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Recently, in the back seat of my car, my older son and his best friend were thinking seriously about their futures:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VK17r6hN96k[/youtube]
(Scene: "The Plan" from Shaun of the Dead, Universal Pictures)
Five years ago, when this same son was battling chronic insomnia brought on by "scary thoughts" of aliens and dying, I could never have predicted that our family movie nights would** one day revolve around spaceships and the walking dead--and yet, here we are, celebrating birthdays with an opening-night viewing of *Paul *and using zombie-homage-flick Shaun of the Dead as a future-happiness benchmark. The common touchstone to these family favorites is Simon Pegg--screenplay-writer and star of Paul, Shaun of the Dead, *Hot Fuzz *and Run, Fat Boy, Run (and ensemble-member in the latest Star Trek film-franchise, to boot).
And now, our friend Simon has come out with a book.
Pegg's frothy, fun autobiography *Nerd Do Well * is hitting the shelves just in time for a sunscreen-slathered, poncho-wearing day at the beach, or (for those lucky thousands), perusal whilst shuttle bus-ing to San Diego Comic Con--and my sons and I have had a blast dipping into it together:
- "He met the scarf-y Dr. Who!"
- "Oh, man! Coldplay played at his pub all the time! At the Winchester!"
- "He sucked at had a hard time with those standardized tests in school, too!"
- "Cool! He met Rick from the Young Ones!"
In fact, there are few geek icons Pegg hasn't had the pleasure of meeting. His list (just off the top of my head) includes: Carrie Fischer, Lou Ferrigno, Gillian Anderson, Peter Jackson, George Lucas, Steven Speilberg, and George Romero, among others.
The devolution into name-dropping lists is one of the book's flaws--but not a deal-breaker, particularly when the name-dropping is followed by a paragraph, page, or chapter of film criticism. Pegg's analysis of bromo-eroticism in Starsky and Hutch, the merits and flaws of the Star Wars prequels, and the socio-political underpinnings of the original Star Wars films are all spot-on, as are his existential ruminations on the heresy that is fast-moving zombies:
My older son, the aspiring writer, ate these discussions up...
In reading this together, we skipped around the book (with me editing out the mildly-salacious bits--the boys can discover those on their own when they're 40 or so): we'd look at a chapter title, vote on its appeal, and dive into another self-effacing, humorous tale from our favorite anti-hero, agreeing all the while (as Pegg says, himself) that, "Geeking out is always more enjoyable in groups of two or more."
(Note: I received a free copy of Nerd Do Well for review.)