But it’s clear from the beginning that architecture in “The Brutalist” is merely a vehicle for a larger set of narrative ideas and concerns, including antisemitism, the plight of refugees, cultural ...
“The Brutalist” is many things ... creating a style of visual thinking for the film’s main character and seeing his ideas to cinematic fruition. On an extremely low budget.
A true epic clocking in at 3 hours and 35 minutes, “The Brutalist” deserves to be experienced on a big screen where Corbet constantly throws big ideas all over a big painterly canvas like a ...
After sitting with László Tóth (Adrien Brody)'s epic journey for 215 minutes in Brady Corbet’s film, it certainly seems like The Brutalist is based on true events—it's utterly convincing ...