Wild Cards Season 3 Review: Family Secrets and the Ghost of a Con Artist
The third season begins with Max Mitchell settled into her work as a consultant for the Vancouver police. She wears...
Read moreDetailsHighlights
Senior Film and Television Critic at Gazettely, specializing in narrative analysis and character development.
Background in screenwriting and storytelling techniques with a Diploma in Screenwriting from the National Film School at IADT.
Experienced script consultant and jury member at film festivals with a focus on independent productions.
Experience
Scott Clark is a seasoned film and television critic whose analytical approach is deeply informed by his background in screenwriting. As a Senior Critic at Gazettely, Scott focuses on narrative structure, character development, and the evolution of television storytelling. With a particular interest in the complexities of long-form narratives and streaming content, he deconstructs both the successes and failures in how stories are told across film and television.
In addition to his writing, Scott regularly moderates panels and serves as a jury member at film festivals. He also conducts screenwriting workshops for emerging writers and mentors junior writers at Gazettely, helping them develop their critical voices in the world of entertainment journalism.
Education
Scott holds a Bachelor's Degree in English Literature from Trinity College Dublin, which laid the foundation for his understanding of storytelling and literary analysis. He later earned a Diploma in Screenwriting from the National Film School at IADT, which refined his approach to both writing and critiquing narratives. This dual focus on literary and screenwriting education shapes his insightful analysis of both the craft and execution of film and television.
The third season begins with Max Mitchell settled into her work as a consultant for the Vancouver police. She wears...
Read moreDetailsThe Australian industrial landscape gives Adrian Chiarella’s feature debut, Leviticus, its harsh foundation. The film locks in its look through...
Read moreDetailsFree Bert casts Bert Kreischer as a fictionalized version of himself, a comedian known for a shirtless stand-up routine. The...
Read moreDetailsLove Through A Prism sets itself up as a period story rooted in 1910s London, then immediately locks its heroine...
Read moreDetailsSam Nelson returns for a second high-stakes crisis. The corporate negotiator leaves the open sky behind and moves into Berlin’s...
Read moreDetailsThe Beauty stages a premise where physical perfection spreads like a contagion. Ryan Murphy and Matt Hodgson adapt a graphic...
Read moreDetailsThe thirty-second century gives the Federation a softer, shakier texture. It feels quiet in a way that carries history, not...
Read moreDetailsThe eighth season of the ABC police drama returns after a long break, and it plays like a statement of...
Read moreDetailsThe film opens with a close, unforgiving gaze: the camera catches each bead of sweat on Kara Chase’s brow as...
Read moreDetailsGreek Mothers Never Die lands in the supernatural comedy lane with an approach that plays intimate feeling and stage-ready exaggeration...
Read moreDetails









