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 centre was constructed on London’s biggest post-war bombsite and hailed by Queen Elizabeth II at its 1982 opening, as ...
The cast and director explore the movie's themes and mysteries. And they wonder, what happened to that bowling alley?
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 ...
Well before she met The Brutalist director Brady Corbet, production designer Judy Becker hoped she could work with him.
The film’s reductive portrayal of an exploited creative ‘genius’ places individuation as the defining feature of existence ...
Credit Oscar-nominated cinematographer Lol Crawley for the jaw-droppingly, almost mythical sequence, a visual allegory in ...
The fictional movie, set in the 1950s and '60s, centers around architect László Tóth (Adrien Brody), a Hungarian immigrant to the United States and a Jewish Holocaust survivor.
The further “The Brutalist” progresses along its 215-minute track, the more evident it becomes that co-writer/director Brady Corbet sees himself in his protagonist, László Toth (Adrien Brody), the ...