Pollock [2000] Trailer
Фильм және анимация
Directed by Ed Harris
Jackson Pollock - Ed Harris
Lee Krasner - Marcia Gay Harden
Peggy Guggenheim - Amy Madigan
Clem Greenberg - Jeffrey Tambor
Ruth Kligman - Jennifer Connelly
Howard Putzel - Bud Cort
Tony Smith - John Heard
Willem DeKooning - Val Kilmer
Sande Pollock - Robert Knott
Stella Pollock - Sada Thompson
Пікірлер: 133
Watched "Pollock" about 100 times and every single time just love it! Ed Harris is not only brilliant actor , he is also talented director.
@ellenripley5327
3 жыл бұрын
I don't think so - they just wouldn't fit this part.
@lolamarie9605
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, same! Loved it and I watched it over and over so inspiring and incredibly done.
RIP and long live Jackson Pollock (January 28, 1912 - August 11, 1956), aged 44 You will always be remembered as a legend.
@linkdavid
2 жыл бұрын
& a murderer
@jimmyjames6267
2 жыл бұрын
I was born August 11th 1962
This film is very good. It gives a very precise picture of Jackson Pollock's life from 1940/56. It's not a romanticized account as in other films on artists that go too far into unreal personalities, for example Modigliani which is almost artsy romanticized. These personages lived day to day existence like most of us mere mortals. They were artists and lived this life (a lot of artists drink). The suicide theme is always hanging over artists heads. Can one leave at the pinnacle of success or do
AWESOME MOVIE! 1000/1000 STARS!!! By far one of the best story and acting ever seen, based on a true story of Jackson Pollock!! Ed Harris is so talented as a director!! RECOMMEND EVERYONE TO WATCH THIS MOVIE!!!
Today I seen that movie on DVD this morning🌄 It's a great movie to watch😊💗
I first fell in love with the actor way way back when he played in an ensemble cast in the role of John Glenn, in "The Right Stuff." POLLOCK was by far his greatest performance. Ever. Period.
Jackson Pollock is proof that giftedness can be found in the most tortured soul.
Ed Harris is the perfect perfect Paul Jackson Pollock
Very good film. Ed Harris is a brilliant actor.
the voice of Tom Waits sounds so perfect for this movie
Are you serious??? As a pro musician for my entire life, the film score was PURE GENIUS. It was a perfect match to the theme of the kind of ART that Pollock created.
@ianswift3521
Жыл бұрын
it felt like a damned disney movie's score.
@bespecher
11 ай бұрын
@@ianswift3521100% it almost ruined the hole movie.
not many people get and understand Jackson Pollock's work....... personally i love his work. i do understand where hes coming from and revolutionized modern art in the 20th century. he was a man with a mysterious mind. long live his legacy.
Harris is one of the finest actors of his generation. His use of the loud and the soft, the subtle and the melodramatic in his craft is exceptional.
Great movie portray very well very wonderful awesome abstract artist Jackson Pollock. Ed Harris did a great job being Pollock.
OK I love this trailer for two reasons... Tom Waits sings.. and Ed Harris up ends an entire dinner table.. that is fucking hysterical
Flippin' the table over, LOL!!! Somebody gotta upload this film on here, we'll appreciate it very much!!!
@glauciafaria8101
4 жыл бұрын
Uaaauu
Ed Harris pulls off a great interpretation of Jackson Pollock. Perfect. I have tried to find the music to this film which is Fantastic too
What a great movie, I watched it - finally - over the weekend. While I am not a huge fan of his big-drip stye, Pollock was one hell of a man. Super fascinating. I appreciate Ed Harris' story telling - he didn't try to glamorize or hide any of Pollock's character defects and the movie ends the same way Pollock's story ended too. I liked how it ended - it wasn't fluffed or made to be overly tragic or artsy-fartsy...it was just... sad and unfortunate. Pollock would've approved, it was rough around the edges just like he was. I hadn't realized he died in this way. Any excuse to watch an Ed Harris movie and I'm in, not sure what took me so long to see this one. Would recommend! I didn't want it to end...
Ed Harris needs to direct more movies!
Damn, had no idea until today that Harris directed it too. *BRAVO*
Great movie about the biography and personal life of great american abstract artist Pollock, the film shows the most memorable Pollock's energetic and creative work on canvas made him famous. Marcia Gay Harden won Oscar for Best Supporting Actress portraying Pollock's wife. Ed Harris was nominated for Best Actor.
Lastly I saw the film in 2000/01 when it came out. I have two DVDs one in Paris the other in Sao Paulo where I have my art studios. Those sluggish days I put on the scene of the big canvas for Peggy Guggenheim, great scene great music great film
How do you know when're finished with the painting? ,,, How do you know when you're finished making love?? One of the best movie lines I've ever heard 👍🤝💐🌾🌺⚘
Thank you: thank you for the inspiration.
as a working photographer i saw myself in his character, people who don't create will never understand
He should've won best actor Oscar.
interesting how John Heard throws around William Blake quotes in this movie, exactly the same as he did in the movie Mindwalk in 1990. I know this movie was in the works since at least 93.
OH they did the table flipping thingy! lol i remember that from a bio
SADA THOMPSON (1927 - 2011)
I agree that Harris was robbed of the Oscar that year. One of THE finest actors ever.... HOWEVER... Crowe was robbed of the Oscar the following year for his remarkable performance in A BEAUTIFUL MIND. Now that TOO was an AMAZING performance. Don't understand the profanity in describing Crowe. Did you ever see his performance in THE INSIDER ...where he actually upstaged Pacino? Also his role as Bud White in LA CONFIDENTIAL? But I don't think that his performance as John Nash can ever be topped.
12.12am and I don't know why I'm looking at a trailer of Jackson Pollock's autob Movie when I've got a 1400 word essay to write about him!!! hahaha kill me now...
@Alex-km7so
4 жыл бұрын
Lexie Hanna 7 years apart, same conundrum
huh. I didn't know there was a movie about Pollock. cool, i wanna see it.
Marcia Gay Harden was Electrifying as Lee Krasner in this.
what a film this is
I have already watching this nice film. My lesson from this film is...don't mess with Peggy Guggenheim, ever. LOL
I would not have given a shit about this movie if Ed Harris hadn't spent 10 years leaening to paint like the dude. Awesome!
Alguien puede subir la película completa en español ¿? Gracías, espero que alguien sea tan amable de hacerme es favor :)
at 20 secs thats the legendary Cedar Bar in New Yoke!
Pollock gave me an new and Stronger appreciation for Physics and Mathematics. Because unlike Art, you cant bullshit your way through recognition in physics and mathematics.
@oathdaggersmadvinyl627
Жыл бұрын
Art isn’t supposed to be math or physics anyway
I literally just got finished watching this in class about 2 hours ago and I fell asleep on it.
@radiopadilla
7 жыл бұрын
Stick to movies about Transformers.
Does anyone know what kind of beer or beer brand Pollock drinks most of?
human beings can be cute and loveable too !!
he WAS nature.
Hello Guys! I am looking for the name of a movie ( I think it's east european) about a painter who is contracted to paint a family, but then he discovers things about a dead boy son of the mother who tries to hide it...anyone know which movie is that? I think there's winter in the middle of the name! Thanks
@covecya he didnt say those words. I mean he said it but someone wrote the answers for him in the interview
I'm a pollack fan never watched the movie,thought it would ruin what I read about him.I always heard that the "drip technique "or "action painting" started in psychotherapy by a therapist, in the beginning I heard there was a piece or a saying,or words under these paintings. THE THOUGHT OR IDEA was to kill these feelings or memories. The death of a memory or a feeling ,was the birth of something, or the evolution of Jackson. It started as some self help and then was the beginning of American abstract expression-ism
I met Jackson Pollock a couple of years ago, he's crazy!
tiene musica de Tom Waits??
@xyPERSON His art looks like what the elephants do when you put a paintbrush in their trunk, or what chimps do when you give them finger paints.
@hamskipper1 he didnt say those words. I mean he said it but someone wrote the answers for him in the interview
Nevermind the Pollocks
Great painter, great movie, great actor ( Ed Harris is hot;)
hey someone needs to put the full peggy guggenheim clip up (not i, im peggy guggenheim!)
@TheDjsingleton try it sometime
“When you have no more paint” 2:08
Highly recommended?
Brilliant film, but had it not been made yet, a perfect title for a biographical film on Pollock would be "I Am Nature". Anyone here know why?
@philipwall1025
2 жыл бұрын
He described himself and his painting as such.I don't know who he was speaking to at the time,but it was his answer to a question, about his art.Its similar to why he numbered most of his pieces ,notwanting to give some perceived perspective of what the piece was.
@philipwall1025
2 жыл бұрын
"I am nature.."
How do you know you’ve finished the painting? How do you know you’ve finished making love? ❤️
god i must be bored if i am even considering watching this at 6 in the morning
@SethHesio what the hell? he died in like the 1950s
if not many painters of this period would have perhaps looked at their embrace of 2D as an embrace of the natur eof the canvas (usually a canvas) ITSELF as essential to the nature: thus making the painting itself mor eprofound instead of an illusory technique of mimicking reality. (This would have been suggested by, if not ancient greek ideas of painting which were illus., but perhaps would have been in line with what plato suggests about mimesis or mimickery being less true than "the real.")
@TheDjsingleton i did when i was a five year old, during finger painting
i love the HOW DO U KNOW WHEN UR FINISHED MAKING LOVE part...think about it..its really a question...
kto od bisza? check track Bisz - Pollock amazing song !!!
damn jack calm down maybe do a painting or something
Pollock rolled his car in August of 56, i'm pretty sure you didn't meet him.
@glauciafaria8101
4 жыл бұрын
hahuahuahuaah
@glauciafaria8101
4 жыл бұрын
Interessante
07.25.
Ed Harris should have won for this.
@diegopisfil614
6 жыл бұрын
Saintnick90 exactly, his performance was better than Russell Crowe
@covecya mmmm..i dont think we can ever know that..but there is a big chance that its just the writers thing
@DDylan816 Well that homeless guy must have lied to me then. He swore he was Jackson Pollock
@MrMikeludo Well, I suppose you have a point about the promotion of it. To me it isnt Mozart to compare to more like this "lady Gaga" or yoko ono, or something. But to me, art is an exploration, it isnt in another "something" established out there like music, as in this like academic or school like worldview. it isnt another topic like math or social studies. I think art has exceeded its previous role in western civ, and i dont think it ever really needed to be boxed in by this role, and...
@freedomland11 :) i do
She's actually Ed Harris's wife in real life. Also not her real nose, she's wearing a prosthetic.
@kaminey77 It is a question? what Ed Harris(Pollock) was trying to get across is "how can you ask me a fucking question like that? do you even know how to give an interview lady" xD~~.... I luv Pollock, dont you?
if you actually understood the concept behind the art work done by Picasso, or Pollock than I think you would not have been so quick to provide such a simpleton comment.
@TheGrunger6 "This is not art..." Hohoho...
Pollock doesn't drink beer anymore. He's dead. Uh-Duh...
Ed Harris: so inadequate.
ohhh terrible de Borderline... la voy a ver....
@covecya i don't know but I ceretainly don't wanna watch this sentimental movie siphon and suck away the beauty and majesty of Pollack's worj . Nope, No fuckin way . You watch this movie I will be watching a documentary on him
looks similar to 'Basquait'
The music was pure bollocks, The only thing it represents is the fact the movie was made between 1995 and 2003 when that type of shit was briefly popular. I preferred this score in Sim City 4.
@SethHesio He's been dead for a LONG time lol
Ed Harris is hot
KZread wants to charge 10 bucks to watch a movie about an abstract painter? RU fucking kidding? I thought it was a good movie but damn... dream on, KZread.
This is an excellent movie . Ed Harris best performance . Visit Decebal Art Gallery (Online Gallery) to see some original oil paintings. Arcadia6000
Im gonna say schlitz or rheingold
@MrMikeludo 2D only form of art being regarded serious because it isnt related to the conceptual frame of modern art or modernist painting at all and it just really effaces why these epople were interested in going in this aesthetic direction: AND I dont agree with the conclusion you say this argument proves or suggests: that a 2d only painting cant communicate anything. YES IT CAN, in my opinion. Yet: I dont agree art should be limited to non-representationalism or 2d only painting. But most
Nin… FIN
it looks someone just dumps paint on a piece of paper
@philipwall1025
2 жыл бұрын
I've heard that in the beginning, there was a piece under the splatter,during psychotherapy for alcholism,alcoholism, therapy told him to kill the piece to kill the memory, the death of onething the birth of another...an idea for self help started it all
You have to understand art people. They're like hippies on LSD. They all look at a piece of shit and if they agree that it's "art," then it's art and sells for a lot of money.
when you come.
That sprightly music playing through the first half ruined it for me
Wow...less krasner's cute and val kilmer is de kooning.
Yeah the line about "how do u know when ur finshed making love" is pretty bad. U know ur finished making love when ur splooge is everywhere
@ippolytos1 many great artists were not either. many times it was a source of employment, you were an artist to sell your work to this patron. when the modern industrialized world developeed and its issues the role of art came to express ideas and embody movements of thought. So i mean...to me I agree that the ignorant promotion of abstract art or contemporary art is stupid. But, I dont agree with what i sense of where you see art fitting in, you are appealing to traditional-ism. we would...
Good movie, in spite of the shitty music, that sounded like it belonged in a film featuring talking cartoon animals.
try watching this movie on acid, you can really relate to this guy
Guggenheim is the real artist, professional turd polisher.
@MrMikeludo I disagree. I think the "classical definition of thought" of which you speak is questionably "classical" and at the extremely least debateable. The cocnept you say is complicated is not. And your conclusion that a 2D surface can communicate nothing I think isnt true. So Id have to say as an intelligent writer and onlooker and artist: your argument doesnt seem to prove your conclusion because the argument of an isolated child's developmental problem doesnt relate to a...