Palace founders Lev Tanju and Gareth Skewis give Wallpaper* a tour of the Seoul store, which celebrates the spirit of the ...
The director of The Brutalist has defended his lead actors' performances after it emerged that artificial intelligence had been used to "refine" their Hungarian accents. Brady Corbet insisted that ...
When Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist premiered at the Venice film festival last September, few film experts believed it could have any impact on the erratic US box office. A nearly four-hour-long ...
When critics and audiences alike are raving about a film, it’s usually a cause for celebration. But Brady Corbet, director of Oscar-favourite The Brutalist, was worried when the film he co-wrote with ...
While “The Brutalist” checks in at three hours and 35 minutes, it’s not the longest film ever nominated – that honor goes to “Cleopatra,” which went over the four-hour mark – but it ...
“The Brutalist” has become an awards season frontrunner, praised for its portrayal of a brilliant architect and Holocaust survivor who seeks a new life in the United States. The period epic is ...
The producer behind Oscar frontrunner The Brutalist has asked that the audience not “diminish a truly terrific film from a gifted filmmaker” over the revelation that it employed AI tools. The film’s ...
In the film, The Brutalist, László Tóth is a Jewish immigrant, Holocaust survivor and architect. In the first act, “The Enigma of Arrival,” László arrives in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.
But in the last few weeks, amplified by the news that the editor behind the newly Oscar-nominated drama “The Brutalist” used AI to tweak a few lines of Hungarian dialogue, that anti-AI sentiment has ...
Days before the Oscar race officially kicks off, one of the expected front-runners sparked controversy when the film's editor admitted using artificial intelligence to enhance Hungarian accents in ...
Spoiler alert! We're discussing major details about the ending of "The Brutalist" (in theaters now nationwide). Beware if you haven't seen it yet. It is the destination – not the journey.