The Brutalist

2024 film by Brady Corbet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Brutalist

The Brutalist is a 2024 epic period drama film directed and produced by Brady Corbet, who co-wrote the screenplay with Mona Fastvold. It stars Adrien Brody as a Hungarian-Jewish Holocaust survivor who immigrates to the United States, where he struggles to achieve the American Dream until a wealthy client changes his life. The cast also features Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy, Stacy Martin, Emma Laird, Isaach de Bankolé, and Alessandro Nivola.

Quick Facts Directed by, Written by ...
The Brutalist
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Theatrical release poster
Directed byBrady Corbet
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyLol Crawley
Edited byDávid Jancsó
Music byDaniel Blumberg
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
  • September 1, 2024 (2024-09-01) (Venice)
  • December 20, 2024 (2024-12-20) (United States)
  • January 24, 2025 (2025-01-24) (United Kingdom)
Running time
215 minutes[2]
Countries
  • United States
  • Hungary
  • United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$9.6 million (net)[5]
Box office$50.1 million[3][6]
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A co-production of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Hungary, The Brutalist premiered at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on September 1, 2024, where Corbet was awarded the Silver Lion for Best Direction. It was released in the United States by A24 on December 20, 2024; in Hungary by UIP-DunaFilm on January 23, 2025; and in the United Kingdom by Focus Features through Universal Pictures International on January 24, 2025.

The film received critical acclaim and accolades for its direction, screenplay, performances, cinematography, and score. The film earned ten nominations at the 97th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, winning for Best Cinematography, Best Original Score, and Best Actor for Brody. At the 82nd Golden Globe Awards, it won three awards, including Best Motion Picture – Drama. It was named one of the top ten films of 2024 by the American Film Institute. It was also a box office success, and grossed $50.1 million against a $9.6 million net budget, becoming Corbet's highest grossing film.

Plot

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Overture

Hungarian-Jewish Holocaust survivor and Bauhaus-trained architect László Tóth immigrates to the United States after being forcibly separated from his wife, Erzsébet, and orphaned niece, Zsófia. As his ship enters New York Harbor, he sees the Statue of Liberty.

Part 1: The Enigma of Arrival

In 1947, László travels to Philadelphia and stays with his cousin, Attila. He discovers that Attila has assimilated, anglicizing his name and converting to Catholicism. Attila reveals to a relieved László that Erzsébet and Zsófia are still alive but stuck in Europe. He offers László work with his furniture business, and the two are soon approached by Harry Lee Van Buren, who wishes to surprise his father, wealthy industrialist Harrison Lee Van Buren, with a renovated library at his mansion near Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Following a drunken night of merriment, Attila's wife Audrey expresses her disdain for László and suggests he live elsewhere. Back at the mansion, Harrison is enraged by the surprise renovation and fires the men; Harry refuses to pay them. Attila blames László for the failed project, falsely accuses him of having made a pass at Audrey, and demands that he leave their home.

Three years later, László, now a heroin addict, works as a laborer loading coal and lives in charity housing with his friend Gordon, an African-American single father. Harrison turns up to tell him the architectural community has lauded his modern library renovation, and that he has discovered László's past as an accomplished architect in Europe. He pays the money owed and invites László to a party, where he commissions a grand project in tribute to his late mother: The Van Buren Institute, a community center comprising a library, theater, gymnasium, and a chapel. Work begins immediately with László living on site and employing Gordon. Harrison introduces László to his personal lawyer, who expedites the immigration of László's wife and niece.

Part 2: The Hard Core of Beauty

In 1953, László reunites with Erzsébet and Zsófia and discovers that as a result of their wartime suffering, Erzsébet is a full-time wheelchair user due to osteoporosis, and Zsófia is unable to speak. During construction, László clashes with contractors and consultants hired by Harrison, who depart from his design in an attempt to stay on budget. He agrees to work unpaid to make up for additional costs. Harry derides László as being merely "tolerated" and makes lewd remarks about Zsófia. Following the derailment of a train carrying materials and ensuing legal costs, a furious Harrison abandons the project and fires the workers.

In 1958, László and Erzsébet have moved to New York City, where he works as a drafter at an architecture firm, and she writes for a newspaper. Zsófia, having recovered her ability to speak, is expecting a child with her husband, Binyamin. They announce they are making Aliyah and moving to Jerusalem, much to the chagrin of László and Erzsébet. Harrison restarts the project and rehires László.

While visiting Carrara to purchase marble, Harrison rapes an intoxicated László, calling him a societal leech whose people invite their own persecution. A traumatized László begins to unravel, becoming more belligerent and impulsively firing Gordon during an argument back on site. Recalling the prior contempt he received, he laments to Erzsébet that they are not welcome in America. After László almost kills Erzsébet by giving her heroin to soothe her pain, she proposes they move to Jerusalem and live with Zsófia, to which he agrees. Shortly afterwards, Erzsébet confronts Harrison at his home and calls him a rapist in front of his family and associates. An enraged Harry violently pushes her out, before his sister Maggie intervenes and helps her leave. Unable to find his father, Harry organizes a search party and tries to locate him within the Institute. Harrison's fate is ultimately left unclear.

Epilogue: The First Architecture Biennale

In 1980, Erzsébet has died, and a retrospective of László's work is held at the Venice Biennale of Architecture. The exhibition showcases various projects built around the world in the ensuing years and includes the Van Buren Institute, completed after a decade's hiatus. Zsófia, accompanied by her young adult daughter and an aging László, gives a revelatory speech asserting that László designed spaces in the structure to resemble both Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps. The structure, she implies, functions as a way of processing trauma. Zsófia ends her speech with a phrase she says László used to tell her as a struggling young mother: "No matter what the others try and sell you, it is the destination, not the journey."

Cast

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Adrien Brody and Felicity Jones attending the premiere of the film at the 2024 Venice Film Festival.

Production

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Development

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Director, Brady Corbet

In September 2018, Deadline reported that director Brady Corbet had chosen the period drama The Brutalist as his next project following the world premiere of his second feature film, Vox Lux.[7] New York-based Andrew Lauren Productions (ALP) developed the screenplay with Corbet and financed the film.[7] Corbet co-wrote the screenplay with his partner Mona Fastvold, with whom he co-wrote the 2015 film The Childhood of a Leader and the 2018 film Vox Lux.[8] The film was originally announced as a co-production between Andrew Lauren and D.J. Gugenheim for ALP, Trevor Matthews and Nick Gordon for Brookstreet Pictures,[9] Brian Young's Three Six Zero,[7] and the Polish company Madants,[10][11] and executive produced by Christine Vachon, Pamela Koffler, and David Hinojosa of Killer Films.[9]

On September 2, 2020, Deadline announced that Joel Edgerton and Marion Cotillard had been cast as the film's leads, László Tóth and Erzsébet Tóth, respectively, and that Mark Rylance was cast in the role of László's mysterious client.[9] Sebastian Stan, Vanessa Kirby, Isaach De Bankolé, Alessandro Nivola, Raffey Cassidy, and Stacy Martin were also announced in unknown roles.[9] Corbet described The Brutalist as "a film which celebrates the triumphs of the most daring and accomplished visionaries; our ancestors", and the project which is so far the closest to his heart and family history.[9] Protagonist Pictures presented the project to buyers at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival.[9] The film takes place in Pennsylvania and was shot in 4 languages: English, Hebrew, Hungarian, and Italian.[8][9]

Director of photography Lol Crawley, editor Dávid Jancsó, and costume designer Kate Forbes were announced on March 9, 2023.[12][13] Production designer Judy Becker was announced on April 11, 2023.[14] Daniel Blumberg composed the film's score.[15]

On April 11, 2023, it was announced that Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn, Jonathan Hyde, Emma Laird, and Peter Polycarpou would star in the film, while Edgerton, Cotillard, Rylance, Stan, and Kirby were no longer attached.[14] It was also announced that the film would be co-produced by the US-based companies Andrew Lauren Productions and Yellow Bear along with the United Kingdom's Brookstreet and Intake Films, and Hungary's Proton Cinema,[14] and financed by Brookstreet UK, Yellow Bear, Lip Sync Productions, Richmond Pictures, Meyohas Studio, Carte Blanche, Cofiloisirs, and Parable Media.[14] CAA Media Finance handles US sales with Protagonist Pictures handling international sales.[14] Focus Features subsequently acquired international distribution rights to the film.[4]

Corbet dedicated the film to Scott Walker who died in 2019, and scored his previous films.[16]

Writing

Corbet had long had an interest in architecture. His uncle is an architect who studied at Taliesin West, which Corbet frequented as a child, while Fastvold's grandfather was a mid-century designer.[17][18] Corbet stated that the film is about the parallels between the artistic experience and the immigrant experience, and that brutalism, in addition to its highly cinematic nature, would work as the perfect visual allegory for exploring post-war trauma.[17][19] Fastvold's own experience as an immigrant from Norway also informed the writing of the film.[17] Furthermore, Corbet considered architecture and filmmaking to be similar processes, as they are both "forms of artistic expression that require an extraordinary amount of participation from other people, collaboration and lots of money".[17]

The character of László Tóth was inspired by several real-life architects and designers, including Marcel Breuer, Paul Rudolph, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, László Moholy-Nagy, Louis Kahn,[19][20] and Ernő Goldfinger.[21] During their research, Corbet and Fastvold consulted architectural historian Jean-Louis Cohen (who died in 2023); Cohen noted that no actual examples of architects that emerged from the war with a career like Tóth's in fact existed.[22] Alongside Cohen's Architecture in Uniform: Designing and Building for the Second World War, Hilary Thimmesh's Marcel Breuer and a Committee of Twelve Plan a Church: A Monastic Memoir, a book chronicling the construction of Saint John's Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota by the Hungary-born, Bauhaus-trained Breuer, was an additional point of reference.[22][23] Corbet further cited the writings of W. G. Sebald and V. S. Naipaul (whose novel The Enigma of Arrival lends its name to the first part of the film) as influences.[19]

Filming

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Cinematographer Lol Crawley discussing The Brutalist at the 2025 IFFR

Corbet shot the film's epilogue in Venice in September 2020. Principal photography, scheduled to start in Poland in December, was postponed due to COVID restrictions.[24] Further delays occurred as a result of the war in Ukraine as well as several pregnancies (including that of lead actress Felicity Jones) and deaths in the families of the film's cast and crew.[24][25][26] Corbet ultimately elected to shoot in Hungary to take advantage of its tax credits, the presence of multiple film labs in Budapest, as well as his own familiarity; both Corbet and Fastvold had prior experience filming in the country.[25]

Principal photography eventually began on March 16, 2023 in Budapest.[14][27][28] The Hungarian capital and surrounding countryside doubled as 1950s Philadelphia and rural Pennsylvania in the film, while the Andrássy Castle in Tóalmás stood in for the Van Buren mansion.[24][29] Production then moved to Carrara, Tuscany, on April 29, 2023.[30][31] Filming took place in the Bettogli and Bombarda quarries in unexpected thick fog, and in the town of Carrara itself.[29] A small camera unit filmed exteriors in New York City, as well as the Statue of Liberty reveal featured in the opening scene.[32] Principal photography wrapped after 34 days on May 5, 2023.[33]

The film was shot using the VistaVision process and cameras equipped with Leica-S lenses. It involves shooting horizontally on 35-millimetre film stock, which was then scanned, with the intention of also making prints for a 70-millimetre release, which has the same height and was the most practical format to show the original size of the VistaVision frame when projecting film.[32] The idea for VistaVision arose while Corbet and director of photography Lol Crawley were scouting the quarries in Italy. The format was originally intended for big vistas, but ultimately the vast majority of the film was shot on VistaVision.[32] Corbet explained that "the best way to access [the 1950s] was to shoot on something that was engineered in that same decade",[34] while Crawley stated that the format, with its wider field of view, allowed filmmakers to photograph architecture without using distorting wide-angle lenses.[35] Crawley also used Arricam ST, LT and Arriflex 235 35-millimetre cameras equipped with Cooke lenses for the shoot. An Arriflex 416 16-millimetre camera equipped with Zeiss Superspeed lenses was used to shoot documentary-style footage, while the TV footage in the epilogue was filmed using a Digital Betacam.[32]

The Van Buren Institute, which was only constructed in portions and as a scale model, was designed by production designer Judy Becker based on the notes of Fastvold and Corbet, who tried to be as descriptive as they could about its features in the script.[22] Not an architect by training, Becker looked to the designs of concentration camps, real-life brutalist buildings, the work of Marcel Breuer and Tadao Ando, Louis Kahn's Salk Institute, Frank Lloyd Wright's Johnson Wax Headquarters and James Turrell's skyspaces for inspiration.[36] She also cited Breuer's Westchester Reform Temple, a synagogue she remembered as a child in Scarsdale, New York that had a Star of David overhead, as a point of reference.[22][37]

Music

The film's score was composed by English musician Daniel Blumberg, who had previously worked with Corbet on the short film Gyuto (2019). The two worked together on the film over a span of seven years.[38][39] The album containing the score was released through Milan Records on December 13, 2024.[39] Blumberg and Corbet wanted continuous music for the film's first 10 minutes, resulting in the opening sequence of The Brutalist being choreographed and shot to Blumberg's demos.[38] The overture features pianists John Tilbury, Sophie Agnel [fr], and Simon Sieger, trumpeter Axel Dörner, and saxophonist Evan Parker, all of whom appear throughout the soundtrack.[38] Synth-pop musician Vince Clarke plays the synthesizer on "Epilogue (Venice)".[39]

The experimental "Construction" was the first track Blumberg wrote for the score; an early demo was composed on a prepared piano at London's Cafe Oto to create a sound similar to construction noises.[39] "Erzsébet", one of the score's themes, was played by Blumberg live on a piano since Corbet wanted the actors to hear the music while shooting; the train noises from the scene were eventually incorporated into the track's final version.[39]

Post-production and AI controversy

Editing was completed by Hungarian editor Dávid Jancsó.[40] In an interview with RedShark News, Jancsó revealed that artificial intelligence (AI) tools from Respeecher, a Ukrainian software company, were deployed in order to improve the authenticity of Adrien Brody and Felicity Jones's Hungarian dialogue.[41] Both actors received dialect coaching, but the filmmakers wanted to perfect their pronunciation "so that not even locals will spot any difference."[41] Unsuccessful ADR work prompted them to record Brody and Jones's voices into Respeecher; Jancsó, a native Hungarian speaker, also fed in his voice to "finesse the tricky dialect".[41]

Director Brady Corbet issued the following statement to Deadline Hollywood after Jancsó's interview sparked backlash on social media:[42][43]

[Brody] and [Jones]'s performances are completely their own. They worked for months with dialect coach Tanera Marshall to perfect their accents. Innovative Respeecher technology was used in Hungarian language dialogue editing only, specifically to refine certain vowels and letters for accuracy. No English language was changed. This was a manual process, done by our sound team and Respeecher in post-production. The aim was to preserve the authenticity of [Brody] and [Jones]'s performances in another language, not to replace or alter them and done with the utmost respect for the craft.

Additionally, it was said that generative artificial intelligence was used to conjure a series of architectural blueprints and finished buildings in the film's closing sequence.[41] In a 2022 Filmmaker article, production designer Judy Becker claimed the film's architecture consultant used Midjourney "to create three brutalist buildings quite quickly."[44] However, Corbet denied this in a subsequent interview: "Judy Becker and her team did not use AI to create or render any of the buildings. All images were hand-drawn by artists. To clarify, in the memorial video featured in the background of a shot, our editorial team created pictures intentionally designed to look like poor digital renderings circa 1980."[45] The director concluded by saying "The Brutalist is a film about human complexity, and every aspect of its creation was driven by human effort, creativity, and collaboration. We are incredibly proud of our team and what they've accomplished here."[42]

Release

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Director Brady Corbet receiving the ARCA Cinema Giovani Award at the 2024 Venice Film Festival

The Brutalist had its world premiere at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on September 1, 2024, where it competed for the Golden Lion and won the Silver Lion for Corbet.[46] It also played at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2024.[47] The film's festival run also included selections for screenings at the 2024 New York Film Festival, the 69th Valladolid International Film Festival, and the 31st Austin Film Festival.[48][49][50] A week after its premiere at Venice, A24 acquired U.S. distribution rights to the film for $10–15 million in what was described as a competitive situation.[51][52] One distributor that bid for the film was Neon, though C.E.O. Tom Quinn said that he and Corbet disagreed on whether to delay the film's release to 2025 in order to produce more 70-M.M. prints.[53] It was released in the U.S. by A24 on December 20, 2024,[54] and was released in the United Kingdom by Focus Features through Universal Pictures UK on January 24, 2025.[55] In Canada, it was distributed by Elevation Pictures.[56]

It was screened in IMAX theaters two days prior to its limited theatrical release for New York and Los Angeles before being screened in IMAX nationwide throughout January.

It was featured in the Limelight section of the 54th International Film Festival Rotterdam to be screened in February 2025.[57]

Reception

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Box office

As of April 13, 2025, The Brutalist has grossed $16.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $33.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $50.1 million.[6][3]

The Brutalist made $266,791 from four theaters in the US in its opening weekend, and then $211,164 in its second weekend and $244,341 in its third.[58] In its fourth weekend, the film expanded to 68 theaters and made $1.38 million. Its figure was noted as outperforming Better Man, which made $1.1 million from 1,291 theaters over the same frame.[59][60] The following weekend it grossed $2 million from 338 theaters (and a total of $2.4 million over the four-day MLK holiday).[61] After earning 10 Oscar nominations, the film expanded to 1,118 theaters, and made $2.9 million over the weekend.[62]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 93% of 319 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.7/10. The website's consensus reads: "Structurally beautiful and suffused with Adrien Brody's soulful performance, writer-director Brady Corbet's immaculately designed The Brutalist is a towering tribute to the immigrant experience."[63] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 90 out of 100, based on 57 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[64]

The film received a five-star review from The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw, who called it "an amazing and engrossing epic". He continued: "The Brutalist obviously takes something from Ayn Rand, but also from Bernard Malamud and Saul Bellow in its depiction of the US immigrant adventure and the promise of success – but maybe Corbet and Fastvold go further and faster into how dizzyingly sensual and sexual it all is". Bradshaw concluded: "It is an electrifying piece of work, stunningly shot by cinematographer Lol Crawley and superbly designed by Judy Becker. I emerged from this movie light-headed and euphoric, dizzy with rubbernecking at its monumental vastness."[65] In a review for Vogue, the cinematography, score, costumes, and production design were described as "sumptuous", "impressively stylish", and possessing a "staggering ambition".[66] Some reviews criticized the film, including The Ringer's Adam Nayman[67] and The New Yorker's Richard Brody, with the latter writing that "Brady Corbet's epic takes on weighty themes, but fails to infuse its characters with the stuff of life."[68]

NPR included the film in their list of the best movies and TV of 2024, with critic Bob Mondello writing that The Brutalist is "Gorgeous, conceptually stunning, and dizzying in its savagery about cracks in the foundation of the American dream."[69] RogerEbert.com writers named The Brutalist in the top slot of the site's Ten Best Films of 2024, which is determined by Borda count of the site's writers.[70] Filmmakers Tim Fehlbaum, Drew Goddard, Reinaldo Marcus Green, Don Hertzfeldt, Matt Johnson, Karyn Kusama, David Lowery, Lance Oppenheim, Paul Schrader, Celine Song, Oliver Stone, Denis Villeneuve, Malcolm Washington and John Waters have cited it as among their favorite films of 2024.[71][72][73][74][75] In March 2025, The New York Times listed The Brutalist as among "The Movies We've Loved Since 2000."[76]

Accolades

Upon its premiere at the 81st Venice International Film Festival, The Brutalist won five awards, including the Silver Lion.[77][78] It was subsequently nominated for nine awards at the 30th Critics' Choice Awards,[79] ten awards at the 97th Academy Awards including Best Picture.[80] It ultimately won three of these, which were Best Cinematography, Best Score, and Best Lead Actor. and seven awards at the 82nd Golden Globe Awards, winning three for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama, Best Director and Best Motion Picture – Drama.[81][82] In addition, the American Film Institute named The Brutalist as one of the top 10 films of 2024.[83]

References

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