Andrew Wyatt lives in St. Louis, Missouri, where he writes on cinema, television, video art, and culture. Wyatt is the lead film critic for The Lens, the official blog of Cinema St. Louis. He was the weekly film critic for St. Louis Magazine from 2010 to 2017, and still contributes to that publication. He has also been a contributor to The Curator and Temporary Art Review.
By Andrew Wyatt
By
Andrew Wyatt
Maura Spiegel’s approach simultaneously favors the intimate and the sensational, painting a portrait of America’s most unassuming cinematic auteur that emphasizes both his workaday normalcy and the rarified place he occupies in the nation’s artistic and cultural landscape. It is an unabashedly hagiographic work.
By
Andrew Wyatt
How exactly the world was killed might be a mystery, but the who seems all-too-obvious: men. Men and their consuming hunger for more power and more speed.
By
Andrew Wyatt
Warner Bros is at its most stimulating when it regards the studio’s movies, stars, and filmmakers as both passive reflections and active agents of a monolithic American cultural identity.
By
Andrew Wyatt
The Big Picture has a broad yet unmistakable viewpoint regarding the artistic fallout of the trends it chronicles, and that outlook is despairing.
By
Andrew Wyatt
It was not the box office hits, the Oscar-winners, or even the overtly druggy cinematic curios of 1968 that had the clearest sense of where the Age of Aquarius might be heading. Rather, it was the smaller American and British horror features—most of them overlooked today—that seemed to discern the looming end of the Revolution.
By
Andrew Wyatt
In every decade since the Sheol, the films that resulted reveal wider, prevailing attitudes toward Jewishness, history, memory, and psychological trauma.