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Peter Nicholas Bradshaw (born 19 June 1962) is a British writer and film critic. He has been chief film critic at The Guardian since 1999, and is a contributing editor at Esquire . Early life and education
Peter Bradshaw (The Guardian) Joe Bob Briggs; Richard Brody (The New Yorker) Tom Brook ; Ty Burr (The Boston Globe) Ernest Callenbach; Vincent Canby (The New York Times) Charles Champlin (The Los Angeles Times) Justin Chang (The Los Angeles Times, Fresh Air, Variety) Anupama Chopra (Anupama Chopra) Michel Ciment ; Jay Cocks ; Pat Collins
Malcolm worked for several decades as a film critic for The Guardian, having previously been an amateur National Hunt jockey, where he had 13 victories, then an actor, and the paper's first horse racing correspondent. [1] [6] In 1977, he was a member of the jury at the 27th Berlin International Film Festival. [7]
Film critic Danny Leigh identified this in her early work: “Almost uniquely, Fiennes remains adamant she wants [Michael] Clark – or whoever she happens to be dealing with – to be understood through their work rather than the other way round; not for her the hackneyed game of small-screen head shrinking.” [1] Guardian film critic Peter ...
He is currently employed as a film critic at The Times. [1] His work has appeared in The Guardian, The Independent, and The Observer. His debut novel, The Fields, was published by Reagan Arthur Books in 2013. [2] [3] It was listed in the 2013 Waterstones 11, a literary book prize aimed at promoting debut authors.
[38] Chief Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw wrote that Norman's "enthusiasm and love for film always shone through" and he was "an accessible, unpretentious surveyor of cinema". [39] Mark Kermode wrote that "watching Barry Norman review films was a pleasure, an education, and an inspiration. Wit, knowledge and wry enthusiasm.
Michael Keith Billington (born 16 November 1939) is a British author and arts critic. [1] He writes for The Guardian, and was the paper's chief drama critic from 1971 to 2019. [2] Billington is "Britain's longest-serving theatre critic" and the author of biographical and critical studies relating to British theatre and the arts.
Robert Herring (Robert Herring Williams, b. 13 May 1903, Wandsworth – December 1975, Chelsea) was a novelist, essayist and poet, remembered as an early writer on film, being film critic of The Guardian for most of the 1930s, a regular contributor to the modernist film magazine Close Up, and later editor of the literary magazine, Life and Letters To-day from 1935 to 1950.