Conoce | A Joe Black

The film’s emotional core isn’t a dramatic explosion, but a quiet conversation. When Bill first meets Joe, he offers him a simple breakfast: a toasted bagel and peanut butter. Joe takes a bite. His eyes widen. “That’s… the best thing I ever tasted,” he says.

Brad Pitt gives one of the strangest performances of his career. As Joe Black, he is not playing a man; he is playing an entity trying on humanity like an itchy wool suit. He walks stiffly, tilts his head like a confused bird, and speaks with a deliberate, halting cadence. He discovers the joy of peanut butter with the wide-eyed wonder of a newborn. Conoce a Joe Black

Why? Because Meet Joe Black isn't really about a high-powered businessman or a whirlwind romance. It is a surprisingly tender, achingly slow meditation on what it means to say goodbye. The film’s emotional core isn’t a dramatic explosion,

Directed by Martin Brest ( Beverly Hills Cop , Scent of a Woman ), the film follows Bill Parrish (Anthony Hopkins), a titan of industry who has built an empire but is running out of time. On the eve of his 65th birthday, he begins hearing a mysterious voice. That voice belongs to Death, who has come to take him. His eyes widen