New Movie Trailers and Spoilers

[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:

[quote]RATTLEHEAD wrote:

Wolverine Teaser Trailer[/quote]

I wonder how this will turn out, lately his X-Men themed movies haven’t interested me much. I largely preferred the older films.

But I am a sucker for traditional Japanese culture, so who knows, I could be swayed.[/quote]

I’m looking forward to it because in all honesty I think this could be the last shot jackman has to create THE wolverine movie after blowing it last time.

If he can nail the character like he did in the first x men i’m happy all round

[quote]Derek542 wrote:

This trailer made me more interested in the movie than the last one.

Yep me to

A different new teaser for the new Wolverine movie…

[quote]MaximusB wrote:

A different new teaser for the new Wolverine movie…

[/quote]

Fuck yes, the fighting looks 100x better than before

Full size trailer. Looks like Logan made a pretty shitty lifestyle choice on his holiday to Japan.

This is what sold me…Im in.

[quote]four60 wrote:
This is what sold me…Im in.

Me too. I can’t wait to see this.

Best of all it’s based on a true story that’s just as crazy as the movie looks.

http://www.miaminewtimes.com/1999-12-23/news/pain-gain/

james

Lol. Fucking Rock is huge

HA

These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines.

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

This is probably my favourite example of what I think is the perfect kind of trailer

[quote]four60 wrote:
HA

Am I the only one that feels they could have done a little bit better than that whiny Hendrix cover?

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

The reason trailers are so revealing is that they never use voice-overs anymore. Where’s the epic gravel- voiced guy who bought his oral care supplies at a hardware store?

[quote]roybot wrote:

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

The reason trailers are so revealing is that they never use voice-overs anymore. Where’s the epic gravel- voiced guy who bought his oral care supplies at a hardware store?[/quote]

Definitely what trailers are missing now.

[quote]roybot wrote:

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

The reason trailers are so revealing is that they never use voice-overs anymore. Where’s the epic gravel- voiced guy who bought his oral care supplies at a hardware store?[/quote]
I thought I remember hearing that guy with the famous voice died.

I’ve seen tha comedy bit before, never gets old. “Get down again!”

[quote]strungoutboy21 wrote:
I thought I remember hearing that guy with the famous voice died.

I’ve seen tha comedy bit before, never gets old. “Get down again!”[/quote]

Yerp, Don LaFontaine, went in late 2008.

[quote]strungoutboy21 wrote:

[quote]roybot wrote:

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

The reason trailers are so revealing is that they never use voice-overs anymore. Where’s the epic gravel- voiced guy who bought his oral care supplies at a hardware store?[/quote]
I thought I remember hearing that guy with the famous voice died.

I’ve seen tha comedy bit before, never gets old. “Get down again!”[/quote]

More…

http://my.spill.com/profiles/blogs/bloody-new-image-from-the-raid-2

I loved the first one

[quote]strungoutboy21 wrote:

[quote]roybot wrote:

[quote]Gettnitdone wrote:
These trailers show too fuckin’ much and by some of the top comments on the Youtube pages for all these trailers, it looks like I’m not the only one who thinks that.

These stupid studios like Paramount and Universal need to go back 20-40 years and remind themselves how to properly make a trailer that doesn’t reveal too much about the plot or characters but still entices the viewer enough to shell out 12 bucks on release date.

Yes, many of the trailers now still successfully over-sell and create exaggerated expectations of the films - a characteristic common to all good trailers during any period (duh, that’s the point) but now they’re doing it at a greater cost. Pin the phenomena down to desperation in an era of enormous budgets and tight competition, but c’mon, it won’t be long before the trend starts to hurt the studios in the only place they ultimately care about – their bottom-lines. [/quote]

The reason trailers are so revealing is that they never use voice-overs anymore. Where’s the epic gravel- voiced guy who bought his oral care supplies at a hardware store?[/quote]
I thought I remember hearing that guy with the famous voice died.
[/quote]

He did, but he wasn’t the only narrator with sand blasted lungs.