"The Brutalist" is a nearly four-hour historical drama starring Adrien Brody as celebrated architect László Tóth. Here's what's real in the new movie.
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,
After 22 years since he won his first Oscar at the age of 29, the youngest actor ever to win in that category, for his role in "The Pianist" in 2002, will Adrien Brody get his second Oscar for his performance as an architect in "The Brutalist?
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?
Set across a decade, the story begins in 1947 with architect Laszlo Toth (Adrien Brody) escaping the horrors ... but once he’s settled in Pennsylvania and lands a job via his cousin Attila ...
IT’S always an issue during a very long film – when to get up to go to the loo. What are you going to interrupt while forcing people in your row to stand up and,
PLOT Following the horrors of World War II, a Jewish architect embarks on a troubled career in America. BOTTOM LINE A towering achievement despite its flaws. If you build a masterpiece that eventually falls apart, was it still a masterpiece?
expanding nationwide Jan. 24), a 3½-hour saga about a Hungarian-Jewish architect named László Tóth (Adrien Brody) who immigrates to rural Pennsylvania after World War II and experiences ...
Adrien Brody carries The Brutalist writer-director Brady Corbet’s vision of astonishing scope, says Right at the point when The Brutalist starts threatening to live up to its name, the action blackens into darkness and the word “INTERMISSION” flashes up.
Nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, The Brutalist is an audacious epic about a Holocaust survivor and architect trying to rebuild his life in the US.
In an interview with Q’s Tom Power, the Oscar-winning actor reflects on his critically acclaimed performance in The Brutalist, and why he says it’s taken him 20 years to find a role of this magnitude.
Marquee Arts cinema program director, Nick Alderink, has returned from the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. He screened a good number of films with an eye towards bringing them to the big screens in Ann Arbor.