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An American Pickle Poster

An American Pickle

A story of self preservation
2020 | 89m | English

(28496 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 5 (history)

Director: Brandon Trost
Writer: Simon Rich
Staring:
Details

An immigrant worker at a pickle factory is accidentally preserved for 100 years and wakes up in modern day Brooklyn. He learns his only surviving relative is his great grandson, a computer coder who he can’t connect with.
Release Date: Aug 06, 2020
Director: Brandon Trost
Writer: Simon Rich
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords immigrant, time travel, jewish american, brooklyn, new york city, duringcreditsstinger, jewish culture, jewish family, yiddish language, pickle
Production Companies Sony Pictures, Point Grey Pictures, Gravitational Productions, Warner Max
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Seth Rogen Herschel Greenbaum / Ben Greenbaum
Sarah Snook Sarah Greenbaum
Molly Evensen Clara
Eliot Glazer Christian
Kalen Allen Kevin
Kevin O'Rourke Dane Brunt
Sean Whalen Scientist
Geoffrey Cantor David Greenbaum
Carol Leifer Susan Greenbaum
Jorma Taccone Liam
Marsha Stephanie Blake Inspector Sanders
Alyse Zwick News Anchor
Dalon Huntington Border Patrol Agent
Jeremy Michael Grey Border Patrol Agent
Efka Kvaraciejus Fish Monger
Darryl Bailey Smith II Teenage Drone Operator
Dino Rende Teenage Kid
Peter Kybart Old Man
Joanna Adler Professor Kim Ecklund
Herb Mendelsohn Rabbi
Norm Golden Wedding Rabbi
Al Nazemian Cab Driver
Adam Dunhoff Congregant
Mark Diamond Congregant
Leib Cohen Congregant
Liz Cackowski Susan O'Malley
Tim Robinson Prosecuting Attorney
Betsy Sodaro Defense Attorney
Quinta Brunson Female Interviewee
Kurt Braunohler Male Interviewee
Michael Weaver Judge
David Flick Construction Worker
Raymond Neil Hernandez Officer Kadushin
John Walpole Seltzer Man
Ian Poake Devon
Charles Rogers Ellis Island Officer
Jess Stark Female Cashier
Jon Donahue Local Reporter
Amy Marsalis Reporter
Paul Monte Jr. Second Reporter
Julie Mun Third Reporter
Allan Snyder Moderator
Fabio Polanco Audience Member
Havilah Brewster Second Audience Member
Francis Capone Manager
Alex McAtee Bartender
Dionysius Akeem Cliff
Nick Arapoglou Todd (uncredited)
Paul Castro Jr. Freegan (uncredited)
Alexandre Chen Chinese Worker (uncredited)
Kristin Cochell Nika (uncredited)
Chuck Filipov Schlupsk Man (uncredited)
David Mattey Ivan (uncredited)
Jeff Daniel Phillips Actor (uncredited)
Adam Ratcliffe ICE Agent (uncredited)
Estes Tarver ICE Agent (uncredited)
Name Job
Brandon Trost Director
Simon Rich Short Story, Screenplay
Ranjani Brow ADR Voice Casting
Wendy Hoffmann ADR Voice Casting
Matt Leonard Stunts, Stunt Coordinator
Lisa Zeno Churgin Editor
Michael Babcock Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Supervising Sound Editor
John Guleserian Director of Photography
William Arnold Production Design
Karuna Karmarkar Set Decoration
Chad Djubek Boom Operator
Cliff McLaughlin Stunts
Paul Nandzik Stunts
Matthew Rugetti Stunts
Justin A. Williams Stunts
Mark Anthony Little First Assistant Director
Austin Lapierre Production Supervisor
Matthew Cavaliero Property Master
Michael Fuchs "A" Camera Operator
John Ruiz First Assistant "A" Camera
Deb Peterson First Assistant "B" Camera
Chase A. Abrams Digital Imaging Technician
Tasha Goldthwait Key Costumer
Sierra Mendoza Costumer
Tori Musial Costumer
Eve Negley Key Makeup Artist
Vanessa Price Hair Department Head
Robert Sciretta Chief Lighting Technician
Allan Barch Lighting Technician
Jacob Hoyson Lighting Technician
Sean Murray Lighting Technician
Keith Seymour Key Grip
Gregory L. Edwards Dolly Grip
David A. Dwyer Key Rigging Grip
Doug Cronin Grip
Taylor Flick Grip
Jonathan Curotola Grip
Russell Tyrrell Special Effects Supervisor
Shawn Boyachek Location Manager
Larry Geyer Assistant Location Manager
Joni Smith Production Coordinator
Lisa Smith-Reed Assistant Production Coordinator
Tanoa Parks Production Accountant
Betsy Butterworth Second Assistant Accountant
Nathan Matt Second Assistant Accountant
Brad Towell Graphic Designer
Joel Cash Art Department Coordinator
Brian Brown Stunts
Shawn Howell Stunts
Krisztian Kery Stunts
Jason Silvis Stunts
Ted Gidlow Unit Production Manager
Frederic Roth Second Assistant Director
Gary Kosko Art Direction
Scott Peterson Script Supervisor
Brian Outland "B" Camera Operator
Jason Cianella Second Assistant "A" Camera
Brian Bresnehan Second Assistant "B" Camera
Terra Stuart Costume Supervisor
Gina La Monica Costumer
James Eidel Costumer
Lisa Layman Makeup Department Head
Doug Fairall Makeup Artist
Candace Orlandi Key Hair Stylist
Matt Feiler Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Donald Klinefelter Lighting Technician
Tom Klabnik Lighting Technician
Eliott Acevedo Lighting Technician
Nick Zinobile Best Boy Grip
Jason Kirker Dolly Grip
Brian Powers Grip
John E. Tremba Grip
Dan Flick Grip
Geoff Maxwell Production Sound Mixer
Dean Tyrrell Special Effects Coordinator
Jason Calabro Assistant Location Manager
James A. Mahathey Assistant Location Manager
Gabrielle Gonnella Production Secretary
Allison A. Millican Travel Coordinator
Sheruldon P. Herron First Assistant Accountant
Grayson Maxwell Second Assistant Accountant
Buster Pile Construction Coordinator
Raquel Bouvy Graphic Designer
Justin Pelissero Leadman
Adele Plauche Set Designer
Mike Matesic Construction Foreman
Jolene Dames Standby Painter
John Youngblood Assistant Property Master
Sheryl Main Unit Publicist
Jonathan Medeiros Second Second Assistant Director
Donna M. Belajac Local Casting
Elizabeth Berra Casting Associate
Marc Scott Transportation Coordinator
Jessica Drake Dialect Coach
Nancy Kirhoffer Post Production Supervisor
Jeremy Peirson Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Effects Editor
Branden Spencer Supervising Sound Editor
Michael Hertlein Dialogue Editor
Chris Dold Assistant Editor
Michael Costello First Assistant Editor
Robin Harlan Foley Artist
Robin Richesson Storyboard Artist
Ella Thompson Assistant Art Director
Chip Eccles Construction Foreman
C. Scott Baker Set Designer
Jesse Ross Assistant Property Master
Molly Rose Casting Assistant
Katie Shenot Extras Casting
Richard A. Koenig Transportation Captain
Amanda Bauder Set Medic
Adam Rowland Visual Effects Supervisor
Jeff Sawyer Sound Effects Editor
Shane Hayes Dialogue Editor
Jesse Millward Assistant Editor
Sarah Monat Foley Artist
Nerses Gezalyan Foley Mixer
James A. Moore ADR Mixer
Jason Oliver ADR Mixer
Adam Levin Assistant Sound Editor
Paul Apelgren Music Editor
Andrea Chlebak Digital Colorist
Patrick M. Allen Digital Intermediate Producer
Jason Evans Visual Effects Supervisor
Elijah Watson Visual Effects Coordinator
Vincent Robert Rosas Visual Effects Producer
Aaron Hasson ADR Mixer
Mike Greenberg ADR Mixer
Tran Hong-Thai Assistant Sound Editor
Jeff Kryka Orchestrator
Marshall Bowen Conductor
Vanessa Galvez Digital Intermediate Producer
Vikki Chapman Visual Effects Producer
Gregory Oehler Visual Effects Supervisor
Derek Ledbetter Visual Effects Supervisor
Esme Coleman Digital Compositor
Francine Maisler Casting
Brenda Abbandandolo Costume Design
Nami Melumad Original Music Composer
Lynn Kressel Local Casting
Gabe Hilfer Music Supervisor
John Koyama Stunt Coordinator
Hunter Baxley Stunts
Alex Benevent Stunts
Heather Bonomo Stunts
Ryan Brown Stunts
Sergei Dmitriev Stunts
Brian Duffy Stunts
Dennis Keiffer Stunts
Chad Knorr Stunts
Donald Mills Stunts
Simon Potter Stunts
Hopper Stone Still Photographer
Laurent Kossayan Sound Effects Editor
Dan Kenyon Sound Effects Editor
Ashley Lambert ADR Voice Casting
Dennis Sands Scoring Mixer
Michael Giacchino Original Music Composer
Name Title
Seth Rogen Producer
Alex McAtee Executive Producer
Ted Gidlow Executive Producer
Evan Goldberg Producer
James Weaver Producer
Simon Rich Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 22 32 15
2024 5 28 36 20
2024 6 23 37 13
2024 7 24 53 13
2024 8 15 23 10
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2024 10 26 51 15
2024 11 27 56 15
2024 12 20 44 12
2025 1 24 39 14
2025 2 23 45 4
2025 3 7 17 2
2025 4 6 10 3
2025 5 3 10 1
2025 6 3 5 2
2025 7 2 6 1
2025 8 3 5 1
2025 9 4 5 2
2025 10 5 5 4

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Reviews

msbreviews
6.0

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com HBO Max arrives to become one more proof of how vital streaming has been to new filmmakers and writers all around the world. An American Pickle is the very first original film released by the respect ... ive service, and it gives the opportunity to Brandon Trost (solo directorial debut) and Simon Rich (feature film screenplay debut) to demonstrate their talents. Despite my curiosity about what they could offer, my eyes were obviously focused on Seth Rogen’s double performance. Even though he’s not the greatest living actor, I always enjoy his comedic roles, most recently in Long Shot and The Lion King. Possessing a premise with tremendous potential to deliver amazing laughs, how did it go? Well, I’m surprised by how grounded and “realistic” Trost and Rich’s approach ends up being. In the first twenty minutes, everything points to a straight-up ridiculous story where the most absurd things occur. Basically, I love every single thing until the title card shows up plus a few more minutes. Herschel’s life goals, his relationship with her lover, what leads to him getting brined for a century, the (technically brilliant) “scientific” justification that they give after he’s found out to be alive and that he didn’t age a day… Everything is ludicrous, but what would you expect from the already crazy premise? Never forget: having the wrong expectations (unrealistic, overhyped, nonsensical) can quickly turn your experience into a nightmare. An American Pickle has an absurd narrative because it develops an absurd concept. That’s what’s so incredibly entertaining about it: the possibilities are infinite as long as the people at the helm are creative enough. This is why I feel somewhat disappointed that primarily Rich couldn’t take this story even further, both character and story-wise. In fact, as soon as the end credits started to roll, my first thought was “is it over already?” Throughout the whole runtime, the viewers have to deal with only two characters who aren’t deeply explored. Herschel is a man out of his time, but with his impressive determination and hard-working personality, he seems to surpass every challenge thrown at him. On the other hand, Ben struggles to get his product/idea on the market, but he doesn’t seem to have the same will that his great grandfather holds. Therefore, the whole narrative is stuck on a loop of Herschel doing things right, and Ben getting jealous over it and trying to mess with his success. Each reiteration becomes less funny, less entertaining, and less plausible (I can accept most plot points, but some are indeed way too nonsensical for the world it finds itself in). Obviously, the comedy bits are almost all linked to Herschel and, as expected, to his dated cultural knowledge. It’s a matter of time until he says something he shouldn’t, mostly stuff related to his views on religion, racism, and every sensitive subject you can think of. Some viewers might even get offended by a couple of jokes, which are precisely the ones I laughed at the hardest. Unfortunately, Rich’s screenplay doesn’t have the imagination a premise like this demands (too focused on stereotypes and easy jokes), but having in mind this is his first writing role in a feature film, it’s a good start. Trost does a pretty decent job, especially when it comes to film two characters interpreted by the same actor, so I wouldn’t mind seeing these two working together again. Nevertheless, it all comes down to Rogen’s double performance, and he nailed it. He’s the main reason why I’m giving this movie a positive review. He’s able to dive into these characters in such a compelling manner that, at some points, I genuinely thought this film was written and directed by him. It feels like a personal project, something that I can easily picture as a Seth Rogen’s movie. He’s hilarious when he needs to be, and extremely serious when the time calls for it. Finally, I don’t look at this film as a comedy because ultimately I don’t even think it is. It’s strangely a sweet story about family and why it should matter so much to every single one of us. All in all, An American Pickle surprisingly takes a grounded approach on the “man out of his time” concept, making the whole message about “family”, even though its premise is absolutely bonkers. The first act sets up a logically ridiculous yet hilarious story that unfortunately doesn’t quite reach its potential. Debutants Brandon Trost and Simon Rich do a reasonable job with the narrative, but Rich could have explored the main characters a bit more, having to ultimately thank Seth Rogen for such a fantastic double performance. The style of humor present in the movie will not work for everyone, but it definitely did for me, even though it lost steam throughout the runtime. Its comedy is at its best when it tackles the dated cultural restrictions in Herschel’s mind. It’s a short, fast-paced story, with a neat score by Nami Melumad (Michael Giacchino wrote the themes), that anyone can enjoy just as long as they have the right expectations. Rating: B-

Jun 23, 2021
maketheSWITCH
5.0

'An American Pickle' feels like a film with so much potential, but potential that is never fully embraced. It isn't the job of a reviewer to say what a film SHOULD have been, but to offer a critique of the film they're actually seeing. In that spirit, the problem with 'An American Pickle' is that th ... ere are really two films here jostling for dominance. Personally, the heartfelt comic fable about two generations of Jewish men finding a new place for themselves in the world while dealing with their grief is the film I was rooting for out of the two, not of two snarky men trying to find new ways to bring each other down. As it stands, 'An American Pickle' has an uneven flavour, where the many ingredients don't entirely come together. - Daniel Lammin Read Daniel's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-an-american-pickle-an-uneven-comedy-that-hasnt-quite-fermented-enough

Jun 23, 2021
tbobio
N/A

it is the trailer first caught me, I love the idea of an outdated man being overwhelmed by the modern world and struggle to adjust for nowadays life crises. the world must be so bizarre in his eyes but still much better than one hundred years ago (since we had made a long way). ....and I found th ... e average score is not even made the pass line, I'm very hesitated. but the intro said it's an adaption of an NYT novel, so that must be worth something. it's actually not bad to watch. sure the scriptwriter chooses the easy way out and not dressed most of the modern-day problems, but you can feel his sincereness about the story. the movie does not express well but you get the "family matters most" the main idea. and Seth Rogen is sooo cute in both characters. I mean don't you just wanna look straight into his sparkling eyes, rub his face and hug him like hugging a huge teddy bear? it's not the preaching with laughs movie I've been expected, but it's ok to watch for idle Sundays

Jun 23, 2021
tmdb28039023
1.0

This movie stars Seth Rogen in a dual role as Herschel, an early 20th century Eastern European Jewish immigrant, and Ben, his last remaining descendant. To paraphrase a Family Guy episode, Seth Rogen looks funny even when he's not doing anything funny. Why, then, is An American Pickle, so unfunny (I ... laughed exactly one (1) time)? My theory is that two Rogens cancel each other out. My other theory is that the makers were going for a circa early-to-mid 70s Woody Allen-style film; Sleeper and Love and Death come to mind. The problem is that Allen himself stopped making that kind of movies about half a century ago (and even he had the good sense to use cryopreservation in Sleeper, which at least sounds sciency, as opposed to a brine-preserved body). Much of what passes for conflict here stems from a billboard advertising vodka that has been erected adjacent to Herschel and Ben’s family plot. The former is determined to buy the billboard, which Ben says costs $200,000, and tear it down. The billboard, mind you, is facing the cemetery and not the street (and it’s established that Ben hasn’t visited the plot in at least five years, so not even he has seen the vodka advertisement). Why this billboard – which makes about as much sense as the ones in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri – can be so costly and at the same time so worthless, is never explained. Another good question is, what are the odds that Herschel and Ben, separated by a hundred years and several generations of (one hopes) exogamy, could pass for identical twins? Not good, especially when they look at old family photos and we see that none of Herschel's descendants look anything like him or Ben. The only reason for this genetic anomaly is that the script requires a case of mistaken identities during the climax of the film. That's it. Wracking my brains to find a good reason for this film to exist, it occurred to me to interpret it as an allegory of Donald Trump’s rise to power. After all, Herschel is a narrow-minded, racist, homophobic, xenophobic, and misogynistic jerk who thinks and says horrible things, but who has a good head for business, allowing him to become popular and successful. That Herschel learns absolutely nothing and never gets his comeuppance is an indication that I may not be too far off. But then I realized two things; first, even if my hypothesis were correct, the movie would have to be entertaining – which it isn’t – before it could work as satire; and second, I'd be giving the filmmakers way too much credit, when they probably just wanted to do a live-action remake of An American Tail.

Sep 03, 2022