The Brutalist is a towering paean to the American ... in Philadelphia and working in his furniture shop, László begins proposing unique Modernist designs, until he's commissioned to build ...
Writer-director Brady Corbet doesn’t see much difference between constructing a skyscraper and making a movie. “There are so ...
Built in the 1960's, Barbican Estate is a brutilist utopia for inner city living. The estate is a massive complex of 2000 ...
Brutalist architecture first emerged in the 1950s in the United Kingdom as an offshoot of modernism. The goal was to create buildings using limited resources and materials to aid reconstruction ...
On this Japanese island, nearly every building is made of concrete Okinawa is a brutalist wonderland. A Brutalist building by a Bauhaus master is reborn as a net-zero hotel Green and gorgeous.
Felicia Curry, host of WETA Arts, meets with Dean Madson, founder of Brutalist DC, to uncover the beauty and significance of DC’s iconic brutalist buildings. From the towering FBI Building to ...
A24 has dated “Queer” and “The Brutalist” for the fourth quarter of this year, officially confirming each film for the 2025 awards race. The studio acquired both epic dramas around this ...
For numerous reasons, Hollywood’s interest in funding ambitious adult dramas like The Brutalist has drastically plummeted over the past 20 to 30 years. Despite that, The Brutalist has emerged as ...
It’s a process,” adds the filmmaker. The Brutalist is Corbet’s third directed feature; it won Best Director at Venice. It also won the Arca CinemaGiovani Award, the FIPRESCI prize ...
Twenty-two years after his Oscar-winning turn in “The Pianist,” the 51-year-old actor could very well pick up a second golden statue for his towering work in “The Brutalist,” which bowed ...
Time will tell whether these are hyperbole, but while watching The Brutalist, it's hard not to ... in Philadelphia and working in his furniture shop, László begins proposing unique Modernist ...
“There are so many similarities,” says Corbet, whose new film “The Brutalist,” which dramatizes the concessions architects are forced to accept, is also an allegory of Hollywood.