Peter Bradshaw
Select another critic »For 2,892 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 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Bradshaw's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Days and Nights in the Forest | |
| Lowest review score: | Baggage Claim | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,333 out of 2892
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Mixed: 1,427 out of 2892
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Negative: 132 out of 2892
2892
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Peter Bradshaw
It’s an intriguing filmic tribute to the rehabilitation programme: effective altruism in action.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 20, 2024
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 15, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The resulting movie is a technically competent piece of work; but no matter how ingenious its references to the first film (let down, however, by borrowings from the A Quiet Place franchise) it has to be said that there’s a fundamental lack of originality here which makes it frustrating.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
This film is an intriguing and well-made diversion, a puzzle whose missing pieces make a disquieting pattern.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
As for Louis-Dreyfus, she is very good in the way that only she can be: intelligent, sensitive, focused and intense, hitting the line-readings with percussive force. How overwhelming it might have been to see her and Petticrew play this story without the indie high-concept bird.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 7, 2024
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- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 1, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Izaac Wang’s reserved, undemonstrative performance is what sets the film’s non-sucrose tone: he only really smiles in a goofy video of his much younger self. It’s a cool, downbeat and satisfying piece of work.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 30, 2024
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 26, 2024
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 25, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Basically, Deadpool is quite right – he is Marvel Jesus, he is the guy elevated from the ranks here to be the heroic saviour, the wacky character who is going to make sense of the whole MCU business by repositioning it as gag material and keep the whole thing ticking over, perhaps until the MCU in its original fundamentally serious mode comes back into box office fashion. It’s amusing and exhausting.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 23, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
There are stabs of the same fear and revelation that made The Beast so fascinating, but this is in the main unfocused and undisciplined, and the isolation of each character merely drains the film of oxygen.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 23, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
There’s an ingenuousness and innocence to Memoir of a Snail, a family-entertainment approachability that belies a strange intensity.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 19, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film has sympathy and charm, although I can’t exactly share all the praise that’s been lavished on it. It unfolds in an indulgent, dreamy summer haze, halfway between rapture and torpor; a murmuring indie-stonewash of good taste.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 16, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
There is a trio of excellent performances from Arabuli, Kankava and Dumanli: very good actors, very well directed, defining three personalities very different from each other in terms of age and attitude but bringing them together in a way that doesn’t feel forced.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 15, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Squibb is however really good: no other casting is conceivable, and it is good to see her get the lead turn she deserves.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 15, 2024
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is only with the explicit possibility of a supernatural explanation, combined with full-on psychiatric breakdown, that the movie loses its light touch and its plausible detail. Yet there’s always a hyper-vigilant twinge of fear.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The sheer sustained silliness of this spoof silent comedy is what finally compels admiration. It’s like chancing across a bunch of eerily gifted kids by the roadside putting on a bizarrely accomplished, very extended series of magic tricks and circus acrobatic stunts.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Perhaps that final meeting in Lasker-Wallfisch’s front room does not offer closure. Nothing could. An amazing and dramatic historical tableau nonetheless.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film is perhaps flawed by its ending, which loses a bit of narrative momentum and insists too strenuously on the metaphorical properties, but there is a tang of real evil in the story’s chaos and its final image.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 10, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Twisters is a fun film with some big setpiece scenes, and Ramos and Powell make gallant admirers for Kate. I do think though that the movies still haven’t given Edgar-Jones – so excellent in TV’s Normal People – the well-written big-screen role she deserves. Some spectacular stormy weather, though.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 10, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Here the romance and adventure of the actual Apollo 11 achievement are undermined for a smirking, tonally jarring non-laugh.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 9, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
An explosion of pass-agg hipster quirkiness is what’s offered here, an everything-everywhere-all-at-onceuniverse of cutesy vulnerability and pseudo-childlike ersatz charm.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 3, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Murphy’s maverick cop – and his theme music – are back to fight corruption, but four decades on there’s little energy to enliven their formulaic reunion.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 2, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
It isn’t a masterpiece, and no one needs Despicable Me 5, but being unassumingly enjoyable isn’t easy.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 2, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The film might occasionally feel a bit self-conscious, but in a way this is a by-product of the film’s experimental nature; trans people are engaging with this fictional literary text in which trans identity has a poetic reality, a visionary reality, precisely that reality which is here found to be empowering.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 2, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
[A] richly enjoyable documentary.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 1, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
The initial setup is great, the Ephronesque excitable phone conversation montage is tolerable, but the cliched breakup and makeup plot transition clanks.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
It is well made and well acted, with a fervent lead performance from Lupita Nyong’o.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- Peter Bradshaw
Gladstone’s performance is looser, more open, less reserved. Simply put: she does more acting, and gives strength and substance to a dense, knotty family drama which though maybe anticlimactic in the final act – and too reliant on a handgun plot-point – is fluent and heartfelt.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 26, 2024
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