Elves, Single All The Way and more streaming trailers to watch Catch all the best new trailers for TV shows and movies headed to popular streaming services. Streaming By Andy Walker. The best new movie trailers and TV show teasers for upcoming streaming titles Elves Elves are perhaps best known as the toy-making, pointy hat-wearing friends of Santa. Voir This series of video essays from David Fincher and David Prior deconstruct some of the greatest movies in our time and aim to understand why cinema remains one of the most impactful storytelling mediums.
Back To The Outback A group of animals, growing tired of the confines of the zoo, escape to the hostile Australian Outback. The master list of TV shows and movies. Disney Plus Hotstar gets new Netflix-like plans in India. Poll: Are you one of the , people who recently canceled Netflix? So marketing departments demand more and more footage, and studios and filmmakers go along with it because they want their films to be seen. Those trailers commit the same sins as the ones today:. And you know what else?
I never saw those trailers. Because trailers used to be something you avoided. They were viscerally annoying. We all my year-old friends and I used to actually get mad when they would come on before a movie. Now we sit in front of our computers all day and watch trailers. For a while that was pretty fun. It was great when Steve McQueen used the single piano note in the Hunger trailer , and then the studios came in and screwed it all up. But then we killed the goose that laid the golden bongs.
Maybe the issue is trailers have peaked they probably peaked with the Alien trailer in , but whatever. Hollywood needs to go back to the lab and figure out a new way of enticing people to see movies in the theater.
I would see that! There are no bad ideas in a brainstorm, except for the idea of putting more footage in trailers. Trailers want us to love movies.
We want to love movies. So in a way, every time a website posts a breezy story about new set-photos or trailers, we make it easier for the studios to marginalize the role of critics and hard journalists. We help sell the movie for them, and without much compensation—either monetary or in terms of our credibility.
They make up their minds when they see the posters and the commercials. Everything else is mere formality. But only to an extent. The Internet has changed the overall tone and approach of the entertainment media, pushing the discussion toward a more casual, fannish form at times—which is just fine, in measured doses.
After the Django Unchained trailer hit last week, for example, I saw pieces scrutinizing the trailer for cues to what the movie would be, and even some pieces that seemed to preliminarily judge Django based solely on a couple of minutes of clips. But not everything on the Internet has to be meant for me. The next generation of bubbly Save time, money, and ultimately help save the planet by forgoing your La Croix.
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