Joe Alwyn marked his first-ever appearance on a late-night talk show with his visit to 'Late Night with Seth Meyers' on Tuesday, January 14.
Joe Alwyn entered new territory on January 14, making his late-night talk show debut on Late Night with Seth Meyers to discuss his latest film The Brutalist which is now playing in select theaters. Fans were thrilled to see Alwyn,
Adrien Brody captivates as a post-war immigrant who comes to America to chase his version of the American Dream.
The Brutalist, directed by Brady Corbet, spans 30 years and explores ... who changes the course of his life. Alwyn plays Harry Lee Van Buren, son of Harrison Lee Van Buren, played by Guy Pearce.
Joe Alwyn made his highly anticipated debut on late-night television, appearing on Late Night with Seth Meyers for the first time ever.As per PEOPLE, the 33-year-old actor made his first appearance on a late-night talk show,
Adrien Brody and Guy Pearce are brilliant in Brady Corbet's epic masterpiece "The Brutalist," about a Holocaust survivor making his way in America.
In The Brutalist, enjoying lots of appreciative chat as Awards Season prepares to kick off with the Golden Globes, Joe Alwyn plays Harry, a rich industrialist’s son, with a performance he says was inspired by president-elect Donald Trump and his offspring.
Picturehouse Central saw the arrival of Brady Corbett’s The Brutalist this evening for the film’s UK Premiere. The epic film has conquered America’s film-going crowd over the last few weeks, and now it’s our turn to see what all the fuss is about.
The making of a good building,” observed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, “is a great moral performance.” Like many notable quotes about architecture, it speaks to grandeur, permanence, scale. One
"Tell me – why is an accomplish foreign architect shoveling coal here in Philadelphia?" A24 has unveiled one more official trailer for the monumental The Brutalist, the third feature from acclaimed filmmaker / actor Brady Corbet.
Brady Corbet’s Golden Globe-winning film opens this week at the Belcourt (in 35 mm) and Regal and AMC locations
From the opening minutes of Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist,” graciousness for survival and dread surround the protagonist, László Tóth, a Holocaust survivor who immigrates to America. The solemn reading of a letter from his wife stuck in Europe,