American Splendor

2003 Comedy Drama

The documentary directing team of Robert Pulcini and Shari Springer Berman makes their narrative feature debut with the biographical comedy drama American Splendor. Harvey Pekar (Paul Giamatti) is a comic book writer inspired by the work of his friend Robert Crumb (James Urbaniak). Pekar writes his comics about the sad monotony of everyday life, based on his own life in Cleveland, OH, working as a file clerk at a veteran's hospital and spending his time reading books and listening to jazz. He meets up with Joyce Brabner (Hope Davis) and they enjoy a depressive relationship together. The filmmakers employ a combination of live-action film, video, and animation, including narration and commentary from the real-life Harvey Pekar. The screenplay was based on Pekar's comic book series American Splendor, which he has been writing since 1976 on Dark Horse Comics, and the 1994 book-length comic Our Cancer Year, written by Pekar and Brabner. American Splendor won the Grand Jury Prize in the Dramatic Competition at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. more..

Director: Robert Pulcini

Starring: Paul Giamatti, Hope Davis, Judah Friedlander, James Urbaniak, Earl Billings

Reviews

  • This film is delightful in the way it finds its own way to tell its own story. There was no model to draw on, but Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini, who wrote and directed it, have made a great film by trusting to Pekar's artistic credo.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    29 November 2012

  • American Splendor presents Pekar as drawn on the page, Pekar as brilliantly interpreted by Paul Giamatti, and the actual Pekar, in the double role of narrator and interview subject -- sometimes all at once. The magic act is thrilling, and truly surprising.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    29 November 2012

  • It's a humane and witty treatment of an average life that, incidentally, speaks to the worth and inherent drama of average lives.

    Mick LaSalle - The San Francisco Chronicle

    29 November 2012

  • Produced by HBO but too good not to play theaters, this soon-to-be minor classic is the best movie about society's untrendiest since "Ghost World" exactly two years ago.

    Mike Clark - USA Today

    29 November 2012

  • Superbly conceived anti-biopic.

    Desson Thomson - The Washington Post

    29 November 2012

Awards

  • AFI Movie of the Year

    AFI Awards (2003)

  • Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay

    Academy Awards (2004)

     
  • Best Screenplay

    Boston Society of Film Critics Awards (2003)

  • Un Certain Regard

    Cannes Film Festival (2003)

  • Best Screenplay, Adapted

    Central Ohio Film Critics Association (2004)