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Harvey Pekar Movies

Offbeat writer Harvey Pekar lived in Cleveland, OH, all of his life. In 1966, he got a job as a file clerk at a VA hospital and worked there for the next 35 years. His autobiographical comic book American Splendor (illustrated by comic book artists like Robert Crumb, Frank Stack, Joe Sacco, and Colin Warneford) was published almost every year since 1976. In order to promote the series, he made regular appearances on Late Night With David Letterman, until his caustic attitude got him kicked off the show. He also published music and book reviews in a lot of jazz magazines like Down Beat and co-wrote the book Our Cancer Year with his wife Joyce Brabner. He eventually won an American Book Award and, by 1990, Dark Horse Comics had started publishing his series. In 1999, he did some essays and commentary on the radio station WKSU and won other awards for his writing and ranting segments. In 2001, he retired from his job at the hospital, but continued to live in Cleveland with Brabner and their adopted daughter Danielle. He also appeared in and narrated the film American Splendor, a critically acclaimed biopic directed by Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini, with Paul Giamatti starring as Pekar. Pekar died at age 70 in July 2010, after suffering from a combination of ailments, including prostate cancer, asthma, depression, and high blood pressure. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
2011  
 
Canadian filmmaker Alan Zweig, himself an admitted curmudgeon, devotes this talking-head documentary primarily to interviews with other curmudgeons with a similar sensibility. The movie consists largely of talking-head interviews with a variety of men and women, spanning several generations, who have the sourly cynical, intellectual view of the world that qualifies them as fellow curmudgeons. Some of the interviewees are renowned in various fields (author Fran Lebowitz, autobiographical comic strip creator Harvey Pekar, indie rock musician Mark Eitzel, media commentator Andrew Rooney); others are far less familiar to the general public. The interviews are largely devoted to humorous, at times philosophical, discussions (with plenty of illustrative anecdotes) about the curmudgeonly attitudes the subjects bring to their worlds, taking in jaded observations of popular culture, social institutions, and humanity as a whole. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi

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Starring:
Fran Lebowitz
 
2006  
 
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For viewers who prefer their glasses thick and their nerds genuine, the man who has achieved nerd superstardom in such efforts as American Splendor, Killer Nerd, and Townies allows viewers into his home for an illuminating look at the outsider lifestyle in this documentary from filmmaker Wayne Alan Howard. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2003  
R  
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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. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi

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Starring:
Paul GiamattiHope Davis, (more)
 
1997  
 
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The Radical Jewish Culture movement flowered in the East Village of lower Manhattan during the early '90s, and embodied a successful attempt to link Jewish work in the creative arts (such as music, painting and sculpture) with extreme leftwing social activism. With her 1997 documentary Sabbath in Paradise, German filmmaker Claudia Heuermann pulls from several resources, including interviews with the movers and shakers in this movement and electrifying concert clips, to weave together a portrait of this exciting ethno-cultural phenomenon. Participants include: Jon Madof, Jamie Saft, Steve Bernstein, Shanir Blumenkranz and many others. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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