IIRC the "in a world" guy that did so many trailer voice-overs had been dead for some time.
What I refer to as the "style" of contemporary trailers is the kinds of edits and sound effects they've just completely done to death. I couldn't help but start laughing at the beginning of the first Mission: Impossible, Dead Reckoning trailer. Fade into one shot, fade to black, fade into another shot, fade to black, fade into another shot, fade to black. Do that again and again while there's some ominous line of dialog being repeated from a scene. That sight gag has been done to death in so many trailers before. Or how about the rapid strobo-stutter edit common to so many horror movie trailers and action movie trailers as well? They have the same piece of noisy whoosh audio stutter edited the same way. It's all a bunch of fucking clip art. I guess the marketing people have run out of ideas. I'd have more respect for them if they just created a movie trailer cut normally where the edit style wasn't calling attention to itself so badly. The beat the audience over the head with the same old shit.
I hardly buy any movies on disc anymore. The main reason is so many modern movies are worth watching only one time and that's it. Another issue is most retail movie discs are bare bones products almost devoid of any real bonus content. Umpteen years ago I grew pretty annoyed that movie trailers were not being included as extras on many retail movie discs when they were a standard item when DVD was new. If I do buy a movie on Blu-ray discs now it doesn't bother me if the teasers and trailers aren't included.
What I refer to as the "style" of contemporary trailers is the kinds of edits and sound effects they've just completely done to death. I couldn't help but start laughing at the beginning of the first Mission: Impossible, Dead Reckoning trailer. Fade into one shot, fade to black, fade into another shot, fade to black, fade into another shot, fade to black. Do that again and again while there's some ominous line of dialog being repeated from a scene. That sight gag has been done to death in so many trailers before. Or how about the rapid strobo-stutter edit common to so many horror movie trailers and action movie trailers as well? They have the same piece of noisy whoosh audio stutter edited the same way. It's all a bunch of fucking clip art. I guess the marketing people have run out of ideas. I'd have more respect for them if they just created a movie trailer cut normally where the edit style wasn't calling attention to itself so badly. The beat the audience over the head with the same old shit.
I hardly buy any movies on disc anymore. The main reason is so many modern movies are worth watching only one time and that's it. Another issue is most retail movie discs are bare bones products almost devoid of any real bonus content. Umpteen years ago I grew pretty annoyed that movie trailers were not being included as extras on many retail movie discs when they were a standard item when DVD was new. If I do buy a movie on Blu-ray discs now it doesn't bother me if the teasers and trailers aren't included.
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