A Quiet Place Part II
/John Krasinski’s well-received break-out hit A Quiet Place drew attention on this blog last year for its relative absence of music; the trailer for its follow-up, the aptly-appended Part II, continues this approach.
Read MoreJohn Krasinski’s well-received break-out hit A Quiet Place drew attention on this blog last year for its relative absence of music; the trailer for its follow-up, the aptly-appended Part II, continues this approach.
Read MoreNow in our third year, as we close 2019 we wanted to look back and honour what we thought were a few key trailers that really moved the needle in terms of the art of placing film in concert with sound and music in a small-scale narrative form.
Read MoreAs we begin to close out this year—and decade—the barrage of polarized political news finds either a reprieve or a conduit, depending on how one may approach it, with In the Heights.
Set in the eponymous Washington Heights, a neighbourhood in northern Manhattan, New York, the musical is set to Lin-Manuel Miranda’s words and melodies, while Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians) takes the director’s helm.
Read MoreUndoubtedly the breakout hit of the DC Extended Universe that Warner Bros. Pictures is pushing to capitalize on the past decade of Marvel’s dominance in theatres, Wonder Woman receives its due sequel in June 2020. Its first trailer drops just in time for the holiday season, and as per the title no time is wasted to foreground the new film’s central conceit as evidenced in the title—worlds away from World War II, instead we have Gal Gadot in the time of neon and synthesizers.
Read MoreWe are once again on the verge of holiday trailer season, and among the first out of this proverbial gate comes promo for the long-anticipated conclusion to Daniel Craig’s run as James Bond, No Time To Die.
Read MoreWhile Trailaurality covered Knives Out previously, this last trailer—more of an homage than a parody or satire—is more than worth a look and listen.
Read MoreJustin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick continue their roles as core creative partners for the Trolls movie franchise, and this time they lean even more heavily into the musical angle.
This go around, the story is built specifically to accommodate and explore distinctive genres of music—funk, country, techno, classical, pop, and rock are included. While one could ask questions of representation and why one genre is picked over another, such a question wouldn't be possible to answer independently, and one could argue a relatively well-differentiated swathe of styles is on offer.
Read More6 Underground, the new Netflix special starring Ryan Reynolds and directed by Michael Bay, is exactly what you might suspect that particular pairing would produce: In essence, this is Deadpool’s Italian Vacation, with the deft mix of action and comedy that title implies.
Read MoreIn Pixar’s latest, Soul, Joe Gardner is a middle-school band teacher, but he wants to be a jazz musician; more than that, he feels he’s born to do it. After Joe’s rhetorical question—with Jamie Foxx’s readily identifiable voice first taking the fore—we hear “Overture (The Click)”, a 2017 track by AJR, an American pop band known for for being multiinstrumentalists self-producing their material in their apartment.
Read MoreFrom director Noah Baumbach (Frances Ha) comes Marriage Story, an somewhat ironically titled film considering it follows the dissolution thereof through divorce proceedings.
“Lucky Trumble” by Nancy Wilson, originally released as part of 2000’s Almost Famous soundtrack, arrives anew in this trailer and covers the first twenty-seven seconds as our two protagonists recount what they admired about each other, up until a gentle breaking point when they both notes simultaneous that the other is “very competitive.”
Read MoreThe trailer begins with a mysterious descending melodic motif in D, with two minor thirds separated by a semitone, slipping between the parallel minor and major keys on the outline of the minor sixth and the major third. Underneath, strings subtly outline a tonic-dominant chord progression as the initial motif stays the course.
Read MoreThe trailer for Netflix’s The Laundromat, a Steven Soderbergh-directed, Meryl Streep-starring satire about the Panama Papers, arrived just last Friday; it owns a playfulness in its dialogue and narrative that is matched in the way it so effusively engages in an interdiegetic interplay between voice and music.
Read MoreAs sure as the October air, NYCC 2019 has come and gone, and with it left a minor dust storm of this fall’s slate for streaming television. Much like our San Diego Comic Con writeup before it, here are just a few of the trailers that caught our ears for their diverse uses of music and sound to punch up the image.
Read MoreIan McKellen (Richard III [1995], The Lord of the Rings trilogy, among others) is at full front and centre here in this second trailer for Bill Condon-directed The Good Liar. Narratively, the film centres on career con artist Roy Courtnay’s difficulty performing what ought to have been a simple swindle of rich widower Betty McLeish, but he finds himself inadvertently enamoured of her.
Read MoreIn this psychological thriller we find novelist June (Naomi Watts) in 1977 New York City during the blackout riots, barely staving off paranoia and writers’ block in her South Bronx apartment.
After a very brief Universal studio card with bridging audio—no micro-teaser here—right away we are introduced to the protagonist’s cloistered world through a series of shots the contrast heavily in aural perspective. First we’re inside a bowl of water, only to taken out with the buzzing of a shaver; an tinnitus-like shrill sound gradually overtakes the radio, the latter of which serves to ground the chaotic symphony of domestic sequestering on display.
Read MoreA reimagining of the 1993 Francis Ford Coppola film based on Frances Hudgson Burnett’s 1911 novel, the music in this trailer for The Secret Garden (2020) enlists an inventive and evocative harmonic move to spur the audience’s sense of wonder.
Read MoreBased on 2013’s Stephen King novel of the same name, Doctor Sleep is a direct sequel to The Shining (1977 book; 1980 film adaption). Perhaps in part driven by the success of It and its sequel in theatres currently, Warner Bros. took advantage of the fact that there is already a famous visual language and memory to draw (and market) from the 1980 original. It’s clearly more the product of director Mike Flanagan, rather than paying any serious homage to Kubrick. The trailer music, however, starts from the original’s score, subsequently building on it.
Read MoreEven Zach Galifianakis couldn’t have predicted that Between Two Ferns would not only be so successful to have lasted ten years (albeit sporadically, with a spread of twenty-one shows in total), but also that it would receive its own feature film edition. Almost naturally, the show that served as one of the progenitors of the Internet-based comedy show medium is premiering its movie on Netflix. Given the streaming giant’s predilection for picking up and ordering somewhat similar shows dispensing bite-size, reality TV humour such as Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, it’s a natural fit.
Read MoreYou’ve got one guess as to what song is embedded in the trailer for director Noah Hawley’s Lucy in the Sky. Rather than simply insert the Beatles tune, however, motivic fragments from “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” are scattered across the two and a half minute running time like a fever dream, with just the faintest hints of the tune’s famous, chromatically tumbling piano line in the first few seconds.
Read MoreOver the past few months and culminating in an avalanche of news and content at this past weekend’s D23 expo, Disney has released a steady array of trailers, confirming to us that the trailer remains the chosen vehicle for the promotion of moving images. The latest bunch are for properties exclusive to its upcoming Netflix competitor, Disney+, which launches in North America on November 12th. To that end, it’s worth investigating how the campaign fits together on an aural level. Here are four of the most notable-sounding trailers released this past weekend.
Read MoreAleasha Harris has adapted her award-winning 2018 play Is God Is into a thriller film and it looks and sounds intense. Gritty, distorted bass guitar comes in with a low register riff at 0:03 and even though we see on screen a black and white shot of two young girls (Racine and Anaia) hugging on a park bench, the music foreshadows conflict.
Following its 2021 reboot (and before that, the 1995 and 1997 originals), one of the most enduring video game movie franchises returns for round two courtesy of Warner Bros.
Mandatory military service now complete, BTS are back. Their new album Arirang was released on March 20th, their first album since 2022. Netflix, longtime proponents of the Korean Wave (Squid Game, K-Pop Demon Hunters, etc.), are releasing a documentary about this historic comeback.
Copyright Dr. James Deaville. Carleton University.
Funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.