9th Annual Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Announced
/The Guild of Music Supervisors recently announced their nominees for their 9th annual awards. Naturally, we’re particularly interested in the “Trailers & Promos” category.
Read MoreThe Guild of Music Supervisors recently announced their nominees for their 9th annual awards. Naturally, we’re particularly interested in the “Trailers & Promos” category.
Read MoreRalph Fiennes, a noted Shakespeare interpreter best best known for his appearance as Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter films, directs this upcoming bio pic of Rudolf Nureyev (Oleg Ivenko), the famed 20th century ballet dancer widely known as “Lord of the Dance.”
Read MoreAlthough Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse may be just making its way out of theatres as of this writing, the Marvel train waits for no one, and we’re already being promised another swinging foray this summer with Spider-Man: Far From Home.
Read MoreTommy James and the Shondells’ 1968 classic “Crimson and Clover” is the song of the day here, and you can already guess which lyrics are being highlighted: as the character (Natasha Lyonne, of Orange is the New Black fame) falls down the stairs to an untimely demise or recklessly staggers into oncoming traffic, the words “over and over” softly drift over her lifeless body as the day is made to repeat once again.
Read MoreIn the aftermath of the influx of holiday season trailers and into the awards show season, we thought it an opportune time to refocus on what’s happening on the small screen. Among the most musically interesting of recent TV trailers is certainly the latest foray promoting the next season for Star Trek: Discovery. This trailer features a constantly shifting and building arrangement that arrives at a satisfying conclusion in its final moments.
Read MoreIt’s that time of year again: 2018 yielded a strong cast of trailers across genres, budgets, and styles. Now for our second year running, here are a few trailers that we felt stood head and shoulders above the rest this year, with a special focus, of course, on the soundtrack.
Read MoreAs we begin to close out the year, we begin to look back – an introspectiveness takes us over alongside the spike in socialization over the holidays, with the implication of the New Year’s resolutions to follow. Of a similar tack comes this trailer for the latest HBO docudrama, focusing this time on the Brexit campaign and its inner workings. While Britons surely want an official investigation into the matter, this Toby Haynes-directed piece might have to do for now. (We kid, of course.)
Read MoreThis sequel to Shaun the Sheep (2015) comes from Aardman, the studio behind Wallace and Gromit and Chicken Run. Known for its visually arresting stop-motion style, Shaun the Sheep: Farmageddon promises, delightfully, more of the same.
Read MoreDirected by Brad Corbet, Vox Lux is a film that in some ways serves as a good chaser to Lady Gaga-lead A Star is Born. Vox Lux follows Celeste in her initial rise to fame in the way of tragedy as a teenager, and subsequently her struggles with her own teenager daughter as she juggles this responsibility and maintaining her career as a relatively older popular music performer.
Read MoreBased on a novel by Ryu Murakami (not to be confused with Haruki Murakami, of 1Q84 fame) and directed by Nicolas Pesce (The Eyes of my Mother, 2016), Piercing (2019) is a psychological thriller hinging on a night between Reed (Christopher Abbott) and Jackie (Mia Wasikowska). Ostensibly on a business trip, Reed leaves his family with a briefcase packed with tools for murder; to his mind, the cure to excise his impulse for violence is to carry out the deed. Jackie, a call girl, is not taken so easily however, and the dynamic veers wildly between lasciviousness and outright violence.
Read MoreIn previous blog posts and on Twitter, we’ve covered the unintentional lack of backing music for a The Mummy reboot trailer, and as an intentional artistic choice in the trailer for horror film A Quiet Place. We said it might be “both a first and only” occurrence for the blog, and today that’s no longer true – the second film to embrace its total lack of tonality, however, could not be more different in tone.
Read MoreYou may have expected Ryan Reynolds to next take up share in your mind with the nigh-inevitable Deadpool 3 – yet, early Christmas miracles do come true. While it’s not the Danny Devito starring role that fans have been clamouring for, this has been one of the most-discussed and intriguingly unusual choices in animated voice acting in recent memory.
Read MoreLaika Studios (Coraline, Kubo and the Two Strings) returns with its signature stop-motion animated style with Missing Link, imagining if Bigfoot were decided more attuned to modernity than any of us might think.
Read MoreThe latest from from the Coen Brothers is part of a Western anthology coming to Netflix. Twenty-five years in, the Brothers’ irreverent wit and playful humour shows no signs of abating. Premiering at the Venice International Film Festival, the second trailer for The Ballad of Buster Scruggs recently released. The first episode in the six-fold series, it promises to be a mix of comedy and violence, not unlike the previous Coen classic Burn After Reading, or more directly, other Coen takes on the Western True Grit (2010) and, of course, No Country for Old Men (2007). With star power like James Franco and Tom Waits in the wings, Buster Scruggs and the attendant anthology promise to follow well in the previous Westerns’ footsteps.
Read More“The Best of Enemies” sees civil rights activist Ann Atwater go up against noted Ku Klux Klan member C. P. Ellis on the issue of school integration – and the pervasive sonic theme here is, indeed, integration. At the beginning of the trailer, for example, the sound of a distant school bell is suddenly engulfed by a burning flame; this bell exact as a perfect sound bridge and segue as it morphs into the sound of a ringing landline telephone. Similarly, this trailer employs a very subtle mashup that in some sense embodies the racial relations that the film promises to explore.
Read MoreEscape Room is the latest trend-come-film cash-in, a horror film with a flair for the supernatural somewhat reminiscent of Jumanji as a set piece wherein the players are being played. Arriving by way of Sony Pictures January 2019, it uses a few trailer music trends and techniques that have marked several other recent film trailers.
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 MoreDisney’s 3D animation division is back with another modern fantasy, this time focusing on the coming of age for Billie, a teen who feels miscast and out of place in her suburban life and discovers the magical realm of Hexe.
A remake of Spanish film The People Upstairs (2020), The Invite has a new trailer that sports a modern remix of the famous opera aria “Habanera” from Georges Bizet’s Carmen. It’s a Spanish-inspired American film using music from a Spanish-inspired French opera. The trailer opens with some verbal sparring between Angela (played by Olivia Wilde, who directs and co-stars) and Joe (Seth Rogen) while a persistent note on the double bass and pulsing shakers establish a groove. The editing here helps many of the words in this dialogue land on beat with the music.
Directed by David Robert Mitchell (best known for the critical acclaimed It Follows), The End of Oak Street adds to a recent crop of more original ideas coming out of Hollywood—we’re thinking, of course, of the runaway success to Backrooms.
Copyright Dr. James Deaville. Carleton University.
Funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.