Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

As we’ve noted fairly often in this blog, musical biopics have experienced considerable popularity in recent years; it stands to reason given this context that eventually, after perhaps the more obvious choices (such as Whitney Houston, Elvis, Queen, or Elton John), attention would turn to those a bit outside—the provocateurs. And among that crowd, there are vanishingly few who have commanded the limelight as consistently as Al Yankovic has.

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Jurassic World: Dominion

Jurassic World: Dominion

How far can one take two musical notes? The trailer for Jurassic World: Dominion seems determined to answer that question. The B-flat / A / B-flat motif has been a part of almost every film in the franchise since its 1993 debut, but usually the melody is harmonized in a way that emphasizes wonder. Not so for this trailer: it takes about seven seconds for a note in the lower register to indicate a much more dour, even sinister mood. The melody then veers into new territory around 0:15, moving upwards as epic percussion batters the senses.

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Top Gun: Maverick

Top Gun: Maverick

For Tom Cruise, it’s not as much a reboot or sequel as it is a return: a startling thirty-six years have passed, yet Cruise shows no sign of slowing down. For the trailer, however, the star is a sound—namely, the sweeping whoosh of fighter planes. After a six-second micro-teaser, the trailer wastes little time (re)establishing the characters, partly to induce drama (“What the hell kind of mission is this?”, a pilot intones)—but the chatter is more of a set-up to the main attraction at 0:22. A jump cut to a precious few seconds of fighter plane action, with every turn of the plane accentuated by the sonic design, steals the show.

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Shining Girls

Shining Girls

Based on the best-selling novel by Lauren Beukes, the upcoming series Shining Girls follows Kirby Mazrachi (Elizabeth Moss, who is also executive produces), a reporter based in Chicago who as a victim of assault attempts to track down her attacker. Things become more complex when she learns that a murder in the area is linked to her case.

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Obi-Wan

Obi-Wan

Disney continues to use its streaming platform to expand on various corners of its vast intellectual property empire, and the latest television series in the Star Wars universe promises to answer a simple but intriguing question: just what exactly happened with Obi-Wan Kenobi in the thirty-odd years between Episodes III and IV?

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The Flight Attendant S2

The Flight Attendant S2

On the eve of the summer blockbuster campaign season, the pace nevertheless continues steadily for trailer drops for television series, whether on streaming or cable. Among them is what might be fairly put as Kaley Cuoco’s second act post-Big Bang Theory, The Flight Attendant. It’s a dramedy that put the actor in a new light in the first season and promises to extend that premise in the next one.

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Bullet Train

Bullet Train

With David Leitch (Atomic Blonde, Deadpool 2) presiding over directorial duties and Brad Pitt in the actor’s seat alongside Sandra Bullock, Brian Tyree Henry, Joey King, and Hiroyuki Sanada, Bullet Train looks to be equal parts action-packed and irreverent. Building on a heritage of train thrillers such as Silver Streak and Murder on the Orient Express, Bullet Train looks to extend the subgenre with a sardonic twist.

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The Bubble

The Bubble

Now that we are officially some two years into the pandemic, it makes sense that we might begin to see a film or two that fully reckon with COVID-19 in whatever way the studios best see fit. It’s a question that most are avoiding: do you acknowledge the pandemic’s existence in film? While most don’t, Judd Apatow (The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Trainwreck) evidently saw the opportunity for potential comedic gold.

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Moon Knight

Moon Knight

The next iteration of Marvel’s parade of short episodic series on Disney+ continues with a lesser-known property, Moon Knight. In it, Steven Grant (Oscar Isaac) leads an otherwise unremarkable life as a gift shop employee but stumbles into a series of blackouts. He develops a dissociative identity disorder, believing he is also Marc Spector, a mercenary; a mystery involving the gods of Egypt ensues.

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The Catch-Up: Severance, Bel-Air, Marry Me, and Hatching

The Catch-Up: Severance, Bel-Air, Marry Me, and Hatching

Mid-winter isn’t usually the busiest period on the annual trailer release schedule, with holiday releases lingering and the potential summer blockbusters on standby. Trailers seems to take a back seat to the awards ceremonies for the prior year. However, there is nonetheless a fair amount still underway, thanks in part to the steady drip of new content for streaming services. Here’s our latest roundup of recent trailers that caught our ears.

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Studio 666

Studio 666

Now coming from you from the department of “things you didn’t know you needed”, the Foo Fighters have neatly side-stepped the influx of musical biopics in recent years with an unabashedly campy, B-movie horror film. In a way, it was always in them: one need only glance at the music video for their best-known hit, 1997’s “Everlong”, to find a strong homage to the Evil Dead movies.

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The 2022 Trailaurality Awards

The 2022 Trailaurality Awards

Another year has passed, and with it, well over four dozen trailers written up at Trailaurality as part of our weekly review. Film trailers continue to be a fascinating showcase for audiovisual editing techniques that, partly as a result of the genre’s short form and advertorial purpose, strive for memorability and notability. This can be achieved in a variety of ways: some offer remarkable instrumentation; some involve a particularly striking edit. In addition to library and original music, trailers are often the domain of some truly unique cover songs and rearrangements. This latter trend is in particular a hallmark of more recent trailers, with a choral arrangement of Radiohead’s “Creep” for The Social Network (2010) often referred to as a watershed moment. Here are a few trailers released in 2021 that we think are particularly worth a second listen, as this small format continues to advance the craft of editing in measurable ways.

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The Catch-Up: Death on the Nile, Janet Jackson, and C’mon, C’mon

The Catch-Up: Death on the Nile, Janet Jackson, and C’mon, C’mon

Welcome to 2022—and with the new year, there’s no slowdown in trailer activity coming off of the holidays. Although it appears Omicron has stifled theatre activity in many parts of the world, there still appears to be an overall expectation that theatres might be back in full force at some point this year; indeed, there are many deferred releases from the past two years or so set for release in the near future. In keeping with recent posts, here are a few recent trailers that caught our ears.

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The Catch-Up: The House of the Dragon, Halo, and The Witcher

The Catch-Up: The House of the Dragon, Halo, and The Witcher

Unsurprisingly, the holidays are a particularly busy time in the realm of film trailers. For its brief window of opportunity before Omicron begins to dig into box office profits, Spiderman: No Way Home has returned blockbuster revenue to heights not seen since 2019. It’s a somewhat surprising affirmation of the theatrical release: for all the hand-wringing about balancing exclusivity between premium-tier streaming platforms (such as Disney Plus Premier Access) and other alternate methods of windowing, it does appear that—variants be damned—people have also just wanted to go to the movies. That being said, streaming television series with high production values are also clearly here to stay. Here are a few that caught our eye—and ear.

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Everything Everywhere All at Once

Everything Everywhere All at Once

Everything Everywhere All at Once looks both admirably understated in its ostensible theme and wildly ambitious in its execution. The film stars Michelle Yeoh (Tomorrow Never Dies; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) and is co-written by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (known simply as “Daniels”, and perhaps best recognized for 2016’s Swiss Army Man). A thematic mix of underpromising in its setting and premise and overdelivering in its execution and exploration is at least partly a key to its positive reception thus far. Specifically, the way the audio is edited in this trailer lends much to this overall impression.

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Moonfall

Moonfall

Starring the ageless Halle Berry, Patrick Wilson, and John Bradley, Moonfall’s concept is decidedly different, as far as disaster movies go: as one might guess from the title, the moon has been knocked out of orbit, and is now on a crash course with Earth. The how and why of it, however, remains an intriguing mystery that promises to lend the film a bit of depth.

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Morbius

Morbius

We last covered Morbius in January 2020; while it’s perhaps obvious why there was a delay of nearly two years, the wait is almost over. Whereas in a previous trailer the musical conceit was a play on Beethoven’s über-popular “Für Elise”, this time we get a trailerized cover version of The Doors’ “People Are Strange” (1967, from Strange Days). The lyrics are on point—“people are strange, when you’re a stranger”—and while there’s an element of obviousness to it, it’s clever enough of a turn on the meaning of the original tune, and the vocals are partly obscured by orchestral atmospherics anyway.

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