movie review: American Splendor
Gilbert Shelton
shelton@noos.fr
Wed, 17 Sep 2003 15:05:00 -0500
Mike,
What the movie fails to mention is that our own Frank Stack (Editor of
the Texas Ranger, '58-'59) is the cartoonist who
illustrated Our Cancer Year and whose contribution to American Splendor
comic strips is rather greater than that of Robert
Crumb. Stack told me that he hasn't heard from Pekar since Frank told
him he didn't want to illustrate any more 150-page
stories.
Gilbert
Michael Eisenstadt wrote:
My roommate was Jay Trachtenberg's 4th caller last
week thus scroring tickets to the above AND a tee-
shirt.
Harvey Pekar is a schlumpy guy living in Cleveland
where he works as a file clerk in a VA hospital and
collects old jazz records and comic books. His stroke
of great good luck is to meet R. Crumb whom he gets
to illustrate stories of his life as comic books.
The beauty of doing so is to memorialize the mundane
into nuggets of great moral insight. As for example
when Harvey sees outside his apartment window 2
handymen throwing a derelict mattress into a dumpster
and discussing a woman: "She's average." "No, she's
stupid." "That's what average is: stupid." Memorialized
by the strokes of R. Crumb's Rapidograph pen, the pathos
of this insight with the visual accompaniment of the
mattress being tossed in the dumpster is permanently
inserted into the cerebellum at least for a while.
The movie displays a number of these insightful moments
followed by Crumb's drawings of them to excellent effect.
After 2 failed marriages, Harvey has a second stroke
of great good luck in meeting Joyce who phones him from
Delaware "the second smallest state in the country" in
search of a copy of American Splendor No. 8. This is
the concurrence of two world-class neurotics who live
unhappily ever after: Joyce nags and Harvey broods.
For example to Harvey screetching at the top of his
voice on the sidewalk "Use your inside voice, Harvey."
Harvey appears a number of times on the Dave Letterman
show as a loser to be laughed at (such is the Dave
Letterman show) until he is permanently 86'ed from the
show for ranting against GE the owners of the network
while wearing a tee-shirt with the slogan ON STRIKE
AGAINST NBC.
While Joyce is in Jerusalem saving the children, Harvey
discovers he has cancer. Joyce advises him to do a
comic book about it as a means of coping with the
ordeal of his treatment. This is published as "Our
Cancer Year", an effective emotional placebo as it
turns out. Harvey recovers to soldier on in his quest
for tiny truths in everyday life. For example, best
not to get on a checkout line at the grocery behind an
old Jewish woman with a number of discount coupons to
negotiate (illustrated below).
Joe Bob Briggs says "Check it out!"
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