I don’t know if I’m just wearing rose tinted glasses here but I’m sure film trailers are getting worse.
In the past couple of weeks we’ve had two trailers running for three minutes each, Fall Guy and Madame Web. What’s worse is that each of these trailers feel like I’m watching an abridged version of the film. They’ll be no surprises left. Netflix seem to be very good at this as well.
I mentioned the time because the rough average was around 2 to 2½ minutes long. It’s slowly creeping up.
All I want is enough footage to get me excited with a hint of plot.
The Force Awakens and Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning teaser trailers were fantastic for grabbing my interest without revealing what was going on.
Yes, I know I could just avoid trailers altogether but I’m weak willed, I like a sneak peek.
What do you think?
This has been the trend for the last decade now. I’ve been avoiding trailers for ages, and many studios like putting straight up spoilers in them. If I’m already interested in a movie I skip trailers completely and just go to watch it.
they’ve been giving away so much in the trailer you no longer need to watch the movie – save yourself a couple hours and sticky feet
Terminator 2 trailers spoiled the twist that Arnold is the good guy.
So did Terminator: Genisys, the biggest plot point of the whole film!
It isn’t new.
I swore off trailers after watching Star Wars: The Force Awakens in the theater. The scene where Han tries to convince Kylo Ren to turn away from the dark side was ruined for me because I knew there was a scene in the show where Rey and Kylo were having a duel.
Ever since then if there’s a movie I even slightly care about then I’ll completely avoid the trailer.
Another thing that pisses me off is when something is labeled a ‘teaser’ but it’s 1:30+ minutes long. That’s not a teaser, that’s a trailer.
I hate the teaser for the trailer I’m literally about to watch. What is up with that and who started it?
That’s a video that’s been formatted for YouTube. The quick bit at the front is designed to sit in the ad space of a video you can’t skip. So the idea is to keep you watching when you’d normally skip it.
No. This has always been a thing. Go back and watch a trailer for an old movie that you know well.
The trick is that you only know it’s a spoiler after you’ve seen the movie.
For western movies, yes generally. I love the trailers of Park Chan-wook’s movies. See the trailers for The Handmaiden and Decision To Leave for example. They don’t give out the plot, they are very intriguing, and subvert expectations once you see the movie.
I stopped going out of my way to watch trailers after Deadpool where it felt like they’d jammed all the best bits into the trailer and everything else was padding.