Stefan Pape interviews Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce & Joe Alwyn on The Brutalist - the genius of Corbet, Jedi-influences & hiding in cupboards.
Director Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” is both intimate and epic. It is an intense exploration of one man’s complicated life during post–World War II in America. Corbet and his co-writer, Mona Fastvold,
Joe Alwyn just reached a new career milestone. On Tuesday, Jan. 14, the actor, 33, made his first-ever appearance on a late-night talk show , Late Night with Seth Meyers, to promote his latest film, The Brutalist.
Adrien Brody captivates as a post-war immigrant who comes to America to chase his version of the American Dream.
Here, we follow Tóth, a Hungarian Jewish architect who, after surviving the Holocaust, immigrates to the U.S. to chase after the American Dream. Already a great actor, Brody presents us with a career highlight, one of his best performances to date.
Adrien Brody stars in Brady Corbet’s epic drama about a brilliant architect from Budapest hired by a dangerous capitalist played by Guy Pearce
Joe Alwyn made his highly anticipated debut on late-night television, appearing on Late Night with Seth Meyers for the first time ever.As per PEOPLE, the 33-year-old actor made his first appearance on a late-night talk show,
You’ll be thankful for the intermission. A remarkable undertaking – the biggest of his career, in fact – Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist has kick-started numerous conversations about modern movie run-times.
The Brutalist received praise from critics and fans when it was released on December 20, 2024, via A24. The film had its premiere at the Venice Film Festival where it was bestowed with the Golden Lion, the highest honor of the event. It also won awards in three categories at the Golden Globe.
In his best-director acceptance speech during Sunday's Golden Globe Awards, "The Brutalist" filmmaker Brady Corbet sent his support to Plaza, whose husband, Jeff Baena, died on Friday.
The making of a good building,” observed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, “is a great moral performance.” Like many notable quotes about architecture, it speaks to grandeur, permanence, scale. One