Bridesmaids is already something of a hit, we know The Hangover Part II is going to be a monster and with the recent releases of
trailers for films like 30 Minutes Or Less, Friends With Benefits, Crazy Stupid Love, Bad Teacher, The Change Up and Horrible Bosses, maybe this summer will be remembered less for its loud explosions and leotards and more for its laughs.
Apart from the obligatory chapter stops (15, in this case), there are unfortunately no supplemental bonus features, except for a small collection of
trailers for films like Echelon Conspiracy and Wrong Turn at Tahoe, the latter being the latest of many straight - to - video flicks starring Cuba Gooding, Jr..
«Nobody at the Tokyo cinema seemed fazed when
a trailer for a film like Resident Evil played right before a showing of Toy Story III.
Who knew
a trailer for a film like this would be as interesting and action packed like this?
I saw
a trailer for a film like this about a year ago and now I cant find anything.
Not exact matches
O'Donnell's recent television ad closed with a slogan that sounds
like the last line of a
trailer for a new M. Night Shyamalan
film: «I'm not a witch;... I'm you.»
It's
like watching the
trailers for movies before the
film starts.
Well the
film was wide release, so it makes sense there wasn't an entirety of focus on the specifics, but I still think it would have worked better if it was more
like the
trailers professed intentions; doco style, with vignettes of alien / human scenes that emphasized and helped explain, not found footage either,
like for example, after talking about Wikus in the past tense, it could focus on him
for a bit then move on, but it stuck with him, and the
film changed gears, I just thought it would have been better to focus on other things, as opposed to dumbing the plot down to one man and his battle against the evil government / corporation, and still stay in the doco style, it could have worked, no?
Our first Film Friday of the new year has brand - new
trailers and clips
for upcoming
films like «Battle: Los Angeles» and «Paul,» casting news
for «The Hobbit» and «The Dark Knight Rises,» and much more.
The unseen events bookending Easy Rawlins» (Denzel Washington) transition from disaffected war veteran to private investigator - namely his former criminal escapades with a trigger - happy associate in Texas (Don Cheadle) versus his further adventures as a fully - fledged gumshoe - unfortunately sound a lot more interesting than the story we are being told, making this feel
like a sequel to, or a two - hour
trailer for, an even better
film.
-- The
film's U.S. theatrical
trailer, along with a handful of other previews
for Sony Classics releases
like the unmissable Before Midnight.
We don't want to say anything more — and frankly, the
trailer makes it difficult to intuit much, save
for some mysterious affliction that seems to render people immobile — but our
film critic A.A. Dowd caught the
film at Cannes this year and praised it, saying Lanthimos «brings a thunderous, quaking dread to every square inch» of his latest project,
like a «twisted slow - burn Cape Fear.»
As much as I'd
like to blame the
trailers for misleading viewers, this is not an easy
film to market, and as such, most ticket buyers walked into their screening ready
for a simple, familiar formula: Seth Rogen + raunchy R - rated comedy.
2016's surprise sort - of - sequel 10 Cloverfield Lane provided our first look at the anthology -
like nature of this loose franchise umbrella, and while we wait to see a
trailer for God Particle (now possibly titled Cloverfield Station) and learn when and how we're actually going to see that movie, we have confirmation that Cloverfield 4 not only exists, but that it's already completed
filming.
Much
like Universal's other prominent awards hopeful Unbroken (which was covered in our previous installment), a
trailer for Get On Up has been released, which provides us some insight on the tone of the
film and how it will portray Brown.
When I watched the
trailer for this
film, I guessed it would go something
like this; man loses his job, has a mid-life crisis, goes on to do manual labor, overcomes his crisis, get offered big opportunity at end with him most likely turning it down because of the new leaf he turned over.
OUR TAKE: The
trailer looks
like a mix of so many other horror movies - and we're not sure our horror interest will extend beyond the Halloween holiday (at least not
for this
film).
It feels
like an extended
trailer for a computer game and this is largely due to the absolutely flat and lifeless action sequences that are so crucial to the
film's success (or lack thereof) as an action / fantasy.
It goes beyond the fact that the
trailers and logline
for the
film that we were all sold on totally misrepresent how the
film actually plays out, essentially spoiling the movie in a bizarrely indirect way that almost feels
like the studio hated it and was passive aggressively sabotaging it.
I, unlike many
film lovers around the world, fell in love with David Cronenberg only in... Continue reading ««A DANGEROUS METHOD» FEELS
LIKE A BAD
TRAILER FOR A GREAT MOVIE»
Watch the
trailers for that
film (conveniently embedded below) and the movie looks
like the
film that made it into theaters, but doesn't convey its tone or personality.
Per the
film's
trailer, it appears this time returning auteur Adam McKay will be fearlessly tackling the period's race politics with a similarly incisive eye to that he previously brought to bear on gender perception in the 1970s, and with a laundry list of Hollywood power players lining up
for cameo roles
like this is goddamn Altman or something, suffice to say that it's going to be an effort to stay classy till Christmas, but we're going to have to try.
With our own experience of the books (hey, we have nieces) being that # 2 is actually the best of the trilogy in expanding the mythology to a more resonant plane while still retaining the visceral excitement of the first, and with the director who'll be responsible
for the taking the franchise home now in the hot seat (Francis Lawrence, replacing Gary Ross), we're hopeful
for a
film that at least partially deserves its inevitably blockbusting box office, and the
trailer makes it look
like it may.
All summer I have seen
trailers for this dramatic
film and thought the premise was interesting, despite it looking
like just another chick...
Look, we get it: internet movie
trailer culture is a problem
for big
film studios, since they'd presumably
like to maintain at least a little bit of mystery around their high - profile
films.
The very long awaited and anticipated first
trailer for A24 «s Moonlight from writer / director Barry Jenkins (Medicine
for Melancholy) is here and it looks
like it could very well be that
film.
If beating advance ticket sales
for previous buzzed - about superhero
films are
like flipping over cars during a late - night road chase sequence in a movie
trailer, then Black Panther is
like... Black Panther, leaping ahead of those vehicles while a Run The Jewels track plays behind it.
Galleries of production stills, production art, filmmaker biographies, posters, lobby cards, merchandise, set documents (call sheets and the
like), and a screenplay excerpt of the
film's climax (Felton had a beautiful command of language), three radio spots, storyboard - to - screen comparisons
for the scuba and squid scenes, an outtakes reel, and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea's 1954 theatrical
trailer finish off this exhaustive treasure chest of a DVD.
It seems that Hollywood is mining John Murphy's
film score catalog
for trailers like this.
Noted Marchetti: «As we get closer to the home video / digital release, we'll be releasing new
trailers and new materials to make sure the genre fans, who love to collect
films like this, know what kind of wild ride they're in store
for.»
Like a lot of movie buffs who've mostly enjoyed the transition of Marvel superheroes to
film, I was intrigued by the
trailers for Thor and turned off by its clumsily designed rash of posters.
... It looks
like we'll soon get another peek at Marvel's first
film of 2018, with the BBFC classifying a new
trailer for Black Panther, which is expected to arrive around the same time as Thor: Ragnarok's UK theatrical opening on October 24th.
The arrival of a new Wes Anderson
film is an event — one that often cuts through the noise of anonymous studio
films geared
for commerce — so we thought, much
like we did last year
for «Moonrise Kingdom» (a piece you guys seemed to enjoy), that we'd do a similar
trailer deconstruction piece and look at some of the themes, motifs and similarities in «The Grand Budapest Hotel» and Anderson's previous movies.
Saw an extended
trailer for this the other night and it looks
like my kinda
film.
It's weird to see a
trailer for a
film that feels
like it has to throw out a recap definition of the Weather Underground, that group of radical leftists who in the early»70s embraced violent tactics (riots, bomb attacks on banks and government buildings) in order to protest government actions and argue
for revolution.
Given what we've seen in the
trailers for the
film, at worst it seems
like a fun and disposable
film.
I do
like the cast, and
for the sake of everyone involved, I hope the actual
film proves to be much better than this
trailer looks.
Admittedly, I have a soft spot
for the horror genre, but based on the
film's unforgettably tense and borderline - gothic
trailer, it seems
like it will be an atypical genre flick: relying less on sudden shocks and more on an atmosphere of dread and uncertainty to affect its viewers.
Fox cut a riveting, gorgeous
trailer that they showed off initially at last spring's CinemaCon, but
for the average moviegoer, as social media monitor RelishMix observes, they've seen this all before with «fans equating Red Sparrow to female - starring action
films like Salt & Atomic Blonde.»
A BD - Live section lets you stream
trailers for various current Universal properties (including Bring It On: The Musical) as well as some exclusive content pertaining to other
films and their Blu - ray releases (
like a Judd Apatow Funny People Q & A).
This
trailer, with nice cameos by Doug Jones and Bruce Thomas, makes it look
like it could be a pretty good
film, but man is it going to be brutally violent, that is
for sure.
I really enjoyed the
film in French but after watching the
trailer, I'm really curious to see how it sounds in English, especially when Page sounds
like a perfect fit
for her character.
Anderson is clearly trying to distinguish his version from the many others that came before it by instilling a steampunk -
like aesthetic to the
film, but while he deserves some credit
for at least trying something new, the
trailer is so laughably bad that it seems to be all
for naught.
Yeah, there were the tongue - in - cheek teenage quips, with burps and cowabungas thrown in
for good measure, but from a glimpse of the
trailer, it looked
like they set out to make a decent
film.
This is a crazy cool, twisted concept
for a
film and it seems
like it's actually pretty messed up with the footage they show in this
trailer.
The theatrical
trailer and TV spots
for The Missing made the
film look
like a psychological thriller and perhaps even a supernatural horror movie.
Arriving October 6th from Universal and Legendary Pictures, the
trailer for Crimson Peak looks
like a classic haunter on roids as Guillermo del Toro brings all sorts of inspiration from
films such as The Legend of Hell House, The Haunting, House On Haunted Hill, The Addams Family and even Haunted Mansion.
It looks
like some people just could not wait
for the Thanksgiving theatrical release of the first
trailer for the highly anticipated
film because director Colin Trevorrow just tweeted it out
like no big deal:
It looks
like all the right ingredients
for another great Woody Allen
film, with this
trailer for Blue Jasmine.
«When I was young, Parvana, I knew what peace felt
like...» GKids has debuted the full - length theatrical
trailer for an animated
film titled The Breadwinner, set in the heart of Afghanistan telling the story of a girl who dresses as a boy in order to work and provide
for her family.