As they scout the mines of Carrara to find marble for their gargantuan Pennsylvania monument, Hungarian architect László Tóth (Adrien Brody) and his brooding American financier Harrison Lee Van Buren (Guy Pearce) stumble into an isolated corner of a cave — and,
The Australian actor digs into his role as a wealthy industrialist opposite Adrien Brody in Brady Corbet’s acclaimed mid-century American epic.
Stefan Pape interviews Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce & Joe Alwyn on The Brutalist - the genius of Corbet, Jedi-influences & hiding in cupboards.
Even before she met The Brutalist director Brady Corbett, production designer Judy Becker secretly hoped she could work with him. The post How Production Designer Judy Becker Did The Brutalist on a Budget appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.
“The Brutalist” is a moving work of art that captures the deep pain of dispossession and the long-lasting mental scars of the Holocaust on the Western world in increasingly subtle ways until a final denouement provides a coda sure to haunt the audience for a long time to come.
Pearce, who lives in the Netherlands with his partner, actor Carice van Houten, and their son, has generally kept much of Hollywood at arm’s length. In conversation, he tends to be chipper and humble — more interested in talking Aussie rules football than the Oscar race.
Ben Johnson's comments and his hiring of Dennis Allen point to one place the Bears could finally decide to get serious about fixing in the draft or free agency.
As the Academy Awards race rounds its final lap, the question is not just which films will win, but where to watch those vying for gold statuettes. Leading-yet-controversial nominee “Emilia Pérez,” tapped for 13 awards,
The Brutalist”—starring Adrien Brody—finally gets a wide release following 10 Oscar nominations. What do critics have to say about director Brady Corbet’s historical epic?
The simple answer is no, The Brutalist is not based on a true story, and is an entirely fictional film.
There’s no place for originality in architecture! Nobody can improve on the buildings of the past!” Those are the second and third lines spoken in the 1949 film version of Ayn Rand’s “The
Yolanthe Fawehinmi chats to stars Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones and Guy Pearce and writer-director Brady Corbet about the message of Oscar-tipped biopic The Brutalist