SUMMARY: Ambitious in its scope, “The Brutalist” seems to have done what it set out to do: leave its audiences with a sense ...
Revitalization of iconic modernist landmarks showcasing how adaptive reuse strategies preserve historical value while ...
Why the stark 20th-century architectural style is back in vogue.
Well before she met The Brutalist director Brady Corbet, production designer Judy Becker hoped she could work with him.
The film’s reductive portrayal of an exploited creative ‘genius’ places individuation as the defining feature of existence ...
We must acknowledge that the great post-war social housing estates, despite their flaws, are still held in great affection by ...
With monochrome elements, levitating forms and a new surprise around every corner, this home in Chennai by Design DNA upends ...
The fictional movie, set in the 1950s and '60s, centers around architect László Tóth (Adrien Brody), a Hungarian immigrant to the United States and a Jewish Holocaust survivor.
The further “The Brutalist” progresses along its 215-minute track, the more evident it becomes that co-writer/director Brady Corbet sees himself in his protagonist, László Toth (Adrien Brody), the ...
It takes more than just length for a film to become an epic but at 215 minutes, plus a fifteen-minute interval, The Brutalist ...
The Smithsons are best known for their late-Sixties Robin Hood Gardens social housing project in Poplar. Demolition of the ...
Bauhaus architects like Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe fled Nazi Germany, but not all of them went to the US.