Knives Out: Glass Onion

Knives Out: Glass Onion

Making a quick comparison between the trailer for the series’ debut back in 2019 and the current offering by writer-director Rian Johnson (Looper, Brick; Star Wars Episode VII: The Last Jedi), there is a bit of an aural link, though perhaps not an obvious one. Both trailers start with the same note, but in this latter instalment everything is bigger and brighter: a mildly dilapidated mansion is traded up for a private Greek island with sun to spare and a single piano is replaced by thrumming strings. At 0:13 the director’s title card is prominently placed, featuring what sounds like the click of a camera synched to the music. At 0:22 a single, reverberant piano note is used—a well-trodden trope, but at least appropriately placed to signal the arrival of the recurring and central figure of the series, detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig), sporting his trademark Foghorn Leghorn-esque Kentucky accent.

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The Fabelmans

The Fabelmans

After a lifetime of telling others’ stories through film, The Fabelmans promises to be a truly special project for Steven Spielberg as he sets out to tell his own (albeit in a decidedly fictionalized manner). It’s a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age tale set in post-war Arizona—likely shot at the Vasquez Rocks, in particular—that serves as an ode to filmmaking itself.

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Babylon

Babylon

With Damien Chazelle directing (LaLa Land, Whiplash), it comes as little surprise that Babylon would have such an intense musical focus for its trailer, which certainly has been making the rounds at the Toronto International Film Festival. Justin Hurwitz returns as composer, helping to cement their reputation as a special collaborative partnership. Every so often, an auteur director will have longtime collaborators, especially in music; Alfred Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann, James Cameron and James Horner, or Tim Burton and Danny Elfman all spring to mind as easy examples of such a phenomenon. With Babylon, Chazelle and Hurwitz surely enter such a category (as if there were any doubt).

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Secret Invasion

Secret Invasion

The (not so) secret to the trailer for Disney’s Secret Invasion, the latest in a steady drumbeat of Marvel Cinematic Universe-based TV series to hit the streaming platform, is in the sound design. For the first twenty seconds or so, a monologue directed at Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) is interrupted only by the occasional ominous, appropriately unidentifiable sound—such as the low-fidelity blare at 0:18 as Fury exits what looks like a spacecraft, or the diegetic closing of a huge metal door at 0:23, interacting somewhat with the dialogue (a closing door as she speaks of Fury’s avoidance). The off-screen voice of Maria Hill appears in frame at 0:30; the sounds pause for a moment as Fury delivers his first line: “yeah, well, this is different”.

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Armageddon Time

Armageddon Time

Written and directed by James Gray (Little Odessa, Ad Astra) and having premiered earlier this year at Cannes, Armageddon Time is a period drama strongly inspired by Gray’s own coming of age. It focuses on the experience of a Jewish-American child, Paul (Banks Repeta), who finds himself at odds with racist parents and educators over his friendship with Johnny (Jaylin Webb). Anthony Hopkins, meanwhile, plays the role of both Paul’s grandfather and a compassionate conscience.

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Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Between a preponderance of franchise movies coming out in this coming holiday season, with Avatar: The Way of Water and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever in the lead, at least one film with a two-part title promises something relatively fresh. The latest Dungeons and Dragons is Paramount Pictures’ reboot of the prior trilogy (2000-2012), and promises a mix of action and comedic flair, leading off with the star power of Chris Pine, perhaps not unlike what Dwayne Johnson was able to do with the Jumanji franchise.

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Andor

Andor

Andor’s trailer definitely diverges sonically from previous Star Wars fare; not only does it follow from the recently concluded Obi-Wan Kenobi series, but it also tells a story centring on much lesser-known characters. These factors probably contribute to a musical backdrop that almost necessarily deviates from the series’ classic musical themes. While the composer for the series is Nicholas Britell (who composed the much-lauded theme for Succession, among other things), epic music composer Rok Nardin takes the reins for the trailer, using “Quantum Field”, a piece yet to be published.

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Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

As the Marvel Cinematic Universe unfolds in its Phase Four plan to reset and introduce characters, surely none of these resets resonates so much as it does for the Black Panther franchise, which faces the untimely passing of its lead, Chadwick Boseman. In light of this, the trailer opens with a cover of Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” (1974). The song acts in a sense as a direct bridge to the audience, in recognition of what everyone knows—the mantle of Black Panther must be passed in this film. It becomes as much, if not more, a tribute to Boseman as it prepares the viewer for the coming narrative.

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House of the Dragon

House of the Dragon

The trailer leverages two musical themes from the original show’s music, originally composed by Ramin Djawadi: the main theme and the House Targaryen theme. This is evident from the outset, with its distinctive rising semitones in its melodic arc as the most conspicuous aspect of the first forty seconds. The addition of epic percussion and a large choir to the theme reinforces the greater focus on the dragons—entirely apt, as a prequel that centers on the titular beasts and the Targaryens’ historical ties to them.

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Pinocchio

Pinocchio

The teaser trailer starts with an ambient tone, on a single note: for those who know it’s a trailer for Pinocchio, the use of “When You Wish Upon a Star” (originally by Cliff Edwards, 1939) is all but a given. The trick is when exactly to release that dose of nostalgia, and this trailer’s edit is suave in taking its time before unloading the goods. We can do a quick call back to the scene with the mechanical clocks at 0:16 (and note how the sound arrives before the image), as well as a little arpeggiated flourish from time to time, but otherwise the scene is simply awash in synth—Glow, composed by Richard Canavan of Audiomachine in collaboration with Harry Lightfoot (Top Gun: Maverick, Encanto, and others) effectively sets the scene.

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The Menu

The Menu

The trailer for The Menu is an exercise in precision. Directed by Mark Mylod and starring Ralph Fiennes (who’s starred in a wide filmography, from The Grand Budapest Hotel to the Harry Potter movies), the horror-inspired take on conceptual dining was bound to be different, and this trailer’s design follows suit.

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Ms. Marvel

Ms. Marvel

This trailer wastes no time in putting the music front and center, with The Weeknd’s recent (2019) hit “Blinding Lights” setting the tone: at eight seconds in, the first frame of action coincides with the downbeat of the drums, synched to the clicking of a pen. An instrumental version of the track serves to underpin a variety of dialogue. At 0:26 the music pauses for a punchline. As the music returns, some extra accent hits punctuate the scenes where Ms. Marvel (Iman Vellani, as Kamala Khan) makes an appearance. A clock that appeared earlier in the trailer comes in at 0:33, where a ticking sound rises to the fore in the arrangement. For whatever reason, as we’ve noted before, ticking has become a go-to sonic element in the trailer’s musical arrangement; it could simply be for the sense of presence and vitality it suggests, or it could be that the pandemic has made us more conscious of passing time.

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