Shoplifters
/Releasing stateside via Magnolia Pictures, “Shoplifters” is the latest by Japanese master filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda. The drama was received as effusive and heart-wrenching, winning the Palme d’Or this year.
Read MoreReleasing stateside via Magnolia Pictures, “Shoplifters” is the latest by Japanese master filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda. The drama was received as effusive and heart-wrenching, winning the Palme d’Or this year.
Read MoreA clear prestige contender for this year’s Oscars, “The Mule” finds Clint Eastwood on his first big screen foray since “Trouble With the Curve” (2012).
Read MoreHolmes and Watson is the next big Will Ferrell flick and most likely this holiday’s season’s biggest draw for Hollywood comedy. Aurally, the trailer hones in on a gradual and playful erosion of the fourth wall, as the ruse that Ferrell and co. put on as Victorian-era law-abiders, while never convincing, eventually drops all pretence – both figuratively and literally.
Read MoreLast time we followed the trailer campaign for Wreck-It Ralph 2 , in June, the trailer featured Daft Punk’s internet-acknowledged hit “Harder, Better, Faster Stronger.” This week’s new trailer continues down this path of nostalgia-tinged novelty by rick-rolling us all.
Read MoreReleased a few days ago, the official teaser for Focus Features’ Captive State feels primed as one part alien invasion movie with a healthy dash of vaguely political commentary. Indeed, it’s hard not to think of the much-ballyhooed American Space Force when watching this trailer. According to the official synopsis, Captive State is set in a Chicago neighbourhood after almost ten years of occupation by an alien force. What promises to propel the film is the conflict between those who comply and those who resist. Again, it is hard not to draw parallels to the political moment south of Trailaurality’s Canadian border when there is an entire coalition of American voters who identify on social media as the de facto, capital-R Resistance. This being said, we’re here for the music and sound, and there is much to say on this front as well.
Read MoreWe last covered the trailer campaign for Halloween back in early June; now, as we enter fall and near the film’s release, the film is ramping up its promotional presence with its second trailer dropping this past week. Having been a part of the canon of Hollywood slasher/horror films since its inception in 1978, Halloween in the 2018 edition enters a part-reboot, part-sequel wherein Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) is found older, wiser, and much more stridently taking on antagonist Michael Myers (Nick Castle). As we’ll hear, John Carpenter similarly reprises his role as the composer of the franchise’s famous piano theme.
Read MoreThe final trailer for Johnny English Strikes Again was recently released, and it picks up mostly where the previous trailer left off. The series, which parodies the James Bond series and likely takes in part from Mike Myers’ turn-of-the-century Austin Powers trilogy, is the third in a series that began in 2003 and had a sequel in 2011’s Johnny English Reborn.
Read MoreFooted by Amazon Studios, Suspiria (2018) is a remake of the 1977 Italian supernatural horror film by Dario Argento. At a world-renowned German dance company, an artistic director, an ambitious young American dancer, and a grieving psychotherapist are engulfed in an all-consuming darkness. The original film was itself based on an 1845 essay by Thomas De Quincey, Suspiria de Profundis (“Sighs from the Depths”).
Read MoreThis week on Trailaurality, we’re taking a step back from weekly analysis of a given trailer and instead giving the spotlight to a large and ever-growing phenomenon in the ever-evolving fan/producer relationship with trailers: reaction videos.
Read MoreAs we enter mid-August, trailers geared towards the holiday season are ramping up; one such features the next outing for Disney’s recent line of live-action films ensconced firmly in the fantasy genre. Following Maleficent (as a spin-off of Sleeping Beauty and the live-action rendition of Beauty and the Beast comes The Nutcracker and the Four Realms.
Read MoreFeaturing Chloë Sevigny and Kristen Stewart and arriving in select theatres September 14th, Lizzie captures the story of Lizzie Borden, the infamous Massachusetts woman who was tried (and eventually acquitted) for the murder (by hatchet) of her father and stepmother in 1892.
Read MoreDue for release this October, Mid90s arrives as the promising promotional material for Jonah Hill’s (best known as a partner-in-laughs to many Seth Rogen films) potentially auspicious debut as director.
Read MoreThis week we are looking at and listening to The Darkest Minds, a new thriller that is one part Stranger Things (produced by the same people, no less), and one part X-Men – “if you can hear this, you’re one of us” intones a voice underneath grainy radio static at the beginning of the trailer, immediately suggesting the kind of psychopathic horror/adventure that Stranger Things has become emblematic of, but as will be seen and heard, definitely of a more action-oriented lilt.
Read MoreA top winner at Sundance 2018, The Miseducation of Cameron Post’s trailer is comedic, quirky, and bears a loveable brand of eccentricity not unlike a Wes Anderson production, taking on the difficult subject of gender and identity and conveying a difficult experience in a relatively light-hearted way.
Read MoreComing in early 2019 as part of TNT’s “Suspense Collection,” I Am the Night promises to be a thrilling match-up, with Wonder Woman director Patty Jenkins directing Hollywood phenom Chris Pine. In this series, a runaway woman discovers that she’s familially connected to a doctor-come-murderer, George Hodel. The suspense that ensues promises equal parts horror and film noire, and the trailer certainly obliges.
Read MoreWritten by Brooks McLaren and directed by David M. Rosenthal, How It Ends is an upcoming Netflix original set to premiere July 13th, roughly eight years after the the initial script in 2010.
Read MoreFollowing some six years after the 2012 original, Disney Animation’s Wreck-It Ralph 2 doesn’t hold back or play shy about its status as an unabashed sequel: it promises everything that earned its 87% on Rotten Tomatoes, but more.
Read MoreSiberia is Keanu Reeves’ latest filmic foray; it offers a similar dramatic palette that whets the appetites of John Wick fans, with a Russian twist.
Read MoreNot quite a reboot and not quite a sequel, Halloween is part of an eleven-instalment franchise stretching back to 1978. Without particular for continuity with its previous sequels, this version of what’s become a sort of re-told myth in the American slasher tradition of filmmaking sees Jamie Lee Curtis reprise her original role as Laurie Strode, seeking some forty years later to enact violent revenge on the escaped mental patient and original film’s murderer, Michael Myers (Nick Castle). As such, the film is best thought of as a direct sequel to the original, within its own continuity.
Read MoreAs covered earlier, the Golden Trailer awards were held last Thursday. The 19th annual event recognized an array of trailers across a variety of categories.
Read MoreThis week we’ll explore the official trailer for Park Chan-wook’s new film No Other Choice, which recently won the International People’s Choice Award at TIFF.
The trailer opens with a spin on the original series theme by Nathan Johnson, this time with tubular bells carving out that signature rising minor motif, suggesting the sacred context and accompanied by pizzicato strings for intrigue. At 0:21 the strings almost rise out of control, only to be grounded by blaring synth at 0:23 alongside a ticking sound. Carrying on the sacred context a wordless choir punctuates the monologue of the series star, detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig); the ticking doubles up at 0:38 as our intrigue deepens over the story of a monsignor (a kind of priest) who appears to be murdered just out of plain sight—a “classic impossible crime”, in Blanc’s words.
Starring Tessa Thompson and with music Hildur Guðnadóttir, there’s no shortage of reasons to get excited about Amazon Prime’s Hedda, a lesbian love triangle drama film set in the upper crust of 1950s British society–it’s Nia Da Costa’s fresh take on a Henrik Ibsen play.
Copyright Dr. James Deaville. Carleton University.
Funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.