Meet Joe Black Poster

Meet Joe Black (1998)

PG-13 11/12/1998 Fantasy, Drama, Romance 2h 58m
74%
User
Score
7.2/10
47%
43/100

Sooner or later everyone does.

Overview

Bill Parrish has it all - success, wealth and power. Days before his 65th birthday, he receives a visit from a mysterious stranger, Joe Black, who soon reveals himself as Death. In exchange for extra time, Bill agrees to serve as Joe's earthly guide. But will he regret his choice when Joe unexpectedly falls in love with Bill's beautiful daughter Susan?

Ron Osborn

Screenplay

Jeff Reno

Screenplay

Kevin Wade

Screenplay

Bo Goldman

Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt

Joe Black / Young Man in Coffee Shop

Anthony Hopkins

Anthony Hopkins

William Parrish

Claire Forlani

Claire Forlani

Susan Parrish

Jake Weber

Jake Weber

Drew

Marcia Gay Harden

Marcia Gay Harden

Allison

Jeffrey Tambor

Jeffrey Tambor

Quince

David S. Howard

David S. Howard

Eddie Sloane

Lois Kelly-Miller

Lois Kelly-Miller

Jamaican Woman

Jahnni St. John

Jahnni St. John

Jamaican Woman's Daughter

Media

Bill Parrish’s Dinner with Death

Bill Parrish’s Dinner with Death

Brad Pitt Meets Anthony Hopkins

Brad Pitt Meets Anthony Hopkins

"I Love Making Love to You"

"I Love Making Love to You"

Trailer #1

Trailer #1

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Reviews

A review by Wuchak

Written on December 20, 2019

***Captivating commentary on love, life and death***

The Grim Reaper (i.e. the Angel of Death) comes to take billionaire industrialist Bill Parrish (Anthony Hopkins) but instead decides to take a holiday in the corporeal universe by possessing the body of a young man (Brad Pitt). Death's deal with Parrish is that, as long as he's entertained, he'll delay Bill's death. Mr. Death materializes as a mysterious stranger with child-like qualities known as 'Joe Black.' His "holiday" is complicated when he falls for Parrish's daughter (Claire Forlani).

"Meet Joe Black" (1998) is a re-imagining of the 1934 film "Death Takes a Holiday" (which I've never seen). It has the confidence to take its time at almost 3 hours, but is so captivating that it feels shorter than most 90-minute mindless flic...

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A review by tensharpe

Written on February 3, 2023

Joe Black ( Brad Pitt ) as the Grim Reaper arrives on the doorstep of wealthy businessman Bill Parrish ( Anthony Hopkins ) after borrowing a body of a man killed that morning. After experiencing chest pains and hearing voices Bill Parish is due to die and Joe has come to escort him to the other side. Bill, playing for more time, engages with Joe and manages to persuade him to spend a little more time on earth. Joe’s interest in humanity and experiencing life is particularly heightened when he and Bill’s daughter Susan start to form a relationship.

 “Meet Joe Black” centres more on the relationship of Joe and Susan rather than Deaths design for Bill. As a Romeo and Juliet style story of forbidden love, “Meet Joe Black” tries hard to play on audience emotions. Brad Pitt and A...

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A review by CinemaSerf

Written on February 8, 2024

Billionaire "Parrish" (Sir Anthony Hopkins) is feeling a bit under the weather as his birthday approaches, and a potential corporate merger looms too. His daughter "Sarah" (Claire Forlani) is, meantime, rather keen on one of his hotshot employees "Drew" (Jake Weber) who is a driving force behind the impending and lucrative business deal. "Parrish" is clearly unwell, and after a scare that looks like an heart attack, he finds a new character in his life. The blonde and piercing-eyed Brad Pitt whose purpose here is pretty clear to us, but not yet to his new friend. Hastily named "Joe Black" the older man starts to act as a sort of guide for the younger, who clearly his little knowledge of how the world works. "Black" starts to feature much more prominently in the life of the mogul and that c...

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A review by Hadam10Rose

Written on March 9, 2025

Death takes a holiday. Not only the name of the play it was based off, but the general premise of the film. A real fish out of water story, with death trying to understand life and why people don't usually want to give it up. I can see this film not ageing well for those on the left who demand changes to older films or scenes cut. With them not understanding that death talks to people in their own voice. So that's why we the audience heard Joe speaking like the Jamaican women who was in the hospital. I can see those people losing their minds over that scene. Demanding at minimum a trigger warning. Anyway the cast did an amazing job and is one of those films where you don't listen to the critics, who gave it a F, listen to the audience who gave it a B....

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