One of Bill’s proudest UA-cam moments came after the trailer for “Mother” was released. Almost immediately, UA-camrs started cutting trailers for other movies in the style of the distinctive (and haunting) “Mother” trailer Bill cut. Watch Bill's original: ua-cam.com/video/XpICoc65uh0/v-deo.html And Zach Prewitt’s Rosemary’s Baby Cover: ua-cam.com/video/CXetZp3JVdw/v-deo.html Thanks for watching. -Phil
5:13 A dream job, anything in film. But, thats not why I am commenting. I saw Carrie when it first came out, and they could afford to give away most of the scenes... because that final scene at the grave had the theater screaming. Sure the Towering Inferno was tense.. but,oh boy "CARRIE" is in a class of its own. Chucky couldnt touch it with a steak skewer
the main reason: films are primarily created as pieces of art, trailers are primarily created as pieces of marketing/commerce. trailers can often rise to become artistic, but they aren't inherent expressions of creativity to nearly the same level as the films themselves.
@@maxonite that's true! it's not an easy line to draw. but the people who make films and win awards for their work are primarily motivated by craft. trailer houses, though certainly requiring artistry, are profit seeking ventures aiming to sell products above anything and everything.
You can't receive an Oscar for a trailer because it's not a film or short film but you CAN submit a trailer or marketing spot and receive other types of awards.
When I was in high school I emailed Don LaFontaine to see how much he would charge to do a VO for our senior year slideshow. Instead of sending an invoice, he sent me an mp3 and the email just read "Enjoy!" What a legend.
Learning that trailer editors usually only have dailies instead of full cuts of movies to work from definitely explains the frequency of, say, trailers “lying” or how there are often scenes that are in the trailers but don’t make it into the final movie.
yes! I always wondered why the sequence on the Twilight trailer: "how long have you been seventeen?" "a while" was never in the movie! Now I know :) they probably got it from the dailies.
@@macestewart not the example I would’ve gone to first. Tho that’s interesting given I’m fairly certain that line was in the book? I only read it the once tho and it’s been a good 15ish years since so. ^^;
@@Caterfree10 lol I know, I think it just got stored in my brain all those years ago that it wasn't in the movie. Especially because, yes, it was in the book! Stil not sure why they had to cut it :(
i wonder if bill neil knows how much of a frenzy he caused among jordan peele fans when they were theorizing why the "from jordan peele" shot was edited that way and what it had to do with the plot of movie. and it's perfect that he mentioned close encounters of the third kind, because brandon perea (who played angel in the film) said he used it as a reference to prepare for his role, as a suggestion by jordan peele himself -- though of course now having seen nope in its entirety, it all makes so much sense.
The Nope teaser trailer was easily my favorite trailer to come out of last year, and seeing the trailer editor himself explain how and why he edited it the way he did made it even better.
Allow me to express how much I despise "bumpers". I think of a trailer as a bit of a mini movie without giving away the plot (although, trailers often ruin the plot), so when I click on a trailer, the trailer ("mini movie") is ruined when the bumper shows all the exciting scenes before I see them in the trailer. Not at all a fan. Great video, however - I *am* a fan of this video. :)
I totally agree! But nowadays since people's attention span is so short, I guess they created them as a way to ensure the person would watch it all the way through. With tik tok, etc. if something isn't engaging in the first three seconds, a lot of people turn away. It's sad
They’re so annoying, I’ve already made a decision to watch a trailer so why do I need a 5 second teaser of the video I’m already watching?? agreed they almost “spoil” moments that will then show up in the actual trailer I’m about to watch
They get "Key Art Awards" and "Golden Trailers", and "Clios" for ads, and "Promax" Awards (or whatever they're called now) for TV promos, and then the Emmys give out Emmys for trailers. It's not like a "real" Emmy, but it also is. At one time, the Key Art Awards event was in the same theater where they present the Oscars.
I mean, it's a little more than just one haunting song. There's the graphics only first half and then the very complex storytelling of the second half. The song helps a lot but it's all the pieces that come together to make the trailer as good as it is.
Dope. Always wondered what the thought process was for some trailers. Now you need to get the people who spoil the entire movie in the trailer...gotta know if it's the studio/director's choice or if the trailer maker's
The answer is that no trailer is made by one person. So many people (editors, producers, filmmakers, studios, etc) have their hands in a trailer plus the trailers also get shown to test audiences. So by the time you see a trailer in theaters or online, it's gone through sometimes months and months of working and re-working to get the version that everyone is happy with and that they think will sell the movie best.
One of the most effective trailers was for the Hunger Games. Due to censorship they were unable to show any violence between children, so they had to end it at the midpoint without showing any of the actual games. The cliffhanger vibes are unmatched. It makes you want to see the games themselves 10x more
I remember that record of Sounds that Make You Shiver!!! I almost cried when you played the withces laugh... OMG!!! So many childhood memories swept over me!
In the case of the Dr. Strangelove trailer, it wasn’t done by the studio. It was done by the movie’s title designer, the legendary Pablo Ferro. He also edited the trailers for movies like Stop Making Sense and A Clockwork Orange.
Excellent breakdown of the art and skill behind what we all seemingly watch and take for granted, goes to show there's a lot more going on behind the scenes
And now we know why sometimes trailers have scenes that the final cut doesn't ... Half the time the trailer house doesn't even know what the final film will be.
It’s really gotten to the point where I will not watch any trailer, and will just wait to watch the movie. It just gives so much away and I feel like I watched the whole movie just from the 1-2 minute video.
GO BILL!!!! So grateful to have had the privilege to work at Buddha Jones a while ago - and still say to this day that's the best work experience I've had, hands down! Congrats on the partnership!!! I only had a handful of interactions with Bill, mostly in the kitchen lol But I remember he was always super nice and witty. So cool to watch this - feel like I'm sitting in his bay again lol Shout out to Buddha! Love you guys and everything you're doing! ❤💯 Definitely remember helping with those Daily Assemblies 😂
This was great….except for the super heavy emphasis on the trailers for horror films. Would’ve liked to see a more well rounded pull from all genres. Would love to see more expansion on this series.
Great video! Would love to see more from Bill, especially his take on how fans sometimes re-cut trailers to completely change the tone of the film (the one that always comes to mind is "Shining!" as a rom-com.)
i'm not mad or sad or upset or happy. just noticing: i loved the movie "Nope" but the trailer had nothing to do with the movie. But it intrigued me. This video explains that very well. Do i want a trailer to tell me what a movie is about? Actually no. But it's probably more expensive to do these non sequitur trailers that still have to get people noticing, remembering, talking, and watching
Yeah, I like when they give you the spirit of the movie without giving you the actual story. I don't know if that works for all viewers, but I like it.
Honestly I was just questioning the art of trailer editing because I wondered how creatively distinct it is from the movie. For instance, Chris Nolan has had phenomenal trailers, and no im not just talking inception/interstellar. Dunkirk, is brilliant using the sort of music from the movie effectively. But especially Tenet, that trailer blew me away, it was so captivating, and honestly better than the movie ended up being. Mad Max Fury Road too has a brilliant trailer. And recently The Flash really surprised me with how fresh and well-edited the trailer was, with unique sound-mixing, a good sort of background score thats original and weird and fitting to the subject (ofc there's the Batman theme for a bit too). But for one thing it stood out from the other superhero trailers, and from the 'let's DJ-mix a popular song whose title kinda fits the movie' like Ant-Man Quantummania.
I remember being surprised by finding out the fact that making trailers were an actual job, and not something the actual film companies would do themselves for their own films. Learned this when I watched The Holiday. You learn something new every day.
People who complain about trailers giving away too much "nowadays" really need to go back and watch some old trailers. Carrie is a great example but it's far from the only one.
I'm fascinated by the amount of people saying they didn't realize trailers weren't made off of the finished product. Thought it was common knowledge at this point!
5:10 This is why I normally don't watch any trailer, I just go straight up looking for the date and save it to my watchlist if the Title of the movie sounds good enough for me, but of course, I can't always avoid the trailers when scrolling through TikTok, Facebook, or Instagram.
This is fascinating! I've always wondered how trailer editing worked and he seems so knowledgeable and passionate about the subject. Is there an AMA with this guy because I want to ask him everything!
Really wished you had analyzed the 2'30'' minute long epic trailer for *_"300"_* with the song by _Nine Inch Nails_ and its faster paced cut of *"THIS IS SPARTA!"* haha
As a VO guy myself, this may come off as blatantly self-serving, but the total lack of voiceover narration in trailers today is something that I wish would change. I mean, I get it - the art of trailers has evolved to more of a "show me, don't tell me"... which overall, is probably a good thing. But I think there's still room to re-introduce trailer VO in such a way that it would actually make the trailer more impactful. Plus, there's the added benefit that it would definitely stand out from all the trailers that employ those BWAHs and numerous other little audio and visual standbys which have become even more ubiquitous than the old "In a world..." narration used to be.
I stopped watching BFF trailers a couple of years back, they’re so full of spoilers. But I do appreciate the work that goes into them. I remember memorizing trailers from my favorite VHS tapes lol they became part of the movie to me
Sometimes I've seen trailers that evoke an incredibly strong feeling in and of themselves. I've gone back and re-watched some of them, like the trailer for "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" for example (the one with the Monsters and Men soundtrack), which is basically an incredibly concentrated, life-affirming short film. Or a trailer for a video game called "Edge of Twilight", where the game is pretty meh, but the cinematic trailer is this incredibly moody, deeply depressing masterpiece of storybook narration.
I am just curious how where did they getting sound bites from from old stuff to use them, like he said he did with Texas Massacre? Like houses getting those og bites from studios or somehow recreating/editing them out? Same question with. Same question with deconstructing songg, how do they getting layers of the track?
Well, I did learn many of the trailers contain scenes that werent in the final release. Kinda weird how they dont work from the final cut. I recall many many iconic scenes that were just never in the theatrical release, yet still strongly associate it with the films due to repetitive trailers views.
Studios have a bad habit of setting release dates that then make ridiculously tight schedules. I work in the industry and have a friend that told me there were around 1,100 VFX shots still unfinished a few weeks from Black Adam's release. But if you want to drum up hype for a movie and get it into people's consciousness a year, six months, etc before the release date, there's really no way else but to use dailies or rough cuts. If they waited until the film was finished, they'd just be sitting on a finished film and realistically they're in the business of making money, so they'd rather just release the film. Doesn't always happen though; Godzilla: King of the Monsters was fully finished like three or four months before its release date, but that's extremely rare, and still means the trailers don't come from the finished products.
That's a very interesting inside in how trailers are made. I'm wondering though how the trailer editors are working with the daily shots. They are not edited to the point the final footage will be (e.g. color grading). How does the trailer editor match the aesthetic from raw footage to the final movie?
Only thing I'd ask him is why trailers these days have to summarize the entire plot, including major plot points. I get that his "butwhatabout Carrie" was a lighthearted joke, but I'd genuenely like to know the actual answer.
The funny thing is that Carrie the book does the same thing - it has a lot of lines like "X didn't know that he would be dead in three hours" or something like that. I thought it was pretty bad and it put me off reading any other Stephen King books for years!
Would love another one of these from someone who cuts a very different genre! To be honest I skipped 80% of this video because every film creeped me out :p
Now we have trailers for trailers. I'm not talking about teasers, but nowadays there's like a 10s preview to the actual trailer. What has the world become...
One of Bill’s proudest UA-cam moments came after the trailer for “Mother” was released. Almost immediately, UA-camrs started cutting trailers for other movies in the style of the distinctive (and haunting) “Mother” trailer Bill cut.
Watch Bill's original: ua-cam.com/video/XpICoc65uh0/v-deo.html
And Zach Prewitt’s Rosemary’s Baby Cover: ua-cam.com/video/CXetZp3JVdw/v-deo.html
Thanks for watching.
-Phil
Mother! has the best and most original trailer i've ever seen. It actually made me watch the movie in theater
5:13 A dream job, anything in film. But, thats not why I am commenting. I saw Carrie when it first came out, and they could afford to give away most of the scenes... because that final scene at the grave had the theater screaming. Sure the Towering Inferno was tense.. but,oh boy "CARRIE" is in a class of its own. Chucky couldnt touch it with a steak skewer
I liked TAR's trailer
Ah this guy made the trailer for Once Upon a time in Hollywood? I honestly thought the trailer was better than the actual movie.
Please ask him to break down The Social Network Trailer
Honestly, why is trailer editing not a category for an award at the Oscars? Some trailers are masterpieces and these editors deserve the credit!
Agree
the main reason: films are primarily created as pieces of art, trailers are primarily created as pieces of marketing/commerce. trailers can often rise to become artistic, but they aren't inherent expressions of creativity to nearly the same level as the films themselves.
@@ianwhitsitt8189 i mean… films are primarily created to make money
@@maxonite that's true! it's not an easy line to draw. but the people who make films and win awards for their work are primarily motivated by craft. trailer houses, though certainly requiring artistry, are profit seeking ventures aiming to sell products above anything and everything.
You can't receive an Oscar for a trailer because it's not a film or short film but you CAN submit a trailer or marketing spot and receive other types of awards.
When I was in high school I emailed Don LaFontaine to see how much he would charge to do a VO for our senior year slideshow. Instead of sending an invoice, he sent me an mp3 and the email just read "Enjoy!" What a legend.
wow beautiful
Learning that trailer editors usually only have dailies instead of full cuts of movies to work from definitely explains the frequency of, say, trailers “lying” or how there are often scenes that are in the trailers but don’t make it into the final movie.
yes! I always wondered why the sequence on the Twilight trailer: "how long have you been seventeen?" "a while" was never in the movie! Now I know :) they probably got it from the dailies.
@@macestewart not the example I would’ve gone to first. Tho that’s interesting given I’m fairly certain that line was in the book? I only read it the once tho and it’s been a good 15ish years since so. ^^;
@@Caterfree10 lol I know, I think it just got stored in my brain all those years ago that it wasn't in the movie. Especially because, yes, it was in the book! Stil not sure why they had to cut it :(
It’s nice to hear someone who makes amazing movie trailers.
i wonder if bill neil knows how much of a frenzy he caused among jordan peele fans when they were theorizing why the "from jordan peele" shot was edited that way and what it had to do with the plot of movie. and it's perfect that he mentioned close encounters of the third kind, because brandon perea (who played angel in the film) said he used it as a reference to prepare for his role, as a suggestion by jordan peele himself -- though of course now having seen nope in its entirety, it all makes so much sense.
The Nope teaser trailer was easily my favorite trailer to come out of last year, and seeing the trailer editor himself explain how and why he edited it the way he did made it even better.
"It's an homage, I guess"
...
"or I'm stealing, I'm not sure" 😂
Love how you start the video with a bumper and then explain it immediately after. Really sets the tone of the video.
Vox should be making more of these types of videos!
Vox can do whatever they want. Ill watch anything they produce. Its all gold.
They used to! I miss them & it's always great to see them.
this guy is so charming and passionate about his work i love listening to him talk about all these trailers
Allow me to express how much I despise "bumpers".
I think of a trailer as a bit of a mini movie without giving away the plot (although, trailers often ruin the plot), so when I click on a trailer, the trailer ("mini movie") is ruined when the bumper shows all the exciting scenes before I see them in the trailer. Not at all a fan.
Great video, however - I *am* a fan of this video. :)
yes!! i feel like bumpers are generally thought of as a waste of everyone’s time
First world problems, ha 🌎
I totally agree! But nowadays since people's attention span is so short, I guess they created them as a way to ensure the person would watch it all the way through. With tik tok, etc. if something isn't engaging in the first three seconds, a lot of people turn away. It's sad
They’re so annoying, I’ve already made a decision to watch a trailer so why do I need a 5 second teaser of the video I’m already watching?? agreed they almost “spoil” moments that will then show up in the actual trailer I’m about to watch
Came here for this
We definitely need an Oscar for best trailer.
They have their own award show.
No we don’t…
They get "Key Art Awards" and "Golden Trailers", and "Clios" for ads, and "Promax" Awards (or whatever they're called now) for TV promos, and then the Emmys give out Emmys for trailers. It's not like a "real" Emmy, but it also is. At one time, the Key Art Awards event was in the same theater where they present the Oscars.
I love the trailer for The Social Network. Just one haunting song.
I mean, it's a little more than just one haunting song. There's the graphics only first half and then the very complex storytelling of the second half. The song helps a lot but it's all the pieces that come together to make the trailer as good as it is.
Vox again taught me something I didn’t even know I needed to learn
I love trailers, I love fast editing, editing on beats and I love how they choose which shots. Thank you for this.
Dope. Always wondered what the thought process was for some trailers. Now you need to get the people who spoil the entire movie in the trailer...gotta know if it's the studio/director's choice or if the trailer maker's
There is quite literally a whole segment in this video about how that began with trailers like Carrie and how it absolutely isn't a modern phenomena.
The answer is that no trailer is made by one person. So many people (editors, producers, filmmakers, studios, etc) have their hands in a trailer plus the trailers also get shown to test audiences. So by the time you see a trailer in theaters or online, it's gone through sometimes months and months of working and re-working to get the version that everyone is happy with and that they think will sell the movie best.
It's the studio. It's always the studio.
One of the most effective trailers was for the Hunger Games. Due to censorship they were unable to show any violence between children, so they had to end it at the midpoint without showing any of the actual games. The cliffhanger vibes are unmatched. It makes you want to see the games themselves 10x more
The 10 Cloverfield Lane trailer ( 9:46 ) is one of my favourites, loved that uncomfortable transition the trailer has to reveal its true story.
Having John Goodman in it and be evil was also part of the rug pull. He's usually comedic so it was even more of a surprise.
The trailer is amazing. It makes the movie looks so much better than it actually is lol great job
The worst trailers are the ones that give you away the entire plot. And it's usually the worst kind of movies that have those trailers
I remember that record of Sounds that Make You Shiver!!! I almost cried when you played the withces laugh... OMG!!! So many childhood memories swept over me!
the mission impossible trailer specifically with henry cavill punching is so good i still think ab it to this day
Whoever cuts Christopher Nolan's trailers together is seriously talented. They're always bangers.
In the case of the Dr. Strangelove trailer, it wasn’t done by the studio. It was done by the movie’s title designer, the legendary Pablo Ferro. He also edited the trailers for movies like Stop Making Sense and A Clockwork Orange.
Bumpers are so weird, while some build hype most make me skip the trailer immediately. Directing trailers is an art itself, how fun this video was.
For some reason, this is exactly how I’d imagine a trailer guy would be.
one of my favourite recent trailers was for Emma (2020), so well edited, and really showed what the movie was like, the humour and the design
Excellent breakdown of the art and skill behind what we all seemingly watch and take for granted, goes to show there's a lot more going on behind the scenes
And now we know why sometimes trailers have scenes that the final cut doesn't ... Half the time the trailer house doesn't even know what the final film will be.
this is purely amazing, brilliant job by Vox's creative team to put this on.
It’s really gotten to the point where I will not watch any trailer, and will just wait to watch the movie. It just gives so much away and I feel like I watched the whole movie just from the 1-2 minute video.
Absolutely hate "bumpers". I came to UA-cam to watch your trailer. I don't need a trailer for your trailer. Enjoyed this video! Thanks Vox and Bill!
GO BILL!!!! So grateful to have had the privilege to work at Buddha Jones a while ago - and still say to this day that's the best work experience I've had, hands down! Congrats on the partnership!!! I only had a handful of interactions with Bill, mostly in the kitchen lol But I remember he was always super nice and witty. So cool to watch this - feel like I'm sitting in his bay again lol Shout out to Buddha! Love you guys and everything you're doing! ❤💯 Definitely remember helping with those Daily Assemblies 😂
Yo! This was actually better than cinema classes I've had. Following that man ASAP.
That’s why sometimes the trailer doesn’t always match the movie itself, because they’re not seeing the entire movie usually.
the original teaser trailer for Nope was a masterpiece
This was great….except for the super heavy emphasis on the trailers for horror films. Would’ve liked to see a more well rounded pull from all genres. Would love to see more expansion on this series.
Just want simple trailers showcasing movie's feel, no spoilers, instead they go for every Drama shown as a Mission Impossible
Can’t believe Inception trailer wasn’t mentioned here. It literally influenced nearly every trailer that came after it for a decade.
Great video! Would love to see more from Bill, especially his take on how fans sometimes re-cut trailers to completely change the tone of the film (the one that always comes to mind is "Shining!" as a rom-com.)
That NOPE trailer was fantastic! I'm very happy I got to know his thought process
I want a series of this man breaking down movie trailers
you should do another video about the design of movie posters!
The jigsaw puzzle analogy was a phenomenal ending 🧩 great video, very informative and engaging!
As an editor. I learned a lot from this short clip.
Love this. Don't see many videos like this
i'm not mad or sad or upset or happy. just noticing: i loved the movie "Nope" but the trailer had nothing to do with the movie. But it intrigued me. This video explains that very well.
Do i want a trailer to tell me what a movie is about? Actually no. But it's probably more expensive to do these non sequitur trailers that still have to get people noticing, remembering, talking, and watching
Yeah, I like when they give you the spirit of the movie without giving you the actual story. I don't know if that works for all viewers, but I like it.
This guy needs to write and direct a full feature film.
Agree 100%❤
i’d watch an entire series about this
Latest mission impossible trailer was amazing.
Honestly I was just questioning the art of trailer editing because I wondered how creatively distinct it is from the movie. For instance, Chris Nolan has had phenomenal trailers, and no im not just talking inception/interstellar. Dunkirk, is brilliant using the sort of music from the movie effectively. But especially Tenet, that trailer blew me away, it was so captivating, and honestly better than the movie ended up being. Mad Max Fury Road too has a brilliant trailer. And recently The Flash really surprised me with how fresh and well-edited the trailer was, with unique sound-mixing, a good sort of background score thats original and weird and fitting to the subject (ofc there's the Batman theme for a bit too). But for one thing it stood out from the other superhero trailers, and from the 'let's DJ-mix a popular song whose title kinda fits the movie' like Ant-Man Quantummania.
I hate trailer bumpers, it spoils the whole trailer. Glad the guy explained right away how badly people who make these decisions think.
But jigsaw puzzles ARE sold with the entire picture of the puzzle on the box...
90s trailers with Don lafontaine is something ❤
I need to teach my film students about film trailers next week. Thanks Vox - lesson done.
Awesome video showing support from Australia
Thank you for this super insightful behind the scenes video.
Wholeheartedly amazing. Not a movie person, but I do love trailers and reading the credits so this is great!
I remember being surprised by finding out the fact that making trailers were an actual job, and not something the actual film companies would do themselves for their own films. Learned this when I watched The Holiday. You learn something new every day.
Phenomenal video! So entertainning and educating at the same time!!
Great interview. 👍
As a trailer music composer...I enjoyed this. :)
People who complain about trailers giving away too much "nowadays" really need to go back and watch some old trailers. Carrie is a great example but it's far from the only one.
loved how this taught tips in filmmaking and Sound Effects
The fact that they have to make the trailers before the movie is even done explains so much
I'm fascinated by the amount of people saying they didn't realize trailers weren't made off of the finished product. Thought it was common knowledge at this point!
Lol the rhythm, beat with action bit at 10:28 he talks about is present everywhere in anime amvs
Thanks for the tutorial Vox and Bill
5:10 This is why I normally don't watch any trailer, I just go straight up looking for the date and save it to my watchlist if the Title of the movie sounds good enough for me, but of course, I can't always avoid the trailers when scrolling through TikTok, Facebook, or Instagram.
Loved this- thanks guys!
This is fascinating! I've always wondered how trailer editing worked and he seems so knowledgeable and passionate about the subject. Is there an AMA with this guy because I want to ask him everything!
Really wished you had analyzed the 2'30'' minute long epic trailer for *_"300"_* with the song by _Nine Inch Nails_ and its faster paced cut of *"THIS IS SPARTA!"* haha
Spectacular 🙌
Love these videos but yes, trailers should be an award category too
As a VO guy myself, this may come off as blatantly self-serving, but the total lack of voiceover narration in trailers today is something that I wish would change. I mean, I get it - the art of trailers has evolved to more of a "show me, don't tell me"... which overall, is probably a good thing. But I think there's still room to re-introduce trailer VO in such a way that it would actually make the trailer more impactful. Plus, there's the added benefit that it would definitely stand out from all the trailers that employ those BWAHs and numerous other little audio and visual standbys which have become even more ubiquitous than the old "In a world..." narration used to be.
I stopped watching BFF trailers a couple of years back, they’re so full of spoilers. But I do appreciate the work that goes into them. I remember memorizing trailers from my favorite VHS tapes lol they became part of the movie to me
Sometimes I've seen trailers that evoke an incredibly strong feeling in and of themselves. I've gone back and re-watched some of them, like the trailer for "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" for example (the one with the Monsters and Men soundtrack), which is basically an incredibly concentrated, life-affirming short film. Or a trailer for a video game called "Edge of Twilight", where the game is pretty meh, but the cinematic trailer is this incredibly moody, deeply depressing masterpiece of storybook narration.
TSLOWM is a great trailer. I get that same feeling from trailers to Wakanda Forever and Thor Ragnarok, off the top of my head.
The video editor of this vid must have been sweating bullets! But well done! Amazing video!
That thumbnail made me think the guy was Seb Vettel for a moment, and I was so confused for a sec there
How can there be a video about trailers and not include the greatest one of all time? INCEPTION
BWWAAAAAAAAA
Excellent!
I am just curious how where did they getting sound bites from from old stuff to use them, like he said he did with Texas Massacre? Like houses getting those og bites from studios or somehow recreating/editing them out? Same question with. Same question with deconstructing songg, how do they getting layers of the track?
Well, I did learn many of the trailers contain scenes that werent in the final release. Kinda weird how they dont work from the final cut. I recall many many iconic scenes that were just never in the theatrical release, yet still strongly associate it with the films due to repetitive trailers views.
Studios have a bad habit of setting release dates that then make ridiculously tight schedules. I work in the industry and have a friend that told me there were around 1,100 VFX shots still unfinished a few weeks from Black Adam's release. But if you want to drum up hype for a movie and get it into people's consciousness a year, six months, etc before the release date, there's really no way else but to use dailies or rough cuts. If they waited until the film was finished, they'd just be sitting on a finished film and realistically they're in the business of making money, so they'd rather just release the film. Doesn't always happen though; Godzilla: King of the Monsters was fully finished like three or four months before its release date, but that's extremely rare, and still means the trailers don't come from the finished products.
That's a very interesting inside in how trailers are made. I'm wondering though how the trailer editors are working with the daily shots. They are not edited to the point the final footage will be (e.g. color grading). How does the trailer editor match the aesthetic from raw footage to the final movie?
Amazing, seems the trailer formula is: artistry plus psychology equals desire
Great video. Trying to off hand recall what my favorite trailer might be and I settled on "Man of Steel". A great trailer will have "re-watchability".
I loved the NOPE trailer so it’s awesome to hear the creative process. The best trailers don’t give away the biggest moments in the film.
i love the behind the scenes of the movie industry... it's just awesome magic and Enginuity.
Great video
Only thing I'd ask him is why trailers these days have to summarize the entire plot, including major plot points. I get that his "butwhatabout Carrie" was a lighthearted joke, but I'd genuenely like to know the actual answer.
The funny thing is that Carrie the book does the same thing - it has a lot of lines like "X didn't know that he would be dead in three hours" or something like that. I thought it was pretty bad and it put me off reading any other Stephen King books for years!
finally, the raise that they deserve
Yesssssss, this is wonderful!
Dude just needs to hire Pablo Francisco now that Don LaFontaine has passed.
More videos with that guy talking about editing please.
Would love another one of these from someone who cuts a very different genre!
To be honest I skipped 80% of this video because every film creeped me out :p
Now we have trailers for trailers. I'm not talking about teasers, but nowadays there's like a 10s preview to the actual trailer. What has the world become...
Real question is why do trailers show the best parts of the movie before watching the movie it spoils the movie making no reason to watch the movie
This is the content you should make more of!!!
Very interesting!