7.5 | / 10 |
| Users | 0.0 | |
| Reviewer | 3.5 | |
| Overall | 3.5 |
Escaping post-war Europe, visionary architect László Tóth arrives in America to rebuild his life, his work, and his marriage to his wife Erzsébet after being forced apart during wartime by shifting borders and regimes. On his own in a strange new country, László settles in Pennsylvania, where the wealthy and prominent industrialist Harrison Lee Van Buren recognizes his talent for building. But power and legacy come at a heavy cost.
Starring: Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy| Drama | Uncertain |
| Period | Uncertain |
| Epic | Uncertain |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.66:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English SDH, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
4K Ultra HD
Region A (B, C untested)
| Movie | 3.5 | |
| Video | 0.0 | |
| Audio | 5.0 | |
| Extras | 2.0 | |
| Overall | 3.5 |
For such a relentlessly dramatic film, The Brutalist has engendered a fair degree of humor, perhaps especially with regard to the most recent Academy Awards ceremony. Host Conan O'Brien got off one of his better punchlines when he quipped, "The Brutalist . . . received 10 nominations. I loved it, and didn't want it to end. Luckily, it didn't". I've seen and/or heard a number of other hilarious jokes about the film, including one similar to O'Brien's that stated the film lasted longer than the actual Brutalist movement. Some of the "comedy" surrounding the film at the Oscars has also focused on star Adrien Brody, who of course took home the Best Actor honors for his performance in the film as László Tóth, probably the very definition of a tortured artist, or in this case, architect. Evidently during Brody's interminable acceptance speech the son of a friend of mine asked his Dad, "When's intermission?" And I have it on good authority that one curmudgeon may have whispered under his breath as Brody droned on, "Where's Will Smith when you really need him?" All of that aside, what is one to make of The Brutalist? As is disclosed in a rather interesting set of interviews with co-writers Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold included on this disc as a supplement, both of them had celebrated architects in their own families, and both had long had a personal interest in architecture in general and Brutalism in particular. That's all well and good, but the actual narrative of The Brutalist may be a minefield that is, yes, explosive, but which inevitably results in fragmentation and maybe even a bit of shell shock for the viewer.


Note: Screenshots are sourced off of A24's The Brutalist
standalone 1080 release. While this release kind of curiously is in SDR (more on that below), I still feel these screenshots probably more
accurately reflect the look of the film than downscaled screenshots taken directly off of the 4K disc.
The Brutalist is presented in 4K UHD courtesy of A24 with an HEVC / H.265 encoded 2160p transfer (mostly) in 1.66:1 (a number of variant
aspect ratios occur during some brief interstitial uses of things like stock footage). If Brutalism emphasized a certain homogeneous monolithic quality,
The Brutalist may be something more of a cobbled together affair, so to speak, featuring a variety of techniques including at least brief uses
of digital capture and with both 16mm and 35mm sources in terms of actual celluloid, and with VistaVision also added to the mix. The result brings
undeniable variability to both detail levels and
probably especially noticeable at this resolution grain structure, but as alluded to above, the most curious thing about this presentation is the lack of
HDR (somewhat hilariously the opening typical disclaimer screens do have HDR). As a result I would probably struggle to cite major
differences in this presentation and A24's 1080 release, though I guess it's perhaps arguable that in some of the more brightly lit outdoor moments in
particular fine detail levels can see a bit of an uptick, per a reported 4K DI (that spec had been preset here, but I have not been able to find any
authoritative confirmation online). The lack of HDR seems to be an especially bizarre decision taking into consideration the attention
paid to grading and even just tones in the general production design, as mentioned in cinematographer Lol Crawley's commentary. While per
Brutalism's austere aesthetic, there can certainly be a prevalence of neutral tones or at least an abundance of grays, there are certainly moments of
more fulsome hues throughout the presentation that I'm sure some will feel could have benefitted from HDR. I'm scoring the 1080 presentation at 5.0,
for what that's worth,
and this is one of those rare cases where the "lesser" resolution may actually be as preferable if not more so than this one.

The Brutalist features a really expressive and almost hallucinatory at times DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track that delivers consistent, if at times nightmarish, immersion courtesy of both scoring choices and especially some almost ghostly sound effects. That latter quality frankly kind of reminded me at times of some elements of the sound design of another A24 offering, The Zone of Interest, especially in terms of the pulsing midrange and lower frequency effects. Daniel Blumberg's score is very nicely spacious, and as has been reported, the opening vignette in the film is a modern day update on the vintage "composed film" technique utilized by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. Dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout, with forced (yellow) English subtitles for various foreign languages, and optional English subtitles available for the rest of the feature.


I actually wanted to be an architect for a long time when I was a kid, and my childhood best friend's father actually was a rather prominent architect in Salt Lake City (along with my parents' house, he designed the first parts of both Sundance and Snowbird), and he invited me to his office when I was probably six or seven to see what it was like. Even at that tender age, when I saw all the math involved (including the use of a slide rule, since it was still the Dark Ages), I knew I had better start searching for a new career dream. Persevering with a dream even when fate keeps dealing you obstacles may be one central idea in the story of László Tóth, but The Brutalist may frankly have too outsized ambitions to concisely handle a "simple" theme like that. In many ways the film is staggering and maybe undeniably exhausting, but it may simply have too much on its veritable drawing board to ever offer a cohesive design. I'm not sure what is gained with the 4K presentation on this disc since there's no HDR, but otherwise video quality is fine and audio quality is great, and the two supplements are appealing and informative.

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