Film trailers are film advertisements. They are shown before the screening of another movie, at a cinema where the films will be exhibited, as well as in the lobby and on Internet. They are more formally known in theaters as previews of coming attractions. The term "trailer" comes from their having originally been shown at the end of a film programme. Although that practice did not last long, due to patrons tending to leave the theater after the films proper were finished, the name has stuck. Trailers have since been shown before the film begins (or before the first film (a-film) in a double-bill programme begins).
Trailers normally consist of a series of selected shots from the film being advertised. Since the purpose of the trailer is to attract an audience to the film being advertised, they usually draw from the most exciting, funny, or otherwise noteworthy parts of the film but in abbreviated form and without producing spoilers. The scenes are not necessarily in the order in which they appear in the film. This helps avoiding spoilers.
Some trailers use "special shoot" footage, which is material that has been created specifically for advertising purposes and which does not appear in the actual film. One of the most notable films to use this technique was Judgment Day, whose trailer featured elaborate special effects scenes that were never intended to be in the film itself. Another one of the most famous "special shoot" trailers was that used for the 1960s thriller Psycho, which featured director Alfred Hitchcock giving viewers a guided tour of the Bates Motel, eventually arriving at the infamous shower. At this point, the soft-spoken Hitchcock suddenly throws the shower curtain back to reveal a woman in the shower giving out a blood-curdling scream. Contrary to popular belief, however, this is not the same scene (or actress) that appears in the movie. Rather, Vera Miles, who had another part in the film, reshot this one shot specifically for the trailer.
The people who create trailers often begin their work while the movie is still being shot. Since the edited movie does not exist at this point, the trailer editors work from rushes. The trailer may be created at the agency while the movie itself is being cut together at the studio. Thus, the trailer may contain footage that is not in the final movie, or the trailer editor and the movie editor may use different takes of a particular shot.
Some trailers that incorporate material that is not in the movie are particularly coveted by collectors, especially in the case of trailers for classic films. For example, in a trailer for Casablanca the character Rick Blaine says "OK, you asked for it!" before shooting Major Strasser, an event which does not occur in the final film.
Trailers, when shown in the United States, usually feature a green band, which is an all-green graphic shown at the beginning of a trailer, usually reading "The following PREVIEW has been approved for ALL AUDIENCES by the Motion Picture Association of America," and sometimes including the movie's MPAA rating. This signifies that the trailer adheres to the standards for motion picture advertising outlined by the MPAA, which includes limitations on foul language and violent, sexual, or otherwise objectionable imagery. Trailers that do not adhere to these guidelines may be issued a red band, which reads "The following PREVIEW has been approved for RESTRICTED AUDIENCES by the Motion Picture Association of America," and may only be shown before an R-rated, NC-17-rated, or unrated movie. The MPAA also mandates that trailers not exceed two minutes and thirty seconds in length, and each major studio is given one exception to this rule per year. When the trailer is shown in other countries, a similar message from the country's rating body replaces the green band.
The producers and editors of a trailer will be given material from the studio to work with, which may include the movie itself (if it has been edited together yet), rushes, and/or computer graphics shots (as they are created during the film editing process).
The trailers that are seen in theaters have been through an extensive process of revisions and approvals by a variety of studio marketing executives. The revision process often includes information from market research conducted at locations all around the country.
Beside creative and unique trailer creation, there are several experimental approaches to generate movie trailers automatically using artifical intelligence. University projects like SVP (University of Bremen, Germany) analyze the movie and try to create a trailer based on typical structures and rules of trailers.
This practice can also affect when films are released. An extreme example of this is Miramax's decision to delay the North American release of Hero by two years, mostly so that they could widely advertise the film before Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill.
This can also affect film sales. In the lead-up to the release of The Phantom Menace, fans of the franchise would buy tickets to see films that would have the theatrical trailer before the feature presentation, yet would leave before the presentation begun.
This advertising is especially valuable as it can be carefully targeted. Movies appealing to one age group or demographic will have trailers for films targeting that same group.
Trailers have spread to other media as well. Trailers for computer games have especially become popular. Notably, the pre-release marketing campaign for Halo 2 featured several trailers attached to major box-office releases, and the game itself was treated as a Hollywood blockbuster. Partially because of the hype, Halo 2 broke every major pre-release sale record for video games.
Movie marketing copy is often accused of being cliché. The creation of trailers has been honed over decades to a very precise art, and certain clichés are useful because in a very short space, they are the most efficient way to communicate a given idea. Record scratches that stop the music to deliver the punch-line to a joke are a very common feature of trailers, but they are continually used because they remain effective.
Trailers are also criticized when they incorporate shots that do not exist in the actual movie. When the trailer is edited from rushes this is practically unavoidable. In extreme cases, scenes may have been shot that were later cut from the release version of the movie, but may still exist in the trailer. Usually these scenes are similar in tone or content to material that does exist in the movie.
In other cases, trailers may use stock footage to convey, in shorthand, a concept that takes longer to explain (or is less visually dynamic) in the movie. In still other cases, shots or dialogue may be rearranged to create situations or exchanges that do not exist as such in the movie. Often this is done to mask a perceived shortcoming in the movie while maximizing the potential of the footage. An example of this was the trailer for Annapolis, which suggested that the film was a war film when in fact it was about boxing.
How much to give away in a trailer is a controversial question. Filmmaker Robert Zemeckis argues that a trailer should tell everything about a film, since, he claims, audiences will not want to pay to see films unless they know exactly what they are paying for. He made this statement after widespread complaints about the spoiler-filled trailers for his films What Lies Beneath (centering on the guilt of a character, a late revelation in the actual film, thus destroying the entire red herring subplot that works so well in the first hour of the movie) and Cast Away (which reveals the final destiny of the castaway trapped on an island). It was first thought that third party trailer-makers had spoiled the endings of his films, until Zemeckis revealed that the trailers were consistent with his philosophy. Many filmmakers disagree and believe that a trailer should show no more than is needed to convince the audience to see a film. From a studio marketing perspective, the most interesting, funny, arresting parts of the movie should be in the trailer—the theory being, showing only less interesting material will attract less of an audience.
Comedic films often have trailers which reveal little of the plot but show all of the best jokes (or in some cases, all of the jokes) in the movie.
Frequent moviegoers are subjected to the same trailer many times, which may be boring. It may also lead to apathy and resentment towards a movie that was practically crammed down their throats leading up to release.
In the mid 2000s, as movie editing software became more advanced it became a common trend for amateur to re-cut a trailer to comedic effect. Such edited trailers have probably existed on the Internet since the early 2000s, but it did not become a common joke until late 2005, probably due largely to the huge amount of Brokeback Mountain parodies that were created in late 2005 and early 2006.
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