NEW YORK (AP) โ When you think of blockbusters, the first thing that comes to mind might not be a 215-minute postwar epic screening for the first time at Lincoln Center.
But that was the scene last week when the New York Film Festival hosted a 70mm print of Brady Corbetโs โThe Brutalist.โ The festival hadnโt then officially begun โ its 62nd edition opens Friday โ but the advance press screening drew long lines โ as some attendees noted, not unlike those at Ellis Island in the film โ and a packed Walter Reade Theatre.
Word had gotten around: โThe Brutalistโ is something to see. Corbetโs epic, starring Adrian Brody as a Jewish architect remaking his life in Pennsylvania, is the kind of colossal cinematic construction that doesnโt come around every day. Shot in VistaVision and structured like movements in a symphony (with a 15-minute intermission to boot), โThe Brutalistโ is indeed something to behold. Itโs arthouse and blockbuster in one, and, maybe, a reminder of the moviesโ capacity for uncompromising grandeur โ and the awe that can inspire.

Itโs been fashionable in recent years to wonder about the fate of the movies, but it can be hard to placate those concerns at the New York Film Festival. The festival prizes itself on gathering the best cinema from around the world. And this year, the movies are filled with bold forays of form and perspective that you can feel pushing film forward.
This is also the time Oscar campaigns begin lurching into gear, with Q&As and cocktail parties. But, unlike last year when โOppenheimerโ and โBarbieโ were entrenched as favorites, the best picture race is said to be wide open. In that vacuum, movies like โThe Brutalistโ and the NYFF opener, RaMell Rossโ โNickel Boys,โ not to mention Sean Bakerโs โAnoraโ and Jacques Audiardโs โEmilia Perez,โ are poised to test arthouse boundaries. This year, those films might be the blockbusters to beat.
โNickel Boys,โ the opening night selection, is Rossโ fictional film debut, but it also carries over the exquisite eye he brought to his 2018 Oscar-nominated documentary โHale County This Morning, This Evening.โ Ross films the adaptation of Colson Whiteheadโs novel from the subjective points of view of two boys โ Ellwood (Ethan Herisse) and Turner (Brandon Wilson) โ who are among the Black students abused at Nickel Academy, a Florida reform school. In a film sprinkled with brutality and tenderness, the first-person approach gives โNickelboysโ a radical sense of empathy.
The festival includes a number of sections and sidebars, but its main slate remains its core. This year, thatโs 32 films from 24 countries, including โThe Seed of the Sacred Fig,โ by exiled Iranian director Mohammad Rasoul; โCaught by the Tides,โ by Chinese filmmaker Jia Zhangke; and French director Mati Diopโs documentary โDahomey.โ

One of the standouts is Georgian director Dea Kulumbegashviliโs devastating, despairing sophomore feature โApril.โ Like, โNickelboys,โ it, too, plays with perspective. An obstetrician, Nina (Ia Sukhitashvili), is blamed for the death of a newborn, but the subsequent investigation has more to do with the illegal abortions she performs in a small Georgian village beneath the Caucasus Mountains.
Kulumbegashviliโs follow-up to her debut, โBeginning,โ is both bracingly real โ she shot a live birth for the film โ and mysteriously surreal. Occasionally we see from Ninaโs perspective, other times we hover just outside it; sometimes โAprilโ seems to visualize something inside her. The effect is chilling, as if Ninaโs body is a moving target.
Like Ross, Indian filmmaker Payal Kapadia worked in documentary before turning to fiction with her luminous โAll We Imagine as Light." Despite being a prize-winner at Cannes, the film was surprisingly overlooked for India's Oscar submission. But that shouldn't detract from Kapadia's remarkable accomplishment.
In it, three women (Kani Kusruti, Divya Prabha, Chhaya Kadam) juggle dreams and reality in modern Mumbai while working at a hospital. Midway, the film shifts from city to country, allowing them a new outlook on Mumbai and the class structures that govern their private lives. โAll We Imagine as Lightโ begins with the gritty realism of a documentary but melts enchantingly into fable.

Like โAll We Imagine as Light," another main slate entry, Carson Lund's โEephus,โ reaches its conclusion at sunset with the dying out of light. In Lund's charming, wry hangout movie, a group of small-town middle-aged guys gather for a baseball game on a field that's soon to be turned into something else. With the fewest of fans and the creakiest of knees, they play one last one. There's laughter and storytelling but they're also sliding like they mean it.
There's an existentialist quality to โEephusโ that could make it a good parable for plenty of things, even the movies. But it's a lovely reminder that, whomever is watching, you play for the love of the game.
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This story has been updated to correct the first name of filmmaker Brady Corbet.