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Pollock (2000)
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Reviews Counted:105
Fresh:86
Rotten:19
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: Though Pollock does not really allow audiences a glimpse of the painter as a person, it does powerfully depict the creative process. Harris throws himself into the role and turns in a compelling performance.
Theatrical Release:Dec 15, 2000 Limited
Box Office: $7,280,174
Synopsis: Ed Harris's POLLOCK is a moving portrait of artist Jackson Pollock, a leader of abstract expressionist painting whose work had major influence on the modern art movement. A serious alcoholic who... Ed Harris's POLLOCK is a moving portrait of artist Jackson Pollock, a leader of abstract expressionist painting whose work had major influence on the modern art movement. A serious alcoholic who was married to Lee Krasner, another prominent painter, the film illustrates Pollock's rise to art world fame in the last 15 years of his life, and his subsequent surrender to the bottle which brought his death in 1956. In its best moments, POLLOCK shows Krasner (a strong, dynamic, and fascinating Marcia Gay Harden) and Pollock (a stern Harris) conversing about the progression of the modern movement while criticizing each other's work from their adjoining studios in a tiny apartment in Manhattan's East Village. Other highlights of the film include a handful of high energy painting sequences that demonstrate Pollock's technique--the fluid straight-from-tube strokes of his earlier work and the more radical throwing, drizzling, and splattering of paint from the brush to the canvas in his later works; along with amusing depictions of the New York and Long Island art worlds with Peggy Guggenheim (Amy Madigan), Clement Greenberg (Jeffrey Tambor), Willem de Kooning (Val Kilmer), and Howard Putzel (Bud Cort) in the major roles. Based on the biography JACKSON POLLOCK: AN AMERICAN SAGA by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith, the film has an uplifting musical score and a soundtrack that includes some of Pollock's favorite jazz-blues tunes, both of which are welcome counterpoints to the movie's darker moments. [More]
Starring: Ed Harris, Marcia Gay Harden, Tom Bower, Jennifer Connelly
Starring: Ed Harris, Marcia Gay Harden, Tom Bower, Jennifer Connelly, Bud Cort, John Heard, Val Kilmer, Robert Knott, Amy Madigan, Jeffrey Tambor, Matthew Sussman, Norbert Weisser, Sada Thompson
Director: Ed Harris
Director: Ed Harris
Screenwriter: Susan Emshwiller, Barbara Turner
Composer: Jeff Beal
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Pollock
Harris' painting technique is so convincing you really think you are watching Pollock at work. The rest of the film works well enough, but it is fairly slow going.
Harris' portrayal -- that rare specimen that deserves the plaudit 'tour de force' -- holds to a world-wise respect as the story dangles maudlin indulgence in front of him.
Harris does a brilliant job playing the tortured, uncommunicative painter.
The enthusiasm Harris devotes to his subject matter leaves one with a positive impression of both the film and himself.
That altogether rare movie about an artist that works because it takes the art itself for granted.
As acted and directed by Ed Harris, the scenes of the painter in action work brilliantly.
The emotional interplay between Harris and Harden is electric, crackling with authenticity.
A great film for people unafraid of tough, melancholic films that plumb the depths of human experience.
Thanks to some terrific performances and a solid debut from Harris behind the camera, the film turns out to be an interesting and engaging experience.
While Ed Harris captures the all the surfaces of Jackson Pollock, his subject remains an enigma.
Succeeds in capturing a personality with all its infuriating and inspiring facets.
Just -- yes, just -- one more film about that perennially obdurate subject, an artist.
Only the artwork and scenes focused on the process of painting get near the truth. The rest is hazy bluster.
Almost good enough to transcend the typical tale of a tortured artist.
Latest News for Pollock
February 15, 2005:
Roll Over, "Beethoven": Harris to Play Composer
More...
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