The film has been nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including best director and screenplay nods for Corbet, who says he hasn't "made any money" in years.
Nominated for ten Oscars at this year's Academy Awards, The Brutalist – the three-and-a-half-hour epic from Brady Corbet – has captivated audiences around the world and will now get the chance to touch even more hearts as it prepares for its home release.
The director Brady Corbet narrates a sequence from his film, starring Adrien Brody. The movie is nominated for 10 Academy Awards.
Directed by Brady Corbet and starring Adrien Brody, The Brutalist has been nominated for 10 Academy Awards. See how much it's made at the box office.
Among others, best director nominees Jacques Audiard, Brady Corbet and Coralie Fargeat are now also nominated as producers of best picture nominees.
Director Brady Corbet has said he made “zero dollars” from his Oscar-nominated movie “The Brutalist” during an interview in which he also highlighted the financial precarity facing many filmmakers.
Brady Corbet, the filmmaker behind “The Brutalist,” has revealed that he and his wife and creative partner Mona Fastvold made "zero dollars" from their last two films, despite the film being a major Oscar contender this year.
Award-winning director Brady Corbet claims he did not make any money from “The Brutalist” — despite the critically acclaimed film grossing $31.1 million globally at the box office.
Corbet and Fastvold previously teamed up for 2018's Vox Lux, a bold drama starring Natalie Portman as a pop star who rises from the ashes of a national tragedy. Fastvold next dire
The Brutalist used artificial intelligence to adjust Adrien Brody and co-star Felicity Jones’s Hungarian lines. As the roles the two played as Hungarian immigrants earned them best actor and supporting actress nominations,
The 97th Academy Awards will be held on Sunday, March 2nd. Will 'Anora' be the big winner? Or will 'The Brutalist' or 'Conclave' sway the voters?
The kind of Old Hollywood micro-epic that seems almost built for an Oscar, a win for Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” would reflect well on the Academy. The title would mean not only a win for a strong directorial vision but also a win for the lower-budget character work we deserve more of.