This hour, we talk about movie trailers. Maybe you wonder what a movie critic thinks of them. Actually, critics don鈥檛 see as many as you do because they often go to special screenings.
I asked America鈥檚 Greatest Living Film Critic, David Edelstein, about trailers. He answered, 鈥淎ctually, I avoid them like the plague. I don鈥檛 watch them online, and when I see movies in theaters, I often whip out my Kindle and plug my ears. If I鈥檓 on the aisle, I leave and get a Diet Coke. Trailers give away everything. They give away jokes. More than that, they orient you to the narrative in a way I don鈥檛 like being oriented. (Of course, I have the luxury of going into a movie not knowing what it鈥檚 even about because I get paid to do so, but that鈥檚 my preferred way to work 鈥 to be left in the hands of the storyteller.) As for as awful ones I have seen鈥 I remember in particular as being terrible because the pace and tone of that movie are antithetical to the way mainstream trailers work. It said quirky. Offbeat. Lovable. Among the best, I recall as being so great. I thought the movie itself was an overrated shambles 鈥 a really terrible piece of storytelling 鈥 but even Tim Burton鈥檚 worst movies have so many good images and set-pieces that they really read in trailers.鈥
For the rest of us, trailers are either a pain or a pleasure.
GUESTS:
- Allan Arkush - Contributor to Trailers from Hell; he worked in the trailer department for Roger Corman
- Stephen Garrett - Founder of
- Sam Hatch - Co-hosts on WWUH
- Kevin O鈥橳oole - Co-hosts The Culture Dogs on WWUH
Join the conversation on and .
Lydia Brown, John Dankosky, Greg Hill, Tucker Ives, Harriet Jones, Betsy Kaplan, Jonathan McNicol, Patrick Skahill, Catie Talarski, and Chion Wolf contributed to this show, which originally aired July 2, 2014.