Dans A Fantastic Fear of Everything, il nous livre un numéro tout simplement hallucinant dans le rôle de cet écrivain complètement parano, à la limite de la folie, qui va tenter de dompter ses peurs. It is based on the novella Paranoia in the Launderette by Bruce Robinson, writer and director of Withnail and I. It's not horrifically funny like Sean of the Dead, as outright entertaining as Hot Fuzz and, mercifully, it's not as tepid as Run Fatboy Run or as stagnant as Paul or Burke and Hare. A manic Pegg for me is a more entertaining Pegg. A blizzard hits, the generator goes out, the pipes freeze, and the dog disappears. Aside from a few chuckles and Simon Pegg's reliably affable screen presence, A Fantastic Fear of Everything has embarrassingly little to offer. It isn’t nearly as funny as it thinks it is — it’s only funny-peculiar. A Fantastic Fear of Everything is essentially a series of progressively tedious sketch routines begging for a more fluid narrative framework and characterizations beyond simplistic movie homages. Enjoy :). Read the Empire Movie review of A Fantastic Fear Of Everything. "A Fantastic Fear of Everything" is not, actually, fantastic, but it was inventive enough to hold my interest, weird enough to be intriguing, and bold in some of its visual experiments. One morning, everything disappears: the TV, the portable heater, their clean clothes, even Grace’s meds. A manic Pegg for me is a more entertaining Pegg. It's not horrifically funny like Sean of the Dead, as outright entertaining as Hot Fuzz and, mercifully, it's not as tepid as Run Fatboy Run or as stagnant as Paul or Burke and Hare. A Fantastic Fear of Everything is probably not what you're expecting from Simon Pegg. Remember Bunny And The Bull? Actually, it's not very funny at all to start with. At the center of it all is Simon Pegg; terrified and manic, talking to himself, racing around in stained Fruit of the Looms, kitchen knife glued to his hand. A Fantastic Fear of Everything Critics Consensus. It's not horrifically funny like Sean of the Dead, as outright entertaining as Hot Fuzz and, mercifully, it's not as tepid as Run Fatboy Run or as stagnant as Paul or Burke and Hare. Personally, it’s not how I would have liked A Fantastic Fear of Everything to conclude. It s always trying to do something unusual. A Fantastic Fear Of Everything is certainly different, but that doesn’t mean it’s good. Personally, it’s not how I would have liked A Fantastic Fear of Everything to conclude. A Fantastic Fear of Everything Plot Synopsis: Jack is a children's author turned crime novelist whose detailed research into the lives of Victorian serial killers has turned him into a paranoid wreck, persecuted by the irrational fear of being murdered. A Fantastic Fear of Everything is probably not what you're expecting from Simon Pegg. A Fantastic Fear of Everything seems to be a rather polarising film with people either engrossed by its quirky rambling charms or bored by its aimless indulgences. Dozens of perfect snow angels, arranged with precise geometry, cover the front lawn. A Fantastic Fear of Everything, which he has both written and directed, is Mills’s film debut and it is the worst movie I have ever reviewed. A Fantastic Fear of Everything is a 2012 British horror comedy film starring Simon Pegg, written and directed by Crispian Mills with Chris Hopewell as co-director. It has a great lead in Pegg. My feelings on A fantastic fear of everything. A Fantastic Fear of Everything is probably not what you're expecting from Simon Pegg. Based on Bruce Robinson’s novella, Paranoia in the Launderette, I can see how this story would work far better on the page than on the screen seeing as the entire story is from … As you can probably guess from my rating I’m firmly in the latter camp. Watch out, SPOILERS!