at a high-profile magazine in New York. Based on Toby Young's memoir "How to Lose Friends & Alienate People".

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Highest rated reviews

83 out of 98 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5 stars
Sounds good

Natrick from , 12th February, 2008

Billed as a 'testosterone laced The Devil Wears Prada', Toby Young's sardonic memoir of his time tackling the glossy magazine scene in New York, How To Lose Friends And Alienate People is directed by 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' director Bob Weide According to director Bob Weide, once he took on How To Lose Friends And Alienate People he was asked how he planned to make the central character, Sidney Young, likeable. Drawing on British journalist Toby Young's autobiographical best seller, Young is 'greedy, pushy and cynical, a balding hack on the make.' The answer Bob Weide gave, 'Two words: Simon Pegg.' In the adaptation, Sidney Young works in London editing the 'Post Modern Review', a witty, intellectual publication that simultaneously derides and is fascinated by celebrity. He is then hired by Clayton Harding to work on Sharp's magazine, after the editor is impressed by Young's disruption of a post-BAFTA party with a pig posing as Babe. He becomes close to a rising starlet, Sophie Maes, but falls for colleague Alison Olsen. Over the course of the book, a drunken Toby Young affronts Mel Gibson at the 'Vanity Fair' Oscars party, asks a strippergram to the magazine's offices on 'Bring Your Daughter To Work Day', and takes cocaine with Damien Hirst on a ruined photo shoot: it remains to be seen which - if any - of these notorious stories make it into the film. Weide is the director of 'Curb Your Enthusiasm', the acclaimed American television series that stars Larry David as himself - that is, a semi-retired multi-millionaire. The show is partly-improvised and filmed in the style of a documentary. David's character is socially inept, neurotic and thwarted by events he is ill-equipped to handle. Weide has also directed a number of documentaries on renegade comedians, including Lenny Bruce: Swear To Tell The Truth and The Marx Brothers In A Nutshell. The script for How To Lose Friends And Alienate People, written by the Brit Peter Straughan, was pitched to Weide by his agent as a 'modernized Ealing comedy'. 'The Sunday Times' described the book as, 'The longest self-deprecating joke' since the complete works of Woody Allen.'

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21 out of 23 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3 stars
Outrageously funny feel-good film!

tunnelweb from , 11th October, 2008

An outrageously laugh-out loud funny feel-good film. Pegg and Bridges play off each other wonderfully, while Dunst does a good job playing a more complicated love interest and Anderson a wily publicist queen, used to getting her own way. An excellent mix, which lifts this otherwise typical film above its competitors.

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19 out of 30 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 0 stars
dont waste your time!

jo0812 from , 5th October, 2008

dont bother going to see this film, its not funny didnt make us laugh and we couldnt wait to get out of the cinema!

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13 out of 13 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 0 stars
Dreadful

jaed from , 27th April, 2009

This is one of the worst films I have seen. It fails on every level. Not funny. Not satirical. Full of cliches about the 'English' and about people (especially women) in New York. It portrays a make-believe world populated by utterly ridiculous characters. Weak, forced, laboured, embarrassing. Truly awful.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 3 stars
Harmless fun

A Customer from York, 16th March, 2010

Harmless fun...loved the dog bit, fluffy & funny like the film. worth a watch and a giggle...as i said, harmless

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Rated 2 stars
Not as funny as I thought it could be

ShonaB from , 15th March, 2010

With the cast members that this film has, I thought there would be far more laugh out loud moments than there was but sadly some of the jokes were just so ridiculous. The storyline was a bit flat and boring but loving Simon Pegg I carried on watching and hoping that it would get better. It didn't really.

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Rated 5 stars
Simon Pegg is hilarious

MaddogMack from , 15th March, 2010

Simon Pegg plays his character to a TEE. He is hilarious. Film is a bit predictable, and needs a different ending to make it believable, but it will make you laugh unless you have had your funny bone removed.

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Rated 2 stars
Very bleak

A Customer from Amersham, 14th March, 2010

Very bleak, good acting yyyy yyyy yyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyy yyyyyy yyyyyy yyyyy yyyy yyyy yyyyy yyyyy

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