
Norbiton, Surrey, England, UK
Peter Watkins (29 October 1935 – 30 October 2025) was an English filmmaker, documentarian, writer and film theorist. He is known as a pioneer of the docudrama and the mockumentary genres, typically with heavy political content. His films present pacifist and radical ideas in a nontraditional style. He mainly concentrated his works and ideas around the mass media and viewers' relation/participation to a movie or television documentary. Nearly all of Watkins' films have used a combination of dramatic and documentary elements to dissect historical occurrences or possible near future events. The first of these, Culloden, portrayed the Jacobite uprising of 1745 in a documentary style, as if television reporters were interviewing the participants and accompanying them into battle; a similar device was used in his biographical film Edvard Munch. La Commune (Paris, 1871) reenacts the Paris Commune days using a large cast of French non-actors. In 2004 he also wrote a book, Media Crisis, an engaged essay about the media crisis, the monoform and, foremost, the lack of debate around the construction of new forms of audiovisual media. Description above from the Wikipedia article Peter Watkins, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

as Documentarist (uncredited)

as Self
1954

as Policeman
1994

as Documentarist (uncredited)
1971

as Documentist (uncredited)
1966

as Narrator / Self
1987

as Narrator (voice)
1974

as Field Interviewer (voice) (uncredited)
1964

as Narrator (voice)
1959

as Himself
2001

as Self
2003

as Himself
2004
as Self
2006
as Self
2003

as Self (Archival footage)
2026
as Self
2006

as Himself
2004

as Self
2003

as Himself
2001

as Policeman
1994

as Narrator / Self
1987

as Narrator (voice)
1974

as Documentarist (uncredited)
1971

as Documentist (uncredited)
1966

as Field Interviewer (voice) (uncredited)
1964

as Narrator (voice)
1959
Screenplay