Jim Anderson, Average American (United States) by Darren Methlie
1h 29m
This vérité fairytale follows Philadelphia cult figure Jim Anderson, also known as GRIMGRIMGRIM — an artist, provocateur, and chronic self-mythologizer — over the course of a decade spent testing the limits of his own survival. Set against a gentrifying, pre-pandemic Philadelphia, the film traces Jim’s restless movement between Boston and Philly, through gallery openings, noise shows, arrests, and reinventions, as he struggles to construct a life out of bits and pieces of the truth not always his own.
Known for his collage work and street presence, Jim builds his identity the same way he builds his art: by blending real biography with exaggeration, masks, and bootlegged histories. As drinking, violence, and legal trouble repeatedly derail him, the film stays close — not to explain or redeem, but to observe how a person rewrites himself in order to survive.
Over time, Jim becomes a father and confronts sobriety without guarantees. What begins as a portrait of artistic notoriety gradually shifts into something quieter and more unsettled: a record of self-mythology giving way, unevenly and without triumph, to accountability. Jim Anderson, Average American is less a story of success than of endurance — and of adulthood arriving late, compromised, and real.
Running time: 01:29:00