Pegg has always seemed like a straight-up guy, one of the fans, who is a proud self-described geek. I find it hard to believe that he'd out-and-out lie about the movie.
He might act coy or be ambivalent or refuse to comment. But turn round and deliberately mislead fans about the villain of the role, knowing how hotly-debated it is and how interested they are? I just don't see it. I think he genuinely values his rapport with fans and knows what it's like to be one.
I think he'd have been pissed off if the same thing had happened to him when he was a fan and I think he knows fans would be less likely to believe him when, for example, he tells them how good his next movie is.
I remember once reading an interview with Winona Ryder where she was laughing about how good her acting was when she convinced people in interviews that Bram Stokr's Dracula was a good movie and that she was pleased with it; the gist of this interview, a few years later was 'Wow, I can't believe you all fell for this.' I just don't think Pegg is the type to pull this sort of stunt.
He might act coy or be ambivalent or refuse to comment. But turn round and deliberately mislead fans about the villain of the role, knowing how hotly-debated it is and how interested they are? I just don't see it. I think he genuinely values his rapport with fans and knows what it's like to be one.
I think he'd have been pissed off if the same thing had happened to him when he was a fan and I think he knows fans would be less likely to believe him when, for example, he tells them how good his next movie is.
I remember once reading an interview with Winona Ryder where she was laughing about how good her acting was when she convinced people in interviews that Bram Stokr's Dracula was a good movie and that she was pleased with it; the gist of this interview, a few years later was 'Wow, I can't believe you all fell for this.' I just don't think Pegg is the type to pull this sort of stunt.