The artist-patron conflict at the heart of The Brutalist takes a cruel, intense turn about three hours into Brady Corbet 's ...
Over the years, Guy Pearce has been good in most all things. But he’s been particularly good at playing characters with a refined disposition who harbor darker impulses underneath.
The Australian actor digs into his role as a wealthy industrialist opposite Adrien Brody in Brady Corbet’s acclaimed mid-century American epic.
Rebecca’s Take “The Brutalist” is an ambitious undertaking, a somber examination about an immigrant’s journey to America ...
The Oscar-nominated screenplays for 'Anora,' 'The Brutalist,' 'The Substance' and more probe the impact of capitalism on ...
Few films have explored the immigrant experience as poignantly as Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist. Taking audiences through the ...
Supported by By Kyle Buchanan A few years ago, as Guy Pearce filmed a television ... hour drama directed by Brady Corbet, Pearce plays the moneyed Pennsylvania industrialist Harrison Lee Van ...
As they scout the mines of Carrara to find marble for their gargantuan Pennsylvania monument ... American financier Harrison Lee Van Buren (Guy Pearce) stumble into an isolated corner of a ...
which soon involves working for an extremely wealthy industrialist (Pearce) to build a massive community center in the middle of Pennsylvania. During the 2025 NYFCC ceremony on Wednesday evening ...
Guy Pearce knits his brow ... There, he meets Harrison Lee Van Buren, a self-made, square-jawed Pennsylvania industrialist played by Pearce. Van Buren becomes Toth’s patron, entrusting ...