Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Review - Adrien Brody's power and depth shine in this colossal epic
The London Standard
|January 09, 2025
The Brutalist, director Brady Corbet’s third feature, is a movie of such colossal size and scope it may well have been carved from marble; an epic paean to the immigrant experience in America in the wake of the Second World War.
The Brutalist Cert 18, 215 mins
It’s no surprise it just bagged best actor for its star Adrien Brody as well as best film and best director and Sunday’s Golden Globes.
“Monumental” has been the word of choice for audiences overwhelmed by the fictional story of László Tóth (Brody), a Hungarian-born Jewish architect who survives the Holocaust and flees to the USA.
After a euphoric glimpse of the Statue of Liberty (pointedly shot upside down in the culmination of a bravura opening sequence) Tóth is soon scratching out a hard-scrabble life in Pennsylvania when well-heeled industrialist Harrison Van Buren (Guy Pearce) commissions him to design and build a grand community centre in honour of his late mother.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 09, 2025-Ausgabe von The London Standard.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The London Standard
The London Standard
Southbank salutes half a century of love and skate
This is a nice touch.
3 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Arrowtown, New Zealand
I arrived in Arrowtown, a historic gold-mining village in New Zealand's South Island, expecting a picturesque detour as part of a wider Otago itinerary and left plotting my return.
2 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
The unsettling thrill of murder most academic
Yrsa, a Cambridge PhD student researching Afropessimism, doesn't intend to take Richardson's life.
1 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Oh, what a send up! The joke is on Ralph Fiennes in this love letter to theatre greats
Here's a warm, entertaining love-letter to a blended family of British theatrical pioneers, in which Ralph Fiennes sends himself up delightfully.
2 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Lady Amelia Windsor and Lykke Li have a royally good time at Selfridges
Private members' clubs are sprouting up across London at a rate of knots.
1 min
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
THE SOUTH WEST IS BEST, SAYS MOLLY COOPER
From endless skies and soaring cliffs to feast nights on the sand and beach after divine beach, Devon and Cornwall are heaven on Earth for the travel curator
4 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Founder Catherine Hurley Arbibe
The gut health advocate starts the day with a downward dog, eats plenty of fibre, loves a second breakfast-and avoids weekday TV
3 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Good times are assured at this prince of Poles
Just after a business collapses, as restaurants so often seem to do, owners rummage for explanations.
3 mins
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
Ralph Fiennes and Tobias Menzies toast theatreland—and Cora Corré is in the mix for cocktails
On the list of things which do not get us in the mood for a party, watching a play (with no interval) about a school shooter ranks pretty high.
1 min
May 07, 2026
The London Standard
There's a rare bird going cheap in Soho
Moods, atmospheres, places change.
1 mins
May 07, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
