To me, no other movie portrays, captures, embraces, forgives, and, most importantly, empathizes a human being more than Ed Harris’s auteuristic gift in Pollock. I have seen the film from its birth in the theatre in 2000 up to 15 more times, and I am still in awe at how much it continues to be a new experience for me with every viewing.
Ed Harris essentially is the troubled, talented, and doomed American master painter, Jackson Pollock, and if his performance isn’t convincing enough, his directing nearly perfects the life of an American celebrity at his most vulnerably beautiful and ugly.
Pollock was just as unhinged in alcoholism as he was an innovator in paint, art, and expression, and with the duality came a painful existence.

Pollock is grueling. It is passionate. It is abundantly satisfying. It is the life of a brilliantly busted painter.
There is a galvanizing energy in not just Ed Harris practice-performing the art of drip painting but the way his face tells the story of success and anguish. Just look at his eyes during the slow-motion prelude and interlude clips.
I know that Ed Harris’s father encouraged his son to look into making a movie about Jackson Pollock because Ed looked a lot like Pollock during his prime. Along with taking on this monumental challenge, Ed Harris sacrifices his body and self-will to fully embrace a man at his highest and lowest and most true. Composer Jeff Beal magnifies the experience with his vibrant score orchestration, and the end result breaks the term “biopic” wide open.
Not all artists have to be tortured, but I can’t help but notice the greatest ones are.
Pollock is a riveting movie I cherish, and I savor the next viewing.
Reely Bernie Faves:
5. The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
6. The Godfather Part II (1974)
8. Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
10. Nosferatu (1922)
11. Pollock (2000)
12. Kicking and Screaming (1995)
13. Jaws (1975)
14. Fargo (1996)
16. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
20. The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
23. King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
24. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
25. Bambi (1942)
26. The Paradise Lost Trilogy (1996-2011)
27. Psycho (1960)
29. Swingers (1996)
30. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
31. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
32. Smoke (1995)
33. Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)
35. Edward Scissorhands (1990)
37. 1917 (2019)
42. If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)
43. The Greatest Showman (2017)
44. National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983)
45. The Florida Project (2017)
Hmm, might be one for the TBW list. 😀
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Please let me know if you see it. If I resuscitate this gem for even one person, I’m happy. It’s worth an uninterrupted go with volume up for that vibrant film score! Just watch Ed Harris’s face tell the story.
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I have the Pulitzer winning book that this movie took its inspiration from. I’m very new to abstract expressionism and so I think I’ll read that before watching the movie. Sounds like a masterpiece of a performance from your descriptions.
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I read that book 15 years ago! Fascinating! Although, Ed Harris is able to make the legend more human in his movie. There is a tender heart in this movie. There is an embrace of a wild animal. It’s a miracle to witness. I can’t wait to see it again.
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You got me on this one…I don’t remember it.
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Barely advertised in 2000. My dad and I were the only ones in the theatre. One of the most overlooked pristine dramas ever, I think.
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I’ll get this one and give it a spin.
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Spoken like a true fan of vinyl 🙂
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‘It is the life of a brilliantly busted painter’. There’s only one Bernie I know who could write such a brilliant line. ]
‘Pollock’ is another movie which evaded my radar, and I know I’m the lesser for it. I hope I can see it one day or perhaps together (with my fav movie reviewer) in the next life.
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Now, this one, Matt, needs to be viewed in this life, especially by you—an embracer of all art forms. This one is a must. It’s funny: as I create my Top 50, some movies scream at me to be seen again soon. (Some I’m sick of, haha.) This is one that I can’t wait to see again (for the 16th time).
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In your review – you caught me hook, line and sinker which goes without saying. Now, I must find it in this life.
All this all reminds me of Leonards ‘In my Secret Life’. Haha
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Ha! Keep “biting your lip then,” haha! Great song.
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