Pollock
Movie Review:
Pollock
is a new film starring and directed by Ed Harris. It is
an honest and sometimes brutal look at the life of one of
America's greatest modern art masters. Unlike a lot of film
bio's Pollock doesn't get weighed down in trying to over
analyze the artistic process or analyze his self-destructive
behavior. It is a look at the man himself. At his life and
how it was affected with his successes and his failures
in the art world.
The
film looks at the period of his life from his early days
as a struggling artist to his meteoric rise and fall in
the art community. The opening scene of the film, we see
a young woman push through a crowd at a Jackson Pollock
art exhibit to get him to sign a copy of Life magazine he
is featured in. As Pollock signs it he looks around the
galley with a look bordering on indifference and disgust.
He is right where every artist wants to be and he can't
stand it. The film jumps back 10 years in time and we see
a drunken Pollock staggering up the stairs to his Greenwich
Village apartment. As his brother helps him up the stairs
Pollock begins to attack several more popular and successful
artists. (I always thought that I would get through life
without hearing anyone scream FUCK PICASSO!! Oh well.) The
film follows his life from there. He meets Lee Krasner who
he would eventually marry. She is a fellow artist and one
of the driving forces into getting Pollack the exposure
and the stability that he needed to get noticed.
The
thing that works most about this film is the performances.
Ed Harris gives a raw inspired performance as Pollock. He
shows us the worst of his qualities when he is drunk in
the gutter. He pulls no punches showing us his petty jealousies
when he is struggling, his fear of how he is perceived when
he is famous and his further decent into alcohol when his
talents have peaked. Counterbalancing Harris portrayal is
Marcia Gay Harden's portrayal of Lee Krasner. She is fantastic
as Pollock's wife. She is the more grounded of the two and
it is her persistence and sacrifice that paved the way for
his success. She is at her most powerful when she is challenging
him about his desire to have children or his decision to
drink after a long period of sobriety. The scenes between
the two actors are the most powerful of the film. It's easy
to see why they were nominated.
Pollock
is the first film directed by Ed Harris and it is an admirable
one. He had a difficult task trying to capture the life
of a very introverted artist. While it would have been nice
to see more of Pollock's thoughts or personality there wasn't
a lot to work with due to the fact that Pollock was not
a very open man. A lot of directors would have relied on
speculation to capture or dissect the person that they are
filming. Smartly, Harris does not.. He shows you the ups,
downs, splatters and spills of the character with out bastardizing
him or glorifying him. Like his artwork you are given a
look at the man and you are allowed to make your own conclusions.
Despite
some slow areas I found the film engrossing and worth seeing.
On a one to ten scale, it gets an eight.
Paul
Ferris
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