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American Splendor

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
54K
YOUR RATING
Paul Giamatti in American Splendor (2003)
Home Video Trailer from HBO Home Video
Play trailer2:20
2 Videos
73 Photos
Dark ComedyDocudramaShowbiz DramaBiographyComedyDrama

An original mix of fiction and reality illuminates the life of comic book hero everyman Harvey Pekar.An original mix of fiction and reality illuminates the life of comic book hero everyman Harvey Pekar.An original mix of fiction and reality illuminates the life of comic book hero everyman Harvey Pekar.

  • Directors
    • Shari Springer Berman
    • Robert Pulcini
  • Writers
    • Harvey Pekar
    • Joyce Brabner
    • Shari Springer Berman
  • Stars
    • Paul Giamatti
    • Shari Springer Berman
    • Harvey Pekar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    54K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Shari Springer Berman
      • Robert Pulcini
    • Writers
      • Harvey Pekar
      • Joyce Brabner
      • Shari Springer Berman
    • Stars
      • Paul Giamatti
      • Shari Springer Berman
      • Harvey Pekar
    • 238User reviews
    • 100Critic reviews
    • 90Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 31 wins & 50 nominations total

    Videos2

    American Splendor
    Trailer 2:20
    American Splendor
    American Splendor
    Trailer 2:25
    American Splendor
    American Splendor
    Trailer 2:25
    American Splendor

    Photos73

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Paul Giamatti
    Paul Giamatti
    • Harvey Pekar
    Shari Springer Berman
    Shari Springer Berman
    • Interviewer
    • (voice)
    Harvey Pekar
    Harvey Pekar
    • Real Harvey
    Chris Ambrose
    • Superman
    Joey Krajcar
    • Batman
    Josh Hutcherson
    Josh Hutcherson
    • Robin
    Cameron Carter
    • Green Lantern
    Daniel Tay
    • Young Harvey
    Mary Faktor
    Mary Faktor
    • Housewife
    Larry John Meyers
    • Throat Doctor
    • (as Larry John Myers)
    Vivienne Benesch
    • Lana
    Barbara Brown
    Barbara Brown
    • Nurse
    Earl Billings
    Earl Billings
    • Mr. Boats
    Danny Hoch
    Danny Hoch
    • Marty
    James Urbaniak
    James Urbaniak
    • Robert Crumb
    Eli Ganias
    Eli Ganias
    • Pahls
    Sylvia Kauders
    Sylvia Kauders
    • Old Jewish Lady
    Rebecca Borger
    • Cashier
    • Directors
      • Shari Springer Berman
      • Robert Pulcini
    • Writers
      • Harvey Pekar
      • Joyce Brabner
      • Shari Springer Berman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews238

    7.454K
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    Featured reviews

    J. Spurlin

    Tricky part-biography, part-documentary that seems effortlessly funny

    Paul Giamatti plays Harvey Pekar, a writer of underground comic books that document his mundane life as a neurotic file clerk. We meet the other nerds and eccentrics who populate his life, including his fat, bespectacled co-worker with a habit of over-enunciating his words; a black co-worker who buys record albums from Pekar but accuses him of selling nothing but junk; and a female fan of his comics who throws up on her first date with him then announces they should dispense with the courtship and just get married. (He accepts the proposal on the grounds that he's lucky to have any woman who will have him.) Pekar meets Robert Crumb, who illustrates the first of Pekar's comics. He becomes a favored guest on David Letterman until delivering a vituperative rant against Letterman and NBC that gets him barred from the show.

    "American Splendor" is mostly a dramatization, but has scenes interspersed where we meet the real Harvey Pekar and the real people in his life. The movie contains many piquant moments, including a scene where the actors and their real-life counterparts appear together on a soundstage. In another scene, Paul Giamatti as Harvey Pekar exits the green room of the Letterman show, followed by a real clip of the real Pekar on the real show. But when Pekar delivers his rant, we see Giamatti with an actor playing David Letterman. We also see an animated Pekar conversing with the real Pekar—or, rather, with Giamatti playing the real Pekar. The movie's visual design makes it look like a mobile comic book; many scenes are bridged with shots of the camera sweeping over comic panels that bridge the story for us.

    This had to have been tricky to pull off, but the movie feels effortless. The nature of identity and the nature of reality are themes the movie presents with a lot of humor and insight. Giamatti is excellent and supported by a uniformly fine cast, especially Hope Davis as Joyce Brabner, the woman who threw up on their first date. I also enjoyed the jazz songs on the soundtrack. What a funny, entertaining, intelligent movie.
    9Chris_Docker

    A modern classic of successful innovation

    Successfully innovative, American Splendor combines fiction and reality in a spellbinding and amusing way, winning awards at Cannes and Sundance, and proving its maxim that life is pretty complex (and endlessly fascinating) stuff . . .

    The story features Harvey Pekar, as himself, as the played by actor Paul Giamatti and as the comic book persona that he has created based on himself. Pekar is downbeat, depressed, in a dead end filing job, rather bitter. His best friend is a self-confessed nerd. Yet when the events of his life are epitomized in comic book snapshots they are intensely poignant, they seem to reach the disenfranchised, the dysfunctional within each of us. We follow him into a marriage that is as weird as he is. The originality of the material is reflected in its postmodern style of presentation, self-awareness of audience-manipulation blending seamlessly with entertainment and artistic delivery. Scenes are introduced and blended with comic book taglines, storyboarding, and even transitions from interloping set discussions with the real Pekar to the actor playing the scene under discussion. If it sounds pretentious, it's not – simply because it works so well and in an unpretentious way. Lovingly created and very moving. Probably the first real classic of 2003 and not to be missed, and for lovers of jazz/blues a soundtrack collectors item.

    (Seeing it at the Edinburgh International Film Festival I also had the privilege of seeing the real life Pekar, his wife and adopted daughter together with Paul Giamatti, truly topping off a multi-media experience haha!)
    10alexgoldfinch

    Russian doll

    It's always hardest to write about what you love and I not only love, but also, to steal a joke from Woody Allen in ANNIE HALL, loaf, luff and lerve this magnificent film. Therefore this will be difficult. Here goes anyway...

    No-one can possibly deny that this is innovative in its use of the real Harvey Pekar (and people from his life) frequently intruding into the fictionalised account. But this is more than just a neat trick. It works brilliantly. Instead of distancing the viewer from the narrative makes one feel more involved in the film's world. How dare this work? This kind of arty-farty stuff is usually guaranteed to annoy me - but this is nothing short of revelatory in its Russian doll-like idea of having fiction within fiction within fact...and you don't need to be some kind of high-brow film critic to appreciate it!

    All the performances are gob-smackingly good, and there isn't one moment in the film that bores, irritates, patronises or rings a false note. The cast inhabit their roles like they were born to play them. and the determination not to idealise them or their situations, makes my cynical anti-Hollywood production values heart sing for joy.

    Do not, I beg you, be put off by the epithet "cult" with which this film has been tarred as if it would appeal only to comic-book fans. No, the appeal here is universal - dealing with Pekar's existential worries and his search for the meaning in his life. It's criminal that American SPLENDOR with all its wit, heart and slickness isn't more highly regarded or more widely known.

    Masterpiece.
    Buddy-51

    creative biopic

    In `American Splendor,' Paul Giamatti plays Harvey Pekar, the comic book creator who became famous as a recurring guest on the David Letterman Show. A resident of Cleveland, Pekar was a socially backward man who found he had the talent to translate the pain, loneliness and frustration of his own unhappy life into universal truths, writing material that other artists would then illustrate in comic book form. He began a series entitled `American Splendor,' which was really an ongoing autobiographical narrative, drawing on people and events in his own life as his source of inspiration. The film, a pseudo-documentary of sorts, tells his life story by cutting back and forth between both staged reenactments of the events in the stories and interviews with Pekar himself commenting on those events.

    `American Splendor' is an offbeat little gem that, in many ways, approximates the look and style of a comic book. As the story plays itself out, captions often appear on the screen, as well as illustrations from Pekar's actual work based on the scene we are witnessing. Robert Pulcini and Sheri Springer Berman, who wrote and directed the film together, create a surrealistic tone by having Pekar and his real friends and companions frequently appear on screen next to the actors who are portraying them (some of them dead ringers for the originals). This technique brings a homespun, homey sweetness to the film. `American Splendor' is a paean to all the social misfits in the world, people who, for whatever reason, can't seem to fit into society's prescribed mold but who often develop strong, meaningful bonds with similar individuals. The movie is also a tribute to the power of art, both for the artist who finds purpose and release through his work and for those to whom his work speaks on a personal and emotional level. The people who inhabit Pekar's strange world – both in reality and within the borders of his comic strip boxes – are seen in the film as warm, good-natured individuals, not socially astute, perhaps, but not losers either.

    The emotional focal point for the film is Harvey's relationship with his wife, Joyce, beautifully played by Hope Davis. Despite the somewhat bizarre nature of their marriage, Harvey and Joyce forge a lasting commitment based on reciprocity and devotion. In fact, in the latter sections, the film achieves an emotional depth one doesn't expect it to early on, partly because Harvey is dealt a cruel blow of fate that he and his wife are forced to navigate through together. Yet, the film as a whole is filled with a sly, deadpan, mischievous sense of humor that demonstrates a keen grasp of the absurdities of life.

    As Pekar, Paul Giametti turns in a flawless performance, capturing the nebbishness, cantankerousness and ultimate likeability of the man he is portraying.

    In both style and content, `American Splendor' is aptly named.
    10departed07

    A True Super-Hero!

    Throughout the years, people have read dozens of comic books: Spider-Man, Batman, Superman, The Green Latern, X-Men, Hulk, etc., looking for escape from reality, but at the same time, looking for a relation from those books. With "American Splendor" on the other hand, it's quite a different comic book. What makes it so special? It's depicting real life where it shows the character Harvey Pekar in different situations.

    "American Splendor" is a comic/drama biography about the life of Harvey Pekar(Played by Paul Giamatti) in which the film plays like a comic book showing scenes that are real and fiction. Even the real Harvey makes appearances quite often in the film to talk about his life, his wife(Joyce) and everything that sort of made him the person who he is today.

    Harvey Pekar can be described as one of those characters who don't seem to give a damn about the world. The reason that I root for this character is that he's the type person that lives in his own world, from not giving a crap about the incidents in the world, to not having a formal college education, to working at a dead end job where in the future, people are still laughing at him. And yet, I don't blame him. I am reminded of two other movies that had losers, but made an impact on male society: "The Big Lebowski" and "Fast Times At Ridgemont High" in which both male characters didn't have to worry about anything or go out on dates, or even pleasing society(shame on you, people).

    All in All, American Splendor is a great movie. Though the film's target audience are for guys, I still encourage people to see this movie. The film also stars, Hope Davis portraying Harvey's wife, Joyce.

    One of the Best Films!

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    Docudrama
    Margot Robbie stars in Quentin Tarantino's "Once Upon A Time In Hollywood."
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      NBC would not lease out the actual Late Show with David Letterman (1993) footage where Harvey Pekar finally lashed out at David Letterman, so the scene had to be recreated with actors.
    • Goofs
      The scene where Harvey gets stuck behind the old Jewish woman leaves out a detail that would help it make sense.

      In the movie, she says that the glasses are 6 for $2, but she couldn't carry 12 last time,, so they should charge her only $1.50 for the additional 6. There is no explanation as to why she should be charged less.

      In the story from the original comic, she says that the glasses are 6 for $2 or 12 for $3.50, but she couldn't get all 12 last time, so they should charge her only $1.50 for the 6 she is buying now.
    • Quotes

      Real Harvey: I felt more alone that week than any. Sometimes I'd feel a body lying next to me like an amputee feels a phantom limb. All I did was think about Jennie Gerhardt and Alice Quinn and all the decades of people I had known. The more I thought, the more I felt like crying. Life seemed so sweet and so sad, and so hard to let go of in the end. But hey, man, every day is a brand new deal, right? Just keep on working and something's bound to turn up.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits are displayed in the style of Harvey Pekar styled comic book panels.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Le Divorce/The Housekeeper/American Splendor/Open Range (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Paniots Nine
      Written by Peter Dolger

      Performed by Joe Maneri

      Courtesy of Avant Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 12, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Huy hoàng kiểu Mỹ
    • Filming locations
      • Cleveland, Ohio, USA
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Good Machine
      • Dark Horse Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $6,010,990
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $159,705
      • Aug 17, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,986,084
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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