Mark Kermode
Mark Kermode (born Mark James Patrick Fairey, 2 July 1963) is an English film critic, author, broadcaster, and musician renowned for his outspoken analyses of cinema, particularly horror films and cultural trends in the industry.[1][2]
He earned a PhD in English from the University of Manchester in 1991, with a thesis examining the radical, ethical, and political implications of British and American horror fiction.[3][4]
Kermode began his career in film journalism during the 1980s and later became chief film critic for The Observer from 2013 to 2023, succeeding Philip French.[5][6]
For over two decades, he co-presented Kermode and Mayo's Film Review on BBC Radio 5 Live alongside Simon Mayo, a program celebrated for its irreverent yet insightful critiques that attracted millions of listeners weekly.[7][8]
His authorship includes best-selling works such as It's Only a Movie (2010), an autobiographical account of his film obsession, and The Good, the Bad and the Multiplex (2011), which critiques modern cinema exhibition practices, alongside British Film Institute monographs on classics like The Exorcist.[9][10]
Kermode's defining traits include a preference for substantive storytelling over spectacle-driven blockbusters and a penchant for hyperbolic rants against films he deems poorly made, contributing to his status as a polarizing yet influential voice in British media.[8]