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Peter Bradshaw

British writer and film critic (born 1962)


British writer and film critic (born 1962)

FieldValue
namePeter Bradshaw
imagePeter Bradshaw in Cork, Ireland.jpg
captionBradshaw at the Cork International Short Story Festival in 2025
birth_namePeter Nicholas Bradshaw
birth_date
death_date
employer{{plainlist
occupation
years_active1997–present
educationHaberdashers' Aske's Boys' School
alma_materUniversity of Cambridge (BA, PhD)
spouseCaroline S. Hill
website
  • The Guardian
  • Evening Standard 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 magazine.

Early life and education

Bradshaw was educated at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School in Hertfordshire and studied English at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he was president of the Cambridge Footlights. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1984, followed by postgraduate research into the Early Modern period, studying with Lisa Jardine and Anne Barton. He received his PhD in 1989.

Career

In the 1990s, Bradshaw was employed by the Evening Standard as a columnist, and during the 1997 general election campaign, editor Max Hastings asked him to write a series of parodic diary entries purporting to be by the Conservative Party MP and historian Alan Clark, which Clark thought deceptive and which were the subject of a court case resolved in January 1998, the first in newspaper history in which the subject of a satire sued its author. Bradshaw was not put into the witness box by his QC Peter Prescott, and the judge Gavin Lightman found in Clark's favour, granting an injunction, deciding that Bradshaw's articles were then being published in a form that "a substantial number of readers" would believe they were genuinely being written by Alan Clark. Bradshaw found it "the most bizarre and surreal business of my professional life. I'm very flattered that Mr Clark should go to all this trouble and expense in suing me like this."

Since 1999, Bradshaw has been chief film critic for The Guardian, writing a weekly review column every Friday for the paper's Film&Music section. He is a regular guest reviewer on the Film... programme broadcast on BBC One. He was on the Un Certain Regard jury for 2011 Cannes Film Festival.

He wrote and performed a BBC Radio 4 programme entitled For One Horrible Moment, recorded on 10 October 1998 and first broadcast on 20 January 1999, which chronicled a young man's coming of age in 1970s Cambridgeshire. Bradshaw's bittersweet short story "Reunion", first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 21 October 2016, was narrated by Tom Hollander and was described in a New Statesman review as "sad and sly, and connected impermeably to the mid-Seventies and what it felt like to be young". Another short story, entitled "Neighbours of Zero", first broadcast on Radio 4 on 17 November 2017, was narrated by Daniel Mays. Bradshaw's story "Senior Moment", first broadcast on Radio 4's Short Works strand on 22 May 2020, was narrated by Michael Maloney.

Bradshaw co-wrote and acted in David Baddiel's television sitcom Baddiel's Syndrome, first aired on Sky One in January 2001.

Bradshaw wrote a play called Mercy, which was released an Audible Original in January 2026, starring Joanna Scanlan.

Favourite films

In a 2022 Sight & Sound poll of cinema's greatest films, Bradshaw indicated that his ten favourites are:

  • The Addiction (USA, 1995)
  • Boyhood (USA, 2014)
  • Annie Hall (USA, 1977)
  • Black Narcissus (UK, 1947)
  • Zama (Argentina, 2017)
  • Vagabond (France, 1985)
  • In the Mood for Love (Hong Kong, 2000)
  • Kind Hearts and Coronets (UK, 1949)
  • Raging Bull (USA, 1980)
  • Singin' in the Rain (USA, 1952)

Bibliography

  • Not Alan Clark's Diary; London: Simon & Schuster, 1998
  • Lucky Baby Jesus; London: Little, Brown and Company, 1999
  • Dr Sweet and His Daughter; London: Picador, 2003
  • Night of Triumph; London, Duckworth Books, 2013
  • The Films that Made Me...; London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2019
  • The Body in the Mobile Library and Other Stories; Lightning Books, 2024

Awards and recognition

Bradshaw has been shortlisted four times for The Press Awards in the Critic of the Year category: 2001, 2007, 2012 and 2013 when he was "Highly Commended".

At the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, Bradshaw was presented with the Annual Achievement Award for an International Film Critic by the Arab Cinema Center.

References

References

  1. Bradshaw, Peter. (9 September 2008). "Sex, violence and classroom action: Peter Bradshaw on the best school movies". The Guardian.
  2. Bradshaw, Peter Nicholas. (1989). "The idea of anatomy in the work of seventeenth-century prose writers". University of Cambridge.
  3. O'Hanlon, Kate. (28 January 1998). "Law report: Format of parodied Clark diaries was deceptive". [[The Independent]].
  4. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/49346.stm "Clark victorious in diary battle"], [[BBC News]], 21 January 1998.
  5. Quirke, Antonia. (27 October 2016). "The pleasure of being young, captured for radio". [[New Statesman]].
  6. Bradshaw, Peter. (17 November 2017). "Neighbours of Zero". BBC.
  7. Bradshaw, Peter. (22 May 2020). "Senior Moment". BBC.
  8. (31 December 2000). "Analyse This". [[The Observer]].
  9. (19 January 2026). "A novelty golf-ball finder that conned the military: best podcasts of the week". The Guardian.
  10. "Peter Bradshaw BFI's 2022 Sight & Sound Poll". [[British Film Institute.
  11. (15 February 2001). "British Press Awards shortlist". [[The Guardian]].
  12. (27 February 2007). "British Press Awards Shortlist".
  13. Press Gazette. (February 8, 2013). "Press Awards 2012: Times Leads the Way With 24 Nominations".
  14. (3 March 2014). "Press Awards 2013 – the Shortlists".
  15. (2014-04-02). "Winners announced for Press Awards 2013".
  16. [https://acc.film/headlines/acc-presents-its-annual-achievement-award-for-film-critics-to-lebanese-film-critic-nadim-jarjoura-and-british-film-critic-peter-bradshaw.php "ACC presents its annual Achievement Award For Film Critics to Lebanese Film Critic Nadim Jarjoura and British Film Critic Peter Bradshaw"], ''Arab Cinema'', 12 May 2024.
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