Lately it’s architects, fictional division, two in particular. “The Brutalist” concerns a fictional Hungarian Jew, one László Tóth (played by Adrien Brody), who survives the Holocaust and sails to ...
“I’m the closest that there is to the creative mind of László,” said Becker, who crafted the ingenious mid-century furniture, shabby Philadelphia interiors, tony drawing rooms and the sprawling ...
A firm favourite for Oscar glory this year 'The Brutalist' is not a biopic but rather a film loosely based of several real ...
The cast and director explore the movie's themes and mysteries. And they wonder, what happened to that bowling alley?
Monumental,” “tremendous,” and “striking” have all been used to describe how much of an achievement The Brutalist is, but there isn’t enough verbiage to replace the grandeur of the experience itself.
When it premiered at the Venice Film Festival last September, “The Brutalist” was hailed as the next great American epic.
Architecture is the device to explore wider themes in Brady Corbet's ambitious three-and-a-half-hour-plus epic that looks set to sweep The Oscars, writes Sarah Simpkin ...
Why the stark 20th-century architectural style is back in vogue.
Who’s the Brutalist? After more than 3 hours, you’ll be glad to get to director and co-writer Brady Corbet’s “Epilogue.” Set ...
Enjoy 12 digital issues a year from the global design authority ...
Ignore all the whingers. Go to see the excellent The Brutalist. Take along an architect you hate. The film is 3½ hours long. They might actually explode with fury ...
Well before she met The Brutalist director Brady Corbet, production designer Judy Becker hoped she could work with him.
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