Skip Navigation or Skip to Content

Joe Black -1998- — Meet

Three hours of Brad Pitt staring meaningfully at sunsets while eating peanut butter sounds like a parody.

Meet Joe Black is a flawed, gorgeous, deeply earnest film—a dying breed in an age of irony. As Bill says near the end: “That’s what life is. A series of rooms. And who we stay with in each of them… that’s what matters.” This movie invites you to stay in its rooms for a while. It’s worth the visit. Meet Joe Black -1998-

The final shot—Joe releasing Bill’s hand, then walking back to the party as the real young man from the coffee shop returns—suggests a beautiful, haunting ambiguity: Is that Brad Pitt still Death, or the resurrected stranger? The film refuses to answer. Watch it if: You enjoy philosophical slow burns, Anthony Hopkins monologues, and movies that prioritize mood over plot. Three hours of Brad Pitt staring meaningfully at