The Black Experience in Trailer Music

The Black Experience in Trailer Music

In light of the ongoing protests happening in the United States, Canada and around the world under the banner of Black Lives Matter, we felt it was appropriate to pause this week and highlight a few of the film trailers we’ve covered that centre on Black lives and experiences. Hopefully you might discover something interesting and new to rent or buy—or see in theatres, perhaps eventually—as a result.

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Tenet

Tenet

Christopher Nolan returns with his latest mind- and time-bending opus, Tenet; while it claims to be coming to theatres, the obvious unknown is when that might really be. Regardless, for the time being we have its latest trailer, which musically plays on its central conceit of time inversion in a couple of subtle and clever ways.

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Beastie Boys Story

Beastie Boys Story

With 94% on the Tomatometer and a corresponding 92% audience score, music documentary Beastie Boys Story is clearly resonating with critics and fans alike. The Spike Jonze-directed live documentary (who directed many of the Beasties’ music videos) happens to arrive via streaming at a time when mass live music concerts are all but a faded memory; it feels particularly timely to drop a retrospective of one of the most bombastic acts to have come out of the hip hop world in the past few decades.

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The Midnight Gospel

The Midnight Gospel

With theatres continuing to be shuttered for the foreseeable future, streaming services have picked up the slack unabated. New services continue to enter the fray serving as reasons for potential subscribers to inch closer towards recreating their cable bill with an ever-growing collection of app subscriptions—last week we surveyed Quibi, and in July we’ll see the stateside launch of NBCUniversal’s “Peacock” service, which will include among other things a reboot of Saved By the Bell. One notable new series arriving on Netflix is The Midnight Gospel, series creator Pendleton Ward’s follow-up to the long-running and recently-ended Adventure Time.

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Quibi

Quibi

Launched to much fanfare online—in part due to the shift in marketing budget allocations necessitated by the ongoing quarantine around the world—Quibi is a new streaming service with much in the way of style. The question, however, is whether a ceiling of ten minutes per episode is enough to give the so-called “quick bites” that stack the platform with enough substance.

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Keeping an Ear to the Trailer Industry in the Time of the Pandemic

Keeping an Ear to the Trailer Industry in the Time of the Pandemic

While not necessarily the most concerning or impactful aspects of the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic, the strident (and prudent) physical distancing measures implemented worldwide have nonetheless also impacted the film and television industry in a profound way.

Films such as Pixar’s latest, Onward, have been granted startlingly short windows from theatre to screen, having made the jump to Disney Plus in about a month. Elsewhere, films like Artemis Fowl (originally due May 29th) are skipping theatres completely, instead bolstering this year’s Disney Plus release schedule; higher-visibility franchises such as Mulan and Black Widow are being pushed to later in the year.

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Tigertail

Tigertail

From Alan Yang (Master of None) comes Tigertail; due on Netflix April 10th, the upcoming feature focuses on a Taiwanese factory worker’s move stateside. It’s an intergenerational drama—Grover (Tzi Ma) moves stateside and grows up unsure of this decision, having left his love and home in Taiwan. His daughter, Angela (Christine Ko), appears to be going through a parallel struggle.

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Upload

Upload

The coverage of comedy trailers continues for the time being with a new series by Greg Daniels (SNL, The Simpsons, Parks and Recreation, King of the Hill, The Office) for Amazon, Upload.

In these days of quarantine, it feels almost eerily prescient to have a comedy series in some sense emulate a life entirely lived online; the premise here is that your consciousness could be uploaded digitally to avert death.

Talking Heads’ 1980 hit “Days Go By” is the key musical track here, not covered or otherwise rearranged, but assiduously spliced and cut to match each scene and moment.

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Onward

Onward

The initial teaser trailer for Pixar’s latest, Onward, used The Cars’ 1984 track “Magic,” with the lyrics making obvious reference to the movie’s fantasy setting while also fitting the film’s mix of 1980s nostalgia and aesthetics. This itself is something that has been a bit of a trend, whether looking at Wonder Woman 1984, the Stranger Things franchise, or others.

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The High Note

The High Note

From Nisha Ganatra (director of 2019’s Late Night), The High Note follows the career of successful singer Grace Davis (Tracee Ellis Ross), whose proposed later-career album her assistant Maggie (Dakota Johnson) has ambitions to produce. It’s a drama following career ambition behind the scenes of the entertainment industry, not unlike Ganatra’s last film. The casting was almost certainly made with Ross’ mother, Diana Ross (of The Supremes fame), in mind—and Tracee Ellis certainly channels her mother’s spirit here.

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The French Dispatch

The French Dispatch

Much like Quentin Tarantino, Wes Anderson has maintained the mantle of the auteur director, rightly earning the distinction of becoming somewhat of a genre unto himself. In addition to the distinctive visual palettes and impeccable sense of mise-en-scène, the musical landscape of Anderson movies tends to cleave to some key collaborators and aesthetic markers.

Chief among these would be his partnerships with composers such as Mark Mothersbaugh— and, in this case, Alexandre Desplat— the latter of whom has taken up scoring duty since 2009’s Fantastic Mr. Fox.

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Radioactive

Radioactive

Due in North American theatres this March, the British production Radioactive is a dramatic biopic about the discoverer of radioactivity and the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. While the trailer score is relatively standard fare considering the genre and subject matter, a few key synch points and a clever, aurally ambiguous moment distinguish this trailer from others like it.

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Super Bowl LIV

Super Bowl LIV

As with the annual San Diego and New York Comic Cons, the Super Bowl is another enduring mass audience congregation both in the United States and around the world, and prime media real estate for all kinds of audiovisual advertising, not the least of which is the Super Bowl teaser trailer. In anticipation of an extraordinarily large audience, studios exploit the opportunity to roll out first or major previews of important upcoming releases, unveiling cinematic trailers on television which for sports pubs and home theaters means big screen airings. Here are just a few of said trailers we found especially interesting in one way or another in their use of music and sound.

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The Rhythm Section

The Rhythm Section

Paramount’s The Rhythm Section is a thriller centred around Stephanie Patrick, who embarks on a quest for vengeance after she finds the place crash that killed her family was intentional. An earlier trailer from September focused on a cover version of Lead Belly’s classic blues song “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?”, this time by Sleigh Bells. This last trailer — the film is due out January 31 — is much more dialogue-heavy, and focuses, in a titular nod, to the rhythm of the proceedings. 

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