Peter Bradshaw
Select another critic »For 2,837 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Bradshaw's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Days and Nights in the Forest | |
| Lowest review score: | Red Dawn | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,308 out of 2837
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Mixed: 1,397 out of 2837
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Negative: 132 out of 2837
2837
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 17, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is humanity and complexity in this welcome movie, as well as muscular power and unreconciled anger.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 17, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
Like so many of Shyamalan’s adventures, Glass starts strongly and fizzles, a dramatic droop which is initially camouflaged by the escalating grandiosity of visual rhetoric, something febrile and high-concept that is visionary in everything except having vision.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 17, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
Upper-middle-class white privilege does not exempt you from drug problems, but it looks as if it rates you a premium kind of respectful and sorrowing film treatment, something to do, I suspect, with the tremulous father-son ownership of this narrative.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
Ronan is just so good in this movie – so intelligent, so passionate, but she upstages Robbie, and Robbie’s parts of the film, often lumbered with leaden historical exposition dialogue, especially from Pearce, don’t have the same snap.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
This extraordinary story has unfortunately been turned into a handsomely produced but laborious, drawn-out and dramatically inert movie.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
For good or ill, the film does not directly engage with Ginsburg’s views on contemporary feminism and sexual harassment and what is sometimes derisively called identity politics.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
The camera roams this way and that in the media scrum, and as in subsequent scenes, the dialogue is overlapping and borderline unintelligible. It is bravura work in its way, but unconnected to any real dramatic energy or political point.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 14, 2019
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 14, 2019
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 10, 2019
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Venerable W does not explicitly debate the existence of evil as such, but it certainly argues that nationalism, ignorance, arrogance, dogmatic religion and fear are its constituent elements. This is a sombre, pessimistic but necessary film.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 1, 2019
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- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 25, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Just as in the book, the memorable part of this story is its ripe black-comic business.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 25, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Despite the panache with which the dance sequences are presented, it is frustratingly inert dramatically.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 25, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The remarkable career of artist and photographer Mark Hogancamp has been turned into an elaborate and misjudged movie of baffling pass-agg ickiness and pointlessness.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Peter Jackson has created a visually staggering thought experiment; an immersive deep-dive into what it was like for ordinary British soldiers on the western front.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 18, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 17, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
I admire it for its craftsmanship and technique, like a machine for creating nostalgia.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 12, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Wilson is just, frankly, dull. He is not allowed to develop an interesting character and he suffers from the obvious comparison with Loki, Thor’s adopted brother played with relish by Tom Hiddleston as a velvety-voiced villain. But then Momoa’s good-ol’-boy characterisation of Aquaman itself only goes so far. This is a film that never quite comes up for air.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 10, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film floats, but, like a synchro-swimmer doing the “egg beater” leg movement, it needs a fair bit of strenuous activity to keep it upright.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are some lively things about Mortal Engines, and the performances are game enough. Yet in all its effortful steampunkiness, Mortal Engines isn’t a film which is particularly exciting or funny, and the idea of the “traction city” is a stylistic and visual design tic that you just have to take or leave.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Dead in a Week is striving for a weirdly sentimental kind of black-comic farce, and it doesn’t work.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It really is very strange, with every idea, every scene, every moment lavishly garnished with floridly serious, mannered language. A little of it goes a long way.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Wardle tells a compelling story of the three happy boys who became three unhappy men, their faces shining with a kind of ecstasy in their youth, then muted with sadness and bewilderment in middle age.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 28, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The incessant and eerily unsatirical product placement is enough to give you a migraine: especially the complacent Disney cross-promotion.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 21, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This bloated, featureless, CGI-heavy movie is not so much stealing from the rich and giving to the poor, as stealing from Guy Ritchie, Batman, Two-Face and a few others – and not giving back all that much to the audience.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 20, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a heart-stoppingly suspenseful story. Conroy is a superb commentator on war and all its cruelties and absurdities.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 16, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
David Mackenzie’s retelling of the Robert the Bruce story for Netflix is bold and watchable, with a spectacular final battle scene shot with flair by the cinematographer Barry Ackroyd- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 9, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Assassination Nation has got some gross-out chutzpah, and the surreal marching band scene over the final credits is inspired.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film induces a grisly shiver, like a slug dropped down the back of your neck, and there are some amazing images. But I wondered if it was finally unfinished and anticlimactic.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This tricksy, exasperating and strangely unenlightening film, with its pointless fictional narrator played by Alan Cumming, purports to tell the story of Orson Welles’s mysterious “lost” masterpiece, The Other Side of the Wind. But in jokily trying to imitate the jabbering chaos of this film’s production history, it fails to give a clear, informative account.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a watchable, if blandly celebratory and unchallenging portrait of a massive rock institution.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
JK Rowling’s creative imagination is as fertile as ever, and newcomers Law and Johnny Depp impress, but the second film in the series is bogged down by franchise detail.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
These are brilliant impersonations, the kind that can only be achieved by exceptionally intelligent actors; the superb technique of both is matched by their obvious love for the originals.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 7, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is something deeply crass about this facetious nonsense, and everyone involved in this film might want to reflect that Nazi medical experimentation during the second world war did in fact happen, under circumstances other than these. It was a very real thing, not just a death-metal horror movie gag.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 7, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Moore never quite settles on a single, compelling riposte to Trump, never really hones his arguments to a piercing arrowhead of counterattack. Instead, he rambles over almost everything … entertainingly, but confusingly, ending on an image of Parkland School shooting survivor Emma González.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Entirely riveting. It made me nostalgic for the BBC’s Young Scientists of the Year programme, which ran from 1966 to 1981. Can’t we revive it?- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is an entirely ridiculous shaggy-dog story, a comedy salted with strangeness and seasoned with surreality.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
People will want to make their own minds up about the film, but for me there is something worryingly crass and naive in it.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Hate U Give is a fierce, dynamic movie with a terrific performance from Amandla Stenberg as Starr.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The habitual calm and gentleness of Mahamat Saleh Haroun’s film-making here has a sharp edge and an overtly political point – as well as a flourish of violent destruction and despair that blindsided me.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Been So Long has a sweet-natured openness. It balances the tough realities of life in the city with the buoyant possibilities of romance isn’t easy, and succeeds a lot of the time. Michaela Coel is tremendous in the leading role.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 14, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
For all its twisty unexpectedness, it didn’t deliver a really satisfying denouement. The performances are interesting.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Columbus is an engrossing and unexpectedly passionate film, although much of the passion is displaced outwards into a feeling for space, for mass, for building materials. It is a static passion, but not inert.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
An entertaining documentary. Maybe the full story of Studio 54 has yet to be told.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film is as intelligent and committed as you would expect from Greengrass, but basically pretty conventional, like a very classy TV movie.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are in fact one or two big gags, but no real sense of fun - not compared to something like Thor: Ragnarok. Director Ruben Fleischer, who made Zombieland and Gangster Squad, is uninspired. Venom is riddled with the poison of dullness.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Just as in Stacy Peralta’s classic 2001 documentary Dogtown and Z-Boys, this gives its audience a sense of the almost pastoral innocence of skateboarding, its devotion to nothing more or less than having fun: a subversive urban vocation that is dedicated to the art of pleasure.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Hart’s brilliant hyperactive comedy has been dampened and smothered in this disappointingly unfunny showcase, which he has produced and co-scripted with five other credited writers.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The humour feels as if it is pitched at kids rather than adults, and for me Johnny English’s wacky misadventures aren’t as inventive and focused as Atkinson’s silent-movie gags in the persona of Bean.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 1, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a harrowingly effective film, though flawed by the actions of Weaving’s officer being unconvincingly motivated at the end, and perhaps born of an emollient screenwriting need to split the difference between the Irish avenger-hero and his enemies.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
I would have loved to hear a discussion on a wider range of issues, particularly #TimesUp, but with a film this much fun, it seems churlish to ask for anything else.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Thoman coolly creates an oppressive atmospheric charge, as well as a deadpan satiric view of a certain kind of chillingly affectless conceptual art. A disquieting and mysterious mirage of a film.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is reasonably inoffensive, a bit like the recent Goosebumps, in which Black played a comparably defanged role, but it looks as if it was produced by some computer programme, devised by accountants and market researchers.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s another of Wahlberg’s collaborations with director Peter Berg, but without the style of their other films.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a horrifying parable, with chilling moments, although the story is structurally uneven.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
[A] highly entertaining and outrageously over-the-top Cinderella soap opera.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a lugubrious quasi-noir mystery set in modern-day New Orleans, starring a charismatic Patricia Clarkson as Detective Mike Hoolihan; a movie that sometimes seems papier-mâchéd together with layers of mannerism and pastiche, floating along like a two-hour dream sequence.- The Guardian
Posted Sep 12, 2018 -
- Peter Bradshaw
This is a film with an impressive, sometimes oppressive craft and technique – but it also feels unfinished. A sustained and rather brilliant conjuring of atmosphere, with some superb ambient music, finally succumbs to a rather banal inability to decide where to take the story and exactly how important the story has been.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It has none of the brilliance and insight of Emma Cline’s 2016 novel The Girls, on roughly the same subject.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film concludes in a minor key, and unresolved: always smart, amusing and engaging.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
I was utterly absorbed in this teeth-clenchingly exciting story and the “heist” sequence itself stands up really well – as well as anything I’ve seen.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a very mysterious and even bizarre film in many ways, shot in what is becoming Nemes’ signature style: long takes, a persistent closeup on the lead character’s face, and a shallow focus that allows the surrounding reality to intrude only intermittently.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 3, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Julian Schnabel has made a heartfelt if straightforwardly reverent film about the last years in the life of Vincent van Gogh – acted by with all the integrity and unselfconscious ease that you would expect from this great actor.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 3, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Audiard’s storytelling has an easy swing to it, his dialogue is garrulous and unsentimental, and the narrative is exotically offbeat.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are smart moments of fear and subliminal shivers of disquiet, the dance sequences are good and of course Guadagnino could never be anything other than an intelligent film-maker. But this is a weirdly passionless film.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 1, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Mike Leigh brings an overwhelming simplicity and severity to this historical epic, which begins with rhetoric and ends in violence. There is force, grit and, above all, a sense of purpose; a sense that the story he has to tell is important and real, and that it needs to be heard right now.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 1, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Coens have given us a hilarious, beautifully made, very enjoyable and rather disturbing anthology of stories from the old west, once planned for television but satisfyingly repurposed for the cinema: vignettes that switch with stunning force from picturesque sentimentality to grisly violence.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 31, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
For one star to get an award, a handful of defeated nominees have to swallow their pain, as the spotlight moves away from them. For one star to deliver the shock of the new, another one has to receive the shock of the old. A Star Is Born turns that transaction into a love story.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 31, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a crazy, dishevelled, often hilarious film, in which lightning flashes of wit and insight crackle periodically across a plane of tedium.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 31, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Favourite may have corrected Lanthimos’s tendency towards arthouse torpor. It is a scabrous and often hilarious film, made loopier by the nightmarish visions and wide-angle distortions contrived by the cinematographer Robbie Ryan.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
At times it feels novelistic, a densely realised, intimate drama giving us access to domestic lives developing in what feels like real time. In its engagingly episodic way, it is also at times like a soap opera or telenovela. And at other times it feels resoundingly like an epic.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Little Stranger is fluently made and really well acted, particularly by Ruth Wilson, though maybe a bit too constrained by period-movie prestige to be properly scary.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a movie packed with wonderful vehemence and rapture: it has a yearning to do justice to this existential adventure and to the head-spinning experience of looking back on Earth from another planet.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 29, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Given the nasty taste in the mouth that the film leaves, it seems almost besides the point to worry about plot holes.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a sad and lonely world, sympathetically captured, beautifully photographed.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Just when we thought it was impossible to say something new about , documentary film-maker Eugene Jarecki pulls it off.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s pretty much impossible for Kate McKinnon to dip below a basic level of funny, and her presence keeps the fizz in this spy spoof action-comedy from director and co-writer Susanna Fogel.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a strange, subdued, rather miserable film, interestingly perceptive on conformism and philistinism as a way of life, and on the disconcerting wiles the inhabitants use in order to thwart Florence’s entirely reasonable plans.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 21, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is romantic and hallucinogenic, with an edge of softcore erotic sleaze.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 21, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 15, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is no romantic tragedy, nor even a visible grit in the oyster: just a dogged, talented, unassuming professional showing us that it’s about the perspiration, not just the inspiration.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 15, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
A superlative performance from Gemma Arterton is at the centre of this almost unbearably painful and sad film from writer-director Dominic Savage.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a film whose initial charge of mystery and intensity dissipates over its running time, the narrative impetus slows, and there is that question of tone that is very much not solved by the revelation at the end. These drawbacks are offset by the directors’ terrific confidence and visual style.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The twist ending is muddled, and has a rather bland and emollient equivalence between intelligence agencies.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
You might need a sweet tooth for this gentle, Hornbyesque drama from writer-director Brett Haley. But it’s a likable heartwarmer and very decently acted.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Xavier Giannoli’s The Apparition is a flawed but heartfelt film about the mysterious workings of divine grace, and things that can’t entirely be explained away.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Martinessi shrewdly combines subtlety, melancholy, satirical observation and candour about sex.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Something in the sheer relentless silliness and uncompromising ridiculousness of this, combined with a new flavour of self-aware comedy, made me smile in spite of myself- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 17, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Over two-and-a-half hours, you get a lot of deafening bangs for your buck, and the tourist location stunts are impressive - but there isn’t as much humour in the dialogue as before.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are watchable moments, undoubtedly, and it is extraordinary to watch Houston’s sensational performance at the 1991 Super Bowl, singing The Star Spangled Banner with such passion: perhaps the greatest moment of her professional life. Her enigma remains unsolved.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s confusing and disorientating but brings back dreamy teen angst like the strongest of madeleines.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 3, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film is intelligent, thorough and sympathetic, with Rupert Everett narrating Beaton’s diaries. But it never quite persuades you that Beaton really deserves to be considered a substantial artist.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Stephen Schible’s documentary portrait follows the musician in the calm and introspective period forced on him – but it also shows him participating in post-Fukushima demonstrations.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This movie channels the paranoia and bad faith that’s in the air at the moment and converts it into a thriller of visceral hostility and overwhelming nihilism. It’s all killer, no filler.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are some heartfelt moments, but this is an opaque and frustrating experience.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Eventually, the drama closes in on itself and attains the logic of a dream, though a dream that dissipates quickly on waking.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are some reasonably entertaining scenes and set pieces, but the whole concept feels tired and contrived, and crucially the dinosaurs themselves are starting to look samey, without inspiring much of the awe or terror they used to- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Hereditary is basically a brilliant machine for scaring us, and Collette’s operatic, hypnotic performance seals the deal every second she’s on the screen.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It really is strange, a film with what is actually a pretty good premise for a comedy, but with no interest in actually being a comedy and also no interest in being a thriller, or even that mysterious erotic parable that it seems to be claiming to be.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Monge has created a satisfying drama of doomed obsession, the gambler’s thrill that staves off, for a few moments, a weariness with life. It’s a film with, as they say, something of the night about it.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is often poignant and humorous but also placid and complacent, with performances bordering on the self-regarding and even faintly insufferable.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a movie made up of delicate brushstrokes: details, moments, looks and smiles.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a simplistic film in some ways, with a naive ending – but there is energy and vigour, too.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Wild Pear Tree is a gentle, humane, beautifully made and magnificently acted movie.- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is an attractive and sympathetic performance from Geirharðsdóttir as Halla.- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Leto is a film with some wonderful moments and some slightly forgettable stretches – like an album with one or two wonderful tracks.- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is bewildering. I’m not sure I understood more than a fraction and of course it can be dismissed as obscurantism and mannerism. But I found The Image Book rich, disturbing and strange.- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Girls of the Sun is a feminist war movie: impassioned, suspenseful, angry.- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a stridently, bafflingly cacophonous movie which despite some smart, shrewd touches, is pretty much content with its single note of shouting acrimony and finishes by immolating itself in martyred self-pity.- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The crystalline black-and-white cinematography exalts its moments of intimate grimness and its dreamlike showpieces of theatrical display. It is an elliptical, episodic story of imprisonment and escape, epic in scope.- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
[An] attractive and sympathetically acted movie in a classic New Wave style.- The Guardian
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film just wades into a murky lake of self-consciousness and sinks inexorably to the bottom.- The Guardian
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is an ordeal of gruesomeness and tiresomeness that was every bit as exasperating as I had feared.- The Guardian
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Solo: A Star Wars Story is a crackingly enjoyable adventure which frankly deserves full episode status in the great franchise, not just one of these intermittent place-holding iterations- The Guardian
- Posted May 15, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an entertaining spectacle but the brilliant tonal balance in something like Jordan Peele’s satire Get Out leaves this looking a little exposed. Yet it responds fiercely, contemptuously to the crassness at the heart of the Trump regime and gleefully pays it back in its own coin.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Access to the great man has clearly been provided with an undertaking not to challenge, not even to ask questions, in the normal interview sense.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
What does the ending of Ash Is Purest White mean — and what does its middle or beginning mean? I’m not sure. It feels like a gripping parable for the vanity of human wishes, and another impassioned portrait of national malaise.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Jafar Panahi has here created a quietly engaging quasi-realist parable, part of his ongoing and unique creative cine-autobiography, full of intelligence and humility and a real respect for women and for female actors. It is gentle, elusive, and redolent of this director’s mysterious Iranian zen.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is as if Noé has somehow mulched up the quintessence of dance, coke and porn together and squooshed it into his camera. If that sounds horrible, then yes it is, but also, often, demonically inspired.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 13, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
However agonising it is to admit it, this film isn't half bad, a sparky black-comic actioner with a cute "con trick" scene showcasing Gibson's Clint Eastwood impression.- The Guardian
- Posted May 12, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an extremely watchable movie, beautifully and even luxuriously appointed in its austere evocation of smalltown America – though maybe a little self-conscious in its emotional woundedness.- The Guardian
- Posted May 12, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film offers something that is never in sufficiently plentiful supply: fun.- The Guardian
- Posted May 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Anon lacks identity and arrives at the finish line in a desiccated, cerebral, unsatisfying style.- The Guardian
- Posted May 3, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Much but not all of this movie’s good work is undone by its silly and unconvincing ending.- The Guardian
- Posted May 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
[Pearce] gives us a carefully crafted dramatic setup, an intriguingly curated selection of suspects for the crime and all of it building to a fascinating, finely balanced ambiguity in the movie’s climactic stages.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Somehow in its pure uproariousness, it works. It’s just a supremely watchable film, utterly confident in its self-created malleable mythology. And confident also in the note of apocalyptic darkness.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 24, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Woman Walks Ahead is a solidly crafted and well shot, if basically unchallenging film.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 24, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a melancholy, interesting film, slightly opaque, a cine-journal about the way youth is clouded by experience.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 23, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a smart, supremely watchable and entertaining film, and Close gives a wonderful star turn.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 13, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
In its simplicity and punch, this is a film that feels as if it could have been made decades ago, in the classic age of Planet of the Apes or The Omega Man.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 13, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is entertainingly over the top, although perhaps the CGI work isn’t quite out of the top drawer.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The effect of this movie by the Australian director Warwick Thornton is cumulative, subtle, almost stealthy.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is fiercely powerful storytelling, simple and muscular in one way, but also conveying nuance and sophistication in its depiction of character.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a film in which Spielberg’s traditional reverence for the wonder and idealism of youth has had to compromise with wised-up survivalist toughness of the new YA mode. But what extraordinary visuals this films conjures up, with images that appear and disappear like quicksilver memes.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 28, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a celebration of her musicality and extraterrestrial scariness, and a reminder that films about female singing stars need not be gallant tributes to tragically doomed fragility.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a calm and often affecting study of L’Arche, a community of people with learning disabilities in Trosly-Breuil, northern France.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The characters at one stage debate the merits of a smooth, fruity wine versus something more taut and acidic: it would be tempting to say that Klapisch goes too predictably for the first option, but the problems here are more with structure than taste.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 19, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Ghost Stories is a barnstormer of an entertainment, a fairground ride with dodgy brakes.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Throughout Vikander maintains a kind of serene evenness of manner. Blandness is Lara’s theme.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 14, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The first world war is one of the 20th century’s oldest, grimmest tales of futility and slaughter. Dibb and his excellent cast put new passion into it.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 12, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
A Fantastic Woman is a brilliant film: a richly humane, moving study of someone keeping alive the memory and the fact of love.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 11, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film periodically livens up, and Oyelowo shows that he can play comedy, but his performance isn’t given much guidance or room to grow and the direction is very flat and uninspired.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 8, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
No movie with these excellent actors can be a complete dead loss, of course, but it’s the kind of feelgood film that somehow always manages to set a keynote of feel-bad, feel-sad gentility.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 27, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are sparks of interest and some powerful moments, but it is structurally disjointed, tonally uncertain, unfocused and unfinished, with some very broad drama-improv-class acting from the kids and a frankly unrelaxed and undirected performance from Halle Berry.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 21, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
The intriguing thing about Black Panther is that it doesn’t look like a superhero film – more a wide-eyed fantasy romance: exciting, subversive and funny.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 6, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
A staggeringly pointless supernatural non-chiller featuring some very tiresome jump scares.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 2, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
Spall is good casting in the lead: miserable, hangdog, humorous and scared, like a handsomer version of Josh Widdicombe. James-Collier is a fierce screen presence: some film-maker needs to find something more for him to do.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s impossible not to laugh at the inspired silliness and charm of Park’s universe. Early Man is a family film that doesn’t just provide gags for adults and gags for children: it locates the adult’s inner child and the child’s inner adult. It’s a treat.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is at least concentrated dramatically in being brought to an endpoint. For fans only.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This long film is blisteringly brilliant for the first hour or so. Then there are shark-jumping issues.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
What a bland and sugary texture there is to this very conservative, undemanding oldster roadtrip.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s all very easy: a feelgood war tale from what feels like a distant age.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
This brief, winsome feature is a typically stylish, if ephemeral piece of work in the classic New Wave manner – almost a time capsule.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 20, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is an outstanding film somewhere inside this sprawling mass of ideas, which might have been shaped more exactingly in the edit.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is an introspective and downbeat film, but forceful and personal, with excruciating and all-too-real moments of mortification. And it can be weirdly moving, almost out of nowhere.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 4, 2018
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s not a film to break moulds or test boundaries. Yet Jackman’s real charm will carry you along.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 20, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
All The Money In The World is not perfect; there is a touch of naïveté and stereotyping in its depiction of the malign Italians with their one, redemptive nice-guy gangster. But with the help of Plummer’s tremendous villain-autocrat performance, Ridley Scott gives us a very entertaining parable about money and what it can’t buy.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 19, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 14, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an engaging film, but it leaves you with a feeling that there might be a deeper, darker, more specific story yet to be told.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 14, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 12, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Last Jedi gives you an explosive sugar rush of spectacle. It’s a film that buzzes with belief in itself and its own mythic universe – a euphoric certainty that I think no other movie franchise has. And there is no provisional hesitation or energy dip of the sort that might have been expected between episodes seven and nine.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 12, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a likeable film which borrows liberally from everything and everyone, and if it’s put together by numbers, well, then it is done capably enough.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 8, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
At its best, Kaleidoscope is like an unsettling dream featuring an Escher staircase that plunges infinitely and vertiginously downwards.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 7, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is such pure delicious pleasure in this film, in its strangeness, its vehemence, its flourishes of absurdity, carried off with superb elegance.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 7, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep give excellent performances, though not exactly a stretch in either case, and both with a tiny, tasty touch of cheese. Their characterisations are luxuriously upholstered, effortlessly fluent, busting with relatability.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 6, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Mudbound is absorbing: the language, performance and direction all have real sinew.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 16, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 14, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 13, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Claire Ferguson’s documentary is a powerful, valuable addition to the Holocaust testimony genre.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
For all his commitment and drive, Gibney shows us the trees but not the wood, and never quite nails the cover-up itself.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 2, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film is pitched with insouciant ease and a lightness of touch at both children and adults without any self-conscious shifts in irony or tone: it’s humour with the citrus tang of top-quality thick-cut marmalade.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 31, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The mystery remains: did the North Koreans get it? Did they not get it? Or did they choose a foggy condition of semi-incomprehension as the only state in which they could reconcile ideological piety with reaching out the hated west?- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 16, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 12, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Rooney Mara and Ben Mendelsohn bring a controlled intensity and force – and even a twisted kind of chemistry – to this disturbing if structurally flawed movie.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 3, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Blade Runner 2049 is a narcotic spectacle of eerie and pitiless vastness, by turns satirical, tragic and romantic.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 29, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
As well as showcasing the blandest and most tasteful three-way sex scene in history, this movie spreads an odd pall of sentimentality and period-glow nostalgia over a fascinating real-life story.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Gary Oldman is terrific as Churchill, conveying the babyishness of his oddly unlined face in repose, the slyness and manipulative good humour, and a weird deadness when he is overtaken with depression.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 14, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film’s real ferocity is saved for the ideologues of terror.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The dazzle of the cast and the targeted in-jokes never take away from the film’s core messaging about the importance of believing in one’s own ability as an artist.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Sheridan is emerging as a master of the Mexican standoff, the shootout, the stomach-turning crime scene, the procedural office politics, but he’s also adept at tuning into the vulnerability and strength of the women and men called in to uphold the law. Wind River is a smart and very satisfying movie.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
There’s a reasonable premise to this horror-thriller, but also something straight-to-rental about the look and feel of the whole thing.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an entertainingly bizarre, lurid nightmare with a playfully literary flavour, very Ackroydian, but with hints of Angela Carter and a bit of William Blake.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 7, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The problem is that almost everything here looks like route one scary-movie stuff that we have seen before: scary clowns, scary old houses, scary bathrooms. In their differing ways, Brian De Palma and Stanley Kubrick were inspired by the potency of King’s source material to create something virulently distinctive and original. This film’s director, Andy Muschietti, can’t manage quite as much.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
As horror it is ridiculous, as comedy it is startling and hilarious, and as a machine for freaking you out it is a thing of wonder.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film is a very sly, subversive and disturbing black tragicomedy about a universal secret addiction.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The beamingly ingenuous Cruise, whose character is not burdened with any doubts or an inner life, somehow sells it to you.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s always supremely watchable, but rarely, if ever, commits itself to genuine jeopardy or suspense. Instead of edge-of-the-seat moments, there are gags and clever touches and excellent performances.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The movie stunningly replicates that sense of inside and outside that must be felt by witnesses to any historic moment: the private debate, the enclosed conflict, and the theatre of confrontation unfolding beyond. What a dynamic piece of cinema.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 21, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s decently and honestly acted by Jack Lowden, who keeps the film alive, but it somehow winds up being a story about always following your dream and never giving up.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 21, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Cruz carries the film. She has a ridiculous kind of heroism, and her disguises are hilarious, particularly as a knight, when she insists on wearing a false beard under her helmet.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 9, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 8, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a film to remind you of the almost miraculously collaborative nature of cinema, but also the radiant personalities of individuals.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a sombre, grieving movie which appears to gesture to the ghost-town ruin that is still in Detroit’s future.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a very good idea for a two-hander, and Frot and Deneuve give it their considerable all.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Our Beloved Month Of August is a real one-off: eccentric and singular and cerebral: an arthouse event, yes, but also witty and emotionally engaged. I found myself thinking about it for days afterwards – and smiling a very great deal. Try it.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 18, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a powerful, superbly crafted film with a story to tell, avoiding war porn in favour of something desolate and apocalyptic, a beachscape of shame, littered with soldiers zombified with defeat, a grimly male world with hardly any women on screen. It is Nolan’s best film so far.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 17, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This quietly amazing film is conceived in terms of pure minimalist intimacy.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a dismal TV movie of the week: trite, shallow, cautiously middlebrow and blandly complicit in the cult of female prettiness that it is supposedly criticising.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a lumberingly dated kind of spy thriller, convoluted without ever being intriguing – and an insufficient number of bangs for your buck.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 28, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 28, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 27, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 27, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film occasionally hits a rather loud note of passive-aggressive piety, but it is very persuasive.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The final explosive showdown seems to be competing with Marvel movies for spectacle. But Marvel brings wit and fun. As far as those factors go, the Transformers franchise is in very short supply.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 20, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This documentary is an invigorating, disturbing portrait of the arrogance and sinister self-importance of rich people, bullying politicians and their battalions of lawyers.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
In its pure misjudged ickiness, bad-acting ropiness, and its quirksy, smirksy passive-aggressive tweeness, this insidiously terrible film could hardly get any more skin-crawling.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Viceroy’s House is no very profound work, but it is a nimble and watchable period drama.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 13, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a strained, dramatically inert and often frankly silly odd-couple bromance fantasy about the Northern Ireland peace process negotiations.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 13, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 7, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a movie which begins with confidence and style, wearing its influences pretty insouciantly; the film sashays about the screen with a kind of sexy-chic smirk, like the unvarying facial expression of its co-lead Eva Green. But it wobbles at the brink of plot-holes which undermine the vital realistic plausibility of a film like this.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is an unfinished doodle of a film, a madly self-indulgent jeu d’esprit without substance: a sketch, or jumble of sketches, a ragbag of half-cooked ideas for other movie projects, I suspect, that the director has attempt to salvage and jam together. [Cannes Version]- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a movie which teeters perpetually on the verge of hallucination, with hideous images and horrible moments looming suddenly through the fog; its movement is largely inward and downward, into a swamp of suppressed abuse memories which are never entirely pieced together or understood – even as the sickeningly violent action continues.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Michel Hazanavicius’s Redoubtable is a reasonably funny, moderately interesting movie, wearing its sprightly colourful pastiche like dry-cleaned retro couture.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is a very odd, singular piece of work: not the visionary masterpiece it assumes itself to be and muddled in its effects and ideas. But certainly bold. It loses altitude yet never becomes earthbound.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is not a new direction for this film-maker, admittedly, but an existing direction pursued with the same dazzling inspiration as ever. It is also as gripping as a satanically inspired soap opera, a dynasty of lost souls.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Andrei Zvyagintsev’s Loveless is a stark, mysterious and terrifying story of spiritual catastrophe: a drama with the ostensible form of a procedural crime thriller. It has a hypnotic intensity and unbearable ambiguity which is maintained until the very end.- The Guardian
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is grownup film-making, more savoury than sweet, seductive, oblique and carried by a wonderfully smart and emotionally generous performance from Juliette Binoche – who delivers the material superbly, material which from almost anyone else would sound dyspeptic or absurd.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This is a movie using non-professionals playing versions of themselves, and under Zhao’s patient, unintrusive directorial eye they appear to be inhabiting a kind of heightened documentary.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is bloated with all the artist cliches, but freighted with mind-blowing dullness and joylessness.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Fatih Akin’s mediocre revenge drama In the Fade is the TV movie of the week: feebly uncontentious and un-contemporary.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a wildly dated-looking and derivative film, a quaint adventure in fantasised naughtiness.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is gripping and absorbing in its way, although perhaps too conscious of its own metaphorical properties and opinion may divide as to whether its expressionist element works. Yet there is no doubt as to its power, and its severity.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film has what its title implies: a heartbeat. It is full of cinematic life.- The Guardian
- Posted May 26, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
This movie really brings some gobsmackingly weird and outrageous spectacle, with moments of pure showstopping freakiness. Eventually it loses a bit of focus and misses some narrative targets which have been sacrificed to those admittedly extraordinary set pieces.- The Guardian
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film has its own kind of mad, migrainey energy and individuality, and Robert Pattinson gives a strong, charismatic performance.- The Guardian
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
The Day After is an elegant exercise. It feels like a chapter from something bigger.- The Guardian
- Posted May 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an intriguing, disturbing, amusing twist on something which in many ways could be a conventional horror-thriller from the 1970s or 1980s, or even a bunny-boiler nightmare from the 90s.- The Guardian
- Posted May 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Coppola tells the story with terrific gusto and insouciant wit, tying together images from the first scene and the last, so that the narrative satisfyingly snaps shut.- The Guardian
- Posted May 24, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a comedy that doesn’t really have, or aspire to, any very tragic dimension, but it’s touching. The quirks are underpinned by a heartfelt solidity.- The Guardian
- Posted May 23, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Wonderstruck is sometimes sweet and well-intentioned, but more often indulgent and supercilious.- The Guardian
- Posted May 23, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
Not funny enough to be satire, not realistic enough to count as political commentary, not exciting enough to work as a war movie, David Michôd’s supposedly Helleresque romp, released on Netflix, is an imperfect non-storm of unsuccess.- The Guardian
- Posted May 22, 2017
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 19, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s a film you have to feel your way into, like a ruined church or a haunted house.- The Guardian
- Posted May 18, 2017
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are such great gags, and it is acted with such fanatical gusto by Barratt that it’s impossible not to root for this unlikeliest of heroes.- The Guardian
- Posted May 12, 2017
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