Meet Joe Black -1998 !new! Jun 2026
(Claire Forlani), had recently encountered in a coffee shop. : Death, calling himself
Yet, it endures because it refuses to be cool. In an era of irony, it is sincere. In an age of fast cuts, it is patient. It is a film about the one appointment we all keep, and it argues that the only appropriate response is to live so fully that when Death offers you his hand, you can walk with him into the fireworks without looking back. Meet Joe Black -1998
Inhabiting the body of a young man named Joe (Brad Pitt), Death strikes a deal with Bill: "You show me the ropes of being human, and I’ll let you live a few days longer." (Claire Forlani), had recently encountered in a coffee shop
There are certain movies that critics love to hate, yet audiences refuse to let die. Martin Brest’s 1998 epic Meet Joe Black is the ultimate poster child for this phenomenon. In an age of fast cuts, it is patient
Bill Parrish (Anthony Hopkins) is a media mogul at the peak of his powers, beloved by his family and respected by his rivals. He is also, as we learn in the film's first scene, dying. On the eve of his 65th birthday, Death comes for him—but not in a black robe. Death manifests in the body of a young man (Brad Pitt) who has just had a chance encounter with Bill’s daughter, Susan (Claire Forlani), in a coffee shop.