Pollock – Portrait of the Artist as a Neurotic Genius
Jack the Dripper reanimates in Ed Harris’s masterful movie about Modern Art anti-hero Jackson Pollock.
A drinker as well as a dripper, Pollock defined `40s and `50s artistic chic.
“Too neurotic” in his own words to fight in WWII (think about it), he learned to paint realism in a WPA Federal Art Project under Modern American master Thomas Hart Benton.
Then he broke the bond between brush and canvas, inventing Abstract Expressionism.
Equal parts art and neurotic exercise, it made him a wildly successful sensation.
Pollack – dependent on his brother Charles, who the movie paints as latently homoerotic in return – became a great artist, opening up through painting and sometimes booze.
An ugly drunk, the bottle killed him – and an innocent companion.
Using considerably more realism than expressionism, Pollock places Pollock in a very small class of American authentics. As played by Ed Harris and directed by Ed Harris, he’s Brando with a brush.
Ed Harris & Marcia Gay Harden fully inhabit celebrity artist couple Jackson Pollack & Lee Krasner, performances that earned her the Best Supporting Actress Oscar and him a nomination from the Academy.
Harris nails Pollock’s odd physicality: stilted walk, inchoate speech and most especially aerobic painting method. IMDb says “Harris’s father bought his son a book about Jackson Pollock simply because he felt Ed bore a strong resemblance to the painter. Ever since then, Ed Harris became fascinated with Pollock’s life.” The preparation paid off. Plus, Harris’s father was right: that’s the real Pollock in the WikChip, looking for all the world like his cinematic doppelgänger.
Harden seems the very essence of New Yorker artist: savvy, abrupt and clear eyed about the sick genius she loved. Hand that actress a gold statuette.
The outstanding supporting cast includes:
Ed walks in Clint’s giant steps by directing – and starring in – this Perfect movie. What’s next Director Harris?
The man went over the edge.
Mostly straight reality.
Regarding jasonhurwitz’s Review
Genius artist. Perfect movie.