For 15 minutes in Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist, audiences are confronted with a still image. Adrien Brody, as immigrant architect Laszlo Tóth, stands with his bride outside a Budapest synagogue, surrounded by family.
That dialogue, it turns out, may have been supplemented by an AI speech tool. Jancsó is a native Hungarian speaker; he knows how difficult the language is to replicate. That’s true even for Brody, whose mother is in fact a Hungarian refugee.
Adrien Brody returns to Oscar-winning form as architect László Toth, a Holocaust survivor who arrives in America to start a new life.
After so many years of setbacks and threats, he keeps returning to his great new American building. It is torture; it is hell, but on he goes. In a Europe ravaged by wars, brutalism found a purpose in the relatively inexpensive and abundant nature of concrete and the need for large,
That moment is where your patience will be tested (if it hasn’t already) and you’ll have to decide whether the movie’s flaws are fatal. As Tóth’s story reaches its end, one character makes a proclamation: "No matter what the others try and sell you,
The Brutalist' director Brady Corbet is defending the controversial use of AI to alter Adrien Brody and Felicity Jones’ Hungarian accents in his acclaimed film
Director Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” is both intimate and epic. It is an intense exploration of one man’s complicated life during post–World War II in America. Corbet and his co-writer, Mona Fastvold,
For 15 minutes in Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist, audiences are confronted with a still image. Adrien Brody, as immigrant architect Laszlo Tóth, stands with his bride outside a Budapest synagogue, surrounded by family.
Nominated for 10 Oscars including Best Picture, Brady Corbet’s film – starring Adrien Brody, Guy Pearce and Felicity Jones – explores around the existential terrors of America, and clocks in at a garg
Adrien Brody brilliantly embodies an émigré architect new to America in Brady Corbet’s toweringly ambitious epic