PREVIEW

The Brutalist

USA-UK-Hungary 2024, 215 mins
Director: Brady Corbet


The end titles of Brady Corbet’s new film The Brutalist unroll to the unlikely needle drop of ‘One for You, One for Me’ by Italian pop duo La Bionda. The 1978 disco hit smacks of deliberate and triumphant irony. After all, if there were ever a contemporary filmmaker who refuses to do one for himself and one for the studio, it’s Brady Corbet. With his latest, an epic drama about an immigrant architect arriving in America, he completes a trilogy of films, each of which – his debut The Childhood of a Leader (2015) and Vox Lux (2018) – have premiered at the Venice Film Festival, and each portraying enigmatic individuals plunging into the fray of history.

In this instance, the individual is László Toth (Adrien Brody), a damaged man who has survived the Holocaust and fled to the United States. We first see him making his way to the deck of a ship to look upon his new home. From his point of view, the Statue of Liberty appears to be upside down: the first indication that this story of immigration and survival, assimilation and ambition is going to be skewed; that perspective – fittingly for an architect – is going to be everything. He travels to Pennsylvania where he’s taken in by a cousin, Attila (Alessandro Nivola), who has married an American and converted to Catholicism.

When Attila’s furniture company secures a commission redesigning a rich man’s private library, Toth uses his Bauhaus training to create a space which is modern but also protective, shielding the books from the light. His vision catches the attention of the library’s owner, Harrison Lee Van Buren (played with reptilian ease by Guy Pearce), a racist millionaire who employs Toth to build a community centre to honour his recently departed mother.

Toth writes letters to his wife Erzsébet (Felicity Jones) in Hungary while he attempts to adjust to this new life. Though they are eventually reunited, along with Toth’s niece Zsófia (Raffey Cassidy), their family unit is one broken by the trauma of persecution and imprisonment. Erzsébet is in a wheelchair and Zsófia refuses to speak. Toth himself is impotent and addicted to heroin, which he indulges in with his friend, Gordon (Isaach de Bankolé) a man he befriended on a breadline.

At a length of just over three and a half hours – including overture and intermission – the film might seem like a big ask, but Corbet’s story never sprawls or meanders. It’s long because its subject is vast; it takes time to explore the depths of its characters. Spanning several decades, it maintains a brilliant sense of specificity throughout, captured with the shallow focus of Lol Crawley’s inventive 35mm cinematography. Whether it’s the febrile atmosphere of a Philadelphia jazz club, or the dark wood and velvet of Van Buren’s mansion, the camera confidently roams a lived-in reality that’s miles apart from the polished vintage nostalgia of historical dramas such as The Crown (2016-2023). In one stunning sequence, the scene shifts to the marble quarries of Carrara in Italy where a combination of the sound design – we hear every crackle and rumble – and the elemental beauty of the rock combine to make moments of pure cinema.

There’s a tinge of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead to the plot, a novel name-dropped more than it is read, with its misunderstood artist battling misfortune with the fickle patronage of the wealthy. (Early John Dos Passos feels like an inspiration as well.) But Corbet and his fellow scriptwriter and partner Mona Fastvold, like Toth building Van Buren’s community centre for his own secret ends, turn the myth of the great man into a story of failure and decline: the trauma of history reenacting itself.

Toth’s designs have a brutality – his concrete oblongs and slabs are ominous as tombstones. He yearns for simplicity that is at odds with the mess of his life. ‘The best description of a cube is the cube itself,’ Toth says, but a cube can be so many things: a puzzle, a room, a prison cell, ice in a drink. And Corbet’s film is similarly slippery as an exploration of art and commerce (there is even a history of Pennsylvania here), as well as a meditation on Jewish identity.

The film is dedicated to Scott Walker, who scored The Childhood of a Leader, and so it’s fitting that the music by Daniel Blumberg plays a similarly muscular and boisterous role to Walker’s earlier score. Bold American filmmaking like this will invite comparisons with Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood (2007) and The Master (2012), as well as perhaps King Vidor’s great silent film The Crowd (1928), but it is also entirely Corbet’s own distinctive voice and vision. Toth is played with a kind of broken gusto by Adrien Brody, offering by far his best work in years. Likewise, Felicity Jones provides Erzsébet with wit, determination and ultimately a dignity carved by survival.

In The Brutalist, the artist suffers, but not for art: he suffers simply what history inflicts. Corbet’s film is a grandiose edifice, but he is as interested in the crumbling foundations as the soaring heights.
John Bleasdale, Sight and Sound, bfi.org.uk, 3 September 2024

THE BRUTALIST
Director: Brady Corbet
Production Company: A24
Producer: Brady Corbet
Written by: Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold
Director of Photography: Lol Crawley
Editor: Dávid Jancsó
Production Designer: Judy Becker
Costume Designer: Kate Forbes
Music: Daniel Blumberg
Music Supervisor: James A. Taylor

Cast
Adrien Brody (László Toth)
Felicity Jones (Erzsébet Tóth)
Guy Pearce (Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr)
Joe Alwyn (Harry Lee)
Raffey Cassidy (Zsófia)
Stacy Martin (Maggie Lee)
Emma Laird (Audrey)
Isaach de Bankolé (Gordon)
Alessandro Nivola (Attila)
Ariane Labed (older Zsófia)
Michael Epp (Jim Simpson)
Jonathan Hyde (Leslie Woodrow)
Peter Polycarpou (Michael Hoffman)
Maria Sand (Michelle Hoffman)
Salvatore Sansone (Orazio)
Zephan Hanson Amissah (teenage William)
Charlie Esoko (young William)
Orban Levente (Hungarian refugee)
Benett Vilmányi (Binyamin)
Péter Deutsch (Rabbi Zunz)

USA-UK-Hungary 2024
215 mins (including 15min interval)
70mm

Courtesy of Universal Pictures

SIGHT AND SOUND
Never miss an issue with Sight and Sound, the BFI’s internationally renowned film magazine. Subscribe from just £25*
*Price based on a 6-month print subscription (UK only). More info: sightandsoundsubs.bfi.org.uk









BFI SOUTHBANK
Welcome to the home of great film and TV, with three cinemas and a studio, a world-class library, regular exhibitions and a pioneering Mediatheque with 1000s of free titles for you to explore. Browse special-edition merchandise in the BFI Shop.We're also pleased to offer you a unique new space, the BFI Riverfront – with unrivalled riverside views of Waterloo Bridge and beyond, a delicious seasonal menu, plus a stylish balcony bar for cocktails or special events. Come and enjoy a pre-cinema dinner or a drink on the balcony as the sun goes down.

BECOME A BFI MEMBER
Enjoy a great package of film benefits including priority booking at BFI Southbank and BFI Festivals. Join today at bfi.org.uk/join

BFI PLAYER
We are always open online on BFI Player where you can watch the best new, cult & classic cinema on demand. Showcasing hand-picked landmark British and independent titles, films are available to watch in three distinct ways: Subscription, Rentals & Free to view.

See something different today on player.bfi.org.uk

Join the BFI mailing list for regular programme updates. Not yet registered? Create a new account at www.bfi.org.uk/signup

Programme notes and credits compiled by Sight and Sound and the BFI Documentation Unit
Notes may be edited or abridged
Questions/comments? Contact the Programme Notes team by email