By When it comes to admiring the brutalist style, Becker has a lot more company now, partly thanks to evolving tastes but in ...
Supported by By Kyle Buchanan Photographs and Video by Caroline Tompkins A few years ago, as Guy Pearce filmed ... directed by Brady Corbet, Pearce plays the moneyed Pennsylvania industrialist ...
Guy Pearce knits his brow ... There, he meets Harrison Lee Van Buren, a self-made, square-jawed Pennsylvania industrialist played by Pearce. Van Buren becomes Toth’s patron, entrusting ...
Rebecca’s Take “The Brutalist” is an ambitious undertaking, a somber examination about an immigrant’s journey to America ...
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 ...
Adrien Brody’s “The Brutalist”—which is nominated for 10 Oscars including Best Picture—apparently is coming soon to digital ...
Historians and experts, along with the film's star and director, discuss how accurate the Oscars' best picture favourite The ...
Guy Pearce and Joe Alwyn. We discussed the merits of the film and when they realised they were working on something special. They speak about the direction, and they tell us about how other roles ...
Even before she met The Brutalist director Brady Corbett, production designer Judy Becker secretly hoped she could work with ...
The Oscar-nominated screenplays for 'Anora,' 'The Brutalist,' 'The Substance' and more probe the impact of capitalism on ...
Few films have explored the immigrant experience as poignantly as Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist. Taking audiences through the ...
On his own in a strange new country, László settles in Pennsylvania ... of the incredibly wealthy Harrison Lee Van Buren (Guy Pearce). Van Buren has a vision of his own and sees Toth as the ...