I Wanna Dance With Somebody

I Wanna Dance With Somebody

While the world has gotten Whitney Houston films in the past (such as 2018’s Whitney), I Wanna Dance With Somebody takes a more dramatized approach, which is unsurprising considering it comes from the people behind 2018’s Bohemian Rhapsody. Though said film contained some historical inaccuracies, it holds the box office record for the biopic and drama genres, at $910 million. It’s unsurprising, then, for them to attempt to replicate that success.

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Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

Is there room for one more outing with one of with Harrison Ford’s most famous characters? Disney appears to believe so—even dedicating the first minute of the trailer to Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny as a way to pump up the nostalgia. Throughout, Indiana remembers his various past adventures while single, cavernously reverberant piano notes signal and reinforce the sentiment. It also serves to build anticipation for the trailer’s second half, as there are no classic Indiana musical themes by Williams to be heard here. The few lines spoken by Harrison Ford in the first half betray how he has aged since the last Indiana Jones outing, which is why Sallah does most of the talking there and why Jones himself has only three words in the second half, his whip speaking for him.

It doesn’t take long, however—at the midway mark—for the editors to relent and give us the theme we all know and love—albeit with a twist or two, of course. For the second half, the score leans in on using the classic “Raider’s March” theme, having originated in the first film, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Of course, there are also new musical elements at play here—and in this case, it’s harmonically quite substantial. First, at 1:01 when the theme is first played, one can immediately tell it has been slowed down to about half-time to maximize its dramatic entrance. Then, at 1:05 we get our first deviating harmony with the use of the subtonic, suggesting the mixolydian mode—a particularly adventurous “mix” of notes. Notice also the synch points immediately preceding this novel harmonic shift, such as the punches and the gunshot around 1:04, using the sounds in a triplet rhythm to help propel things along.

The harmony then takes an even more dramatic turn at 1:09, presenting a new chord unexpectedly while also moving up to the minor second of the key. This is in effect as completely outside the original key as one can get, and when coupled with the syncopated entrance, it is genuinely exciting (and maybe even a bit off-putting). Sure enough, it reverts to the original key quickly, presenting itself as another modal shift.

While heavy in nostalgia and action, the trailer leaves some room for comedy. However, that only happens after the main title card has appeared and the trailer proper is seemingly finished. It’s such a tonal shift from the rest of the trailer, one can hear why it would be positioned as a bookend. (Incidentally, the lack of music also allows one to appreciate the sound of the whip much better.) A short musical flourish leads us out.

For such a long-running series as Indiana Jones which harbours such classic themes, using said cues was going to be a given for the trailer for The Dial of Destiny. What remains more interesting is how the arrangers find a way to freshen the experience. Keeping the melody intact while playing with not just one, but two distinct shifts in harmony helps those perhaps overly familiar with the theme to hear it anew, if only momentarily. But trailers are supposed to tease and breathe new life into established franchises.

— Curtis Perry

Puss in Boots: The Last Wish

Puss in Boots: The Last Wish

There’s life yet in the wider Shrek franchise, as evidenced by this second instalment for the fan-favourite character, Puss in Boots. The last Shrek-adjacent movie was the first Puss in Boots film eleven years ago; evidently, Dreamworks saw it fit to green light once more. This may have something to do with Shrek’s enduring popularity in Internet culture—effectively doing Dreamworks’ market research for them. To some extent they acknowledge this musically in the trailer in the creative narrative use of All Star, a song with equally enduring status in meme culture. (Take this instalment as a litmus test for a possible Shrek 5, maybe?)

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Avatar: The Way of Water

Avatar: The Way of Water

With Black Panther: Wakanda Forever having seen release, the next great holiday season blockbuster promises, somewhat refreshingly, not to be a Marvel property—and while it is a sequel, it has been some thirteen years in the making. Just as important as what its trailer does do is what it doesn’t do. Namely, its resolute focus on sensorial immersion is coupled with an insistence on not over-explaining or otherwise spoiling plot details. This results in a trailer that handily achieves its goal of reacquainting the world with the most successful blockbuster film franchise of all time.

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Spirited

Spirited

The trailer opens with a six second micro-teaser—replete with release info—for those who don’t have 2’20” to spare, The trailer proper starts with an opening hearkening back to trailers of old—the “in a world” schtick of Don LaFontaine, this time spun as “on a bitter, cold Christmas Eve” in horror mode. Foreboding strings in a minor key amplify the tension, only to be cut through a “rug pull” at 0:26 with the first of many comedic one-liners strewn throughout the trailer. By 0:39, with the fake-out revealed, the music takes a turn to much jazzier fare as the narrative continues to unfold, and as we come to understand the plot seems to centre on a kind of contemporary retelling of A Christmas Carol.

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Knives Out: Glass Onion

Knives Out: Glass Onion

Making a quick comparison between the trailer for the series’ debut back in 2019 and the current offering by writer-director Rian Johnson (Looper, Brick; Star Wars Episode VII: The Last Jedi), there is a bit of an aural link, though perhaps not an obvious one. Both trailers start with the same note, but in this latter instalment everything is bigger and brighter: a mildly dilapidated mansion is traded up for a private Greek island with sun to spare and a single piano is replaced by thrumming strings. At 0:13 the director’s title card is prominently placed, featuring what sounds like the click of a camera synched to the music. At 0:22 a single, reverberant piano note is used—a well-trodden trope, but at least appropriately placed to signal the arrival of the recurring and central figure of the series, detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig), sporting his trademark Foghorn Leghorn-esque Kentucky accent.

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The Fabelmans

The Fabelmans

After a lifetime of telling others’ stories through film, The Fabelmans promises to be a truly special project for Steven Spielberg as he sets out to tell his own (albeit in a decidedly fictionalized manner). It’s a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age tale set in post-war Arizona—likely shot at the Vasquez Rocks, in particular—that serves as an ode to filmmaking itself.

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Babylon

Babylon

With Damien Chazelle directing (LaLa Land, Whiplash), it comes as little surprise that Babylon would have such an intense musical focus for its trailer, which certainly has been making the rounds at the Toronto International Film Festival. Justin Hurwitz returns as composer, helping to cement their reputation as a special collaborative partnership. Every so often, an auteur director will have longtime collaborators, especially in music; Alfred Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann, James Cameron and James Horner, or Tim Burton and Danny Elfman all spring to mind as easy examples of such a phenomenon. With Babylon, Chazelle and Hurwitz surely enter such a category (as if there were any doubt).

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Secret Invasion

Secret Invasion

The (not so) secret to the trailer for Disney’s Secret Invasion, the latest in a steady drumbeat of Marvel Cinematic Universe-based TV series to hit the streaming platform, is in the sound design. For the first twenty seconds or so, a monologue directed at Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) is interrupted only by the occasional ominous, appropriately unidentifiable sound—such as the low-fidelity blare at 0:18 as Fury exits what looks like a spacecraft, or the diegetic closing of a huge metal door at 0:23, interacting somewhat with the dialogue (a closing door as she speaks of Fury’s avoidance). The off-screen voice of Maria Hill appears in frame at 0:30; the sounds pause for a moment as Fury delivers his first line: “yeah, well, this is different”.

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Armageddon Time

Armageddon Time

Written and directed by James Gray (Little Odessa, Ad Astra) and having premiered earlier this year at Cannes, Armageddon Time is a period drama strongly inspired by Gray’s own coming of age. It focuses on the experience of a Jewish-American child, Paul (Banks Repeta), who finds himself at odds with racist parents and educators over his friendship with Johnny (Jaylin Webb). Anthony Hopkins, meanwhile, plays the role of both Paul’s grandfather and a compassionate conscience.

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Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Between a preponderance of franchise movies coming out in this coming holiday season, with Avatar: The Way of Water and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever in the lead, at least one film with a two-part title promises something relatively fresh. The latest Dungeons and Dragons is Paramount Pictures’ reboot of the prior trilogy (2000-2012), and promises a mix of action and comedic flair, leading off with the star power of Chris Pine, perhaps not unlike what Dwayne Johnson was able to do with the Jumanji franchise.

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Andor

Andor

Andor’s trailer definitely diverges sonically from previous Star Wars fare; not only does it follow from the recently concluded Obi-Wan Kenobi series, but it also tells a story centring on much lesser-known characters. These factors probably contribute to a musical backdrop that almost necessarily deviates from the series’ classic musical themes. While the composer for the series is Nicholas Britell (who composed the much-lauded theme for Succession, among other things), epic music composer Rok Nardin takes the reins for the trailer, using “Quantum Field”, a piece yet to be published.

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Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

As the Marvel Cinematic Universe unfolds in its Phase Four plan to reset and introduce characters, surely none of these resets resonates so much as it does for the Black Panther franchise, which faces the untimely passing of its lead, Chadwick Boseman. In light of this, the trailer opens with a cover of Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” (1974). The song acts in a sense as a direct bridge to the audience, in recognition of what everyone knows—the mantle of Black Panther must be passed in this film. It becomes as much, if not more, a tribute to Boseman as it prepares the viewer for the coming narrative.

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