Brady Corbet and 'The Brutalist' go for broke

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Brady Corbet and 'The Brutalist' go for broke
EntertainmentChantal AkermanLars Von Trier
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Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” emerged less like a new film worth checking out than a movie colossus to behold.

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This image released by A24 shows Adrien Brody, left, and Felicity Jones in a scene from"The Brutalist." Filmmaker Brady Corbet appears at The Gothams Film Awards in New York on Dec. 2, 2024. Corbet’s visionary three-and-a-half-hour postwar American epic, shot in VistaVision, has taken on the imposing aura of its architect protagonist’s style. Little about it is tailored to today’s more prescribed movie world. It even has an intermission.

“The Brutalist,” written by Corbet and his partner, the filmmaker Mona Fastvold, operatically unfolds the fictional story of László Tóth , a Hungarian architect who, having survived Nazi concentration camps, emigrates to Pennsylvania. He’s scraping by in a working class life when his renovation of a library for a wealthy industrialist, Harrison Lee Van Buren , propels him back into architecture.

Fastvold and Corbet, who live in New York with their 10-year-old daughter, shot “The Brutalist” in Hungary. If the movie is a self-conscious stab at resurrecting some of the visionary spirit of American moviemaking, it’s also a commentary on some of the forces that constrict it today. “The film was certainly designed to be outsized and imposing,” Corbet says. “We knew the film would be long. We knew it was a big object. We also felt it had to be. The form and the content needed to be lock step with each other. The appeal of Brutalism is its commitment to both minimalism and maximalism, and all of my films are playing with that dynamic. I like those extremes.”

“The research and the immersion needed to portray someone who lived through the horrors of World War II left me with an understanding that clearly lingered and exists within me,” Brody says."Oh definitely. I find that filmmakers often need to exorcise their circumstances,” says Brody. “Brady is very open and unguarded as he references his own journey and hardships along the way. It’s very relatable. I understand them.

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Entertainment Chantal Akerman Lars Von Trier Michael Haneke Stanley Kubrick Andrei Tarkovsky Brady Corbet Natalie Portman Guy Pearce Adrien Brody Mona Fastvold World News Olivier Assayas Larisa Shepitko

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