Hector And The Search For Happiness, film review: Simon Pegg holds whimsical but affecting' comedy-drama together
(15) Peter Chelsom, 120 mins Starring: Simon Pegg, Stellan Skarsgård, Rosamund Pike, Toni Collette

The ever-likable Simon Pegg holds together this whimsical but affecting comedy-drama about a London-based psychiatrist pondering the metaphysical meaninglessness of existence.
Hector (Pegg) is a buttoned-up sort of chap with a very compartmentalised life. In search of contentment and new adventure, he bids goodbye to his beloved (Rosamund Pike) and embarks on his own eccentric version of a Grand Tour. He encounters Asian prostitutes, Buddhist monks, gun-runners, aid workers and his old girlfriend, who is now married with kids.
The film plays like a slightly more grown-up version of a Tintin adventure, which the director Peter Chelsom acknowledges with a few references to Hergé's tufty-headed detective. Pegg's sure-footed performance is comic enough to keep the mawkishness at bay, but also soulful and serious enough to make us believe in his eccentric quest.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments