The cast of ‘The Brutalist’ discusses the Oscar-nominated film directed by Brady Corbet and the idea of the American Dream.
Pearce, who lives in the Netherlands with his partner, actor Carice van Houten, and their son, has generally kept much of Hollywood at arm’s length. In conversation, he tends to be chipper and humble — more interested in talking Aussie rules football than the Oscar race.
There, he is recruited by Guy Pearce’s smooth but dangerous plutocrat Harrison Van Buren to work on a hugely ambitious modernist building project. So convincing is Corbet’s sweeping epic ...
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,
Adrien Brody captivates as a post-war immigrant who comes to America to chase his version of the American Dream.
The Brutalist, releasing on January 24, is gaining attention for Guy Pearce’s BAFTA-nominated performance. Directed by Brady Corbet, the Golden Globe-winning film follows a Holocaust survivor’s life-changing journey.
But it was partially in reaction to the monotony of the show that prompted Guy to seek out only the strangest and most interesting roles, as amply demonstrated in his 1994 breakout film role as Adam/Felicia in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.
An emotional epic, it traces the course of one man’s efforts to rediscover his identity and place in society, taking its time to consider myriad aspects of his resurrection.
Oscar nominee ‘The Brutalist’ and Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’ perpetuate a colossal cliche: the image of practitioners as lone, tortured geniuses.
The Brutalist tells the story of jewish Hungarian architect László Tóth who flees to America in the aftermath of World War Two, leaving his wife behind. Once in America he star
Escaping post-war Europe, visionary architect László Toth arrives in America to rebuild his life, his work, and his marriage to his wife Erzsébet after being forced apart during wartime by ...
The complainants have got it all wrong. This Oscar-nominated movie is not about Adrien Brody’s Hungarian-Jewish architect, it’s an argument for culture