American Splendor (2003)

CinemaSource
details
Rating: R
Release Date: Aug 15, 2003
Running Time: 105 mins.
Country Of Origin: United States
synopsis
Harvey Pekar is file clerk at the local VA hospital. His interactions with his co-workers offer some relief from the monotony, and their discussions encompass everything from music to the decline of American culture to new flavors of jellybeans and life itself. At home, Harvey fills his days with reading, writing and listening to jazz. His apartment is filled with thousands of books and LPs, and he regularly scours Cleveland's thrift stores and garage sales for more, savoring the rare joy of a 25-cent find. It is at one of these junk sales that Harvey meets Robert Crumb, a greeting card artist and music enthusiast. When, years later, Crumb finds international success for his underground comics, the idea that comic books can be a valid art form for adults inspires Harvey to write his own brand of comic book. An admirer of naturalist writers like Theodore Dreiser, Harvey makes his "American Splendor" a truthful, unsentimental record of his working-class life, a warts-and-all self portrait. First published in 1976, the comic earns Harvey cult fame throughout the 1980s and eventually leads him to the sardonic Joyce Barber, a partner in a Delaware comic book store who end ups being Harvey's true soul mate as they experience the bizarre byproducts of Harvey's cult celebrity stature.
cast + crew
Harvey Pekar
Joyce Brabner
Toby Radloff
Real Harvey
Robert Crumb
Interviewer
Mr Boats
Bob the Director
Real Toby
Real Joyce
Screenplay
Source Material
Source Material
Producer
Associate Producer
reviews
Source
rating January 29, 2004
American Splendor presents Harvey Pekar as such a mess that Robert Crumb, who shambled through his own 1994 documentary, comes off as the picture of suavity next to his buddy Harvey. Paul Giamatti brilliantly captures Pekar's essential shlubbiness -- back hair and all -- but when the real Pekar shows up in archival David Letterman appearances, there's a wit and liveliness that's missing from his fictional version. The movie is always involving and frequently funny, particularly in exchanges with… Continued
Source

The true story of a hospital administrative clerk who goes from rags to (relative) riches with his homegrown autobiographical comic book series, American Splendor.

Story

Grumpy curmudgeon Harvey Pekar (Paul Giamatti) is a file clerk at a Cleveland, Pa., V.A. hospital, with little ambition, little hope and little joy in his life other than what he gets from reading, listening to his beloved jazz records, and scouring garage sales for that rare 25-cent find. It is at one such garage sale Harvey… Continued