Peter Bradshaw
Peter Bradshaw is the Guardian's film critic
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This documentary study of President Ronald Reagan, composed entirely of White House TV footage, is entertaining enough but too lenient on its subject
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Ryan Gosling plays an LAPD officer heading for an encounter with Harrison Ford’s Deckard in a film whose sheer scale leaves you hyperventilating
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Five critics choose their favourite film of the decade, from Charlie Kaufman’s surreal journey into John Malkovich’s mind to Baz Lurhmann’s Shakespearean tragedy with guns and Hawaiian shirts
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A big-city thirtysomething, numbed by her endless pursuit of pleasure, finds her life turned around when she witnesses a violent crime
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Men looking for younger partners via a new website, beware. If you fall for it, there’ll be no sympathy, writes the Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw
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Familiar romantic comedy tropes abound in the debut film from Hallie Meyers-Shyer, daughter of the genre’s empress, Nancy Meyers
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Pearce reaches Nicolas Cage levels of menace as he torments Dakota Fanning’s fiercely defiant homesteader in Martin Koolhoven’s freaky thriller
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The story of AA Milne’s difficult relationship with his son is a bizarrely clenched and twee heritage drama that wallows in misery
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Vatche Boulghourjian was selected for Cannes’ Critics’ Week for this meandering mystery about a blind musician who discovers that his childhood was a lie
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In this strange, unsettling romance, a Hungarian abattoir provides the backdrop for an affair between two workers that exists only when they sleep
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This engaging film focuses on a couple who once dazzled audiences with their intimate dance routines but whose off-stage love turned to heartbreak
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LaMotta was immortalised on screen by Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, but their brilliant 1980 movie remade boxing history in the process
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A film-maker returns to the place of his boyhood on a quest for love and creative fulfilment in this melancholy cine-journal
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Peter O’Toole’s impossibly charismatic debut performance remains a mesmeric marvel in this digitally restored version of a truly exhilarating feat of film-making
Notebook Used and abused by Boris Johnson – what did Kipling do to deserve that?