What movie trailer ruined the movie with how much it revealed?
I saw the trailer for "American society of magical Negroes" and it looked kinda funny in the first 20 seconds, then the trailer went on to show what I'm pretty sure was literally everything in the movie.
Are there any other trailers that made you lose all interest in seeing it because it showed literally everything?
And they're speeding them up so they can cram more scenes in. I went and saw Godzilla X Kong and could barely keep up with some of them they were switching through things so fast.
Terminator 2. The ad campaign and trailers revealed what had the potential to be an amazing reversal of expectations well ahead of time. I actually got to see it with a friend who was out of touch enough to not have seen any spoilers; I wish I'd had his experience.
I'm eagerly counting down the hours until my kids are old enough to watch Terminator with me. Hopefully they can stay spoiler free until then. Luckily the franchise did everything it could to not stay relevant.
As ridiculous as this movie was, I always thought that the trailer for Star Wars Episode I : The Phantom Menace shouldn't have shown Darth Maul's double bladed lightsaber.
Yes, but that cool factor was more valuable as a marketing tool than a reveal in the film. It wasn't a plot point so, I don't blame them too much but it did reduce the impact in the cinema.
After that happened in the movie, I was angry that a big moment had been denied me. I basically stopped watching trailers of any film I intended to see that day.
People who are into movies say that the trailer is a part of the experience. But I'd prefer to go in completely unspoiled.
This happened for me with the scene in one of the new star trek movies where they play beastie boys while busting out of a cloud or something. Idk, it was a really cool scene, but I was mad that I'd already seen it in the trailer. It's ludicrous. I still complain about it to my wife to this day.
I'm the same. If I know I'm going to watch some thing I don't what the trailer. People get pissed off when I ask them not to talk about the trailer in front of me too.
I basically don't watch trailers anymore. I'll read a synopsis and look at some aggregate scores.
Ideally though I'll just ask someone I know for what they've seen that's good.
The only time I watch trailers anymore is when I trust the people involved to leave me with nothing but confusion and questions. Like the Death Stranding trailers that Kojima puts together.
I saw Get Out without knowing anything about it. Very effective movie if you were expecting a romantic comedy like Meet the Parents, lol. If I'd seen a trailer I wouldn't have been nearly as blindsided by the horror turn of events.
Oh yeah, it's definitely a movie you should watch completely blind! I went in not knowing what to expect at all and felt delightfully unsettled throughout. I'm not sure how I somehow managed to avoid all the trailers 😂
Prometheus showed literally every good shot from the movie including the titular spacecraft colliding with an alien spaceship at the very end, but then maybe that’s ok because the trailer was much better than the actual movie.
The trailer for Green Lantern gave away the best parts of the show, but it wasn't actually good. I saw the trailer in the theater, turned to my girlfriend and said, "I think we may have seen everything good about that movie." Turned out I was right.
Terminator: Genisys has the big reveal right in the trailer. I think if they had left that out it could have at least redeemed that steaming pile of shit a little bit.
I was a kid when it came out and I'd never seen the first one by that point, but Terminator 2 did the same as nobody knew Arnie was a good guy in the second one until they spoiled it in the trailer.
Old trailers were either enigmatic and gave you the vibe of the movie or would just show you "hey, here's all what this movie is about" and go over each major plot point.
I mute trailers and just watch the first 20 seconds to see if the film's atmosphere matches my current mood. Haven't had a trailer spoil the film in years this way
The short episode summaries on Netflix that show before you watch an episode often spoiler the main plot or even the plot twist. I will never understand why they do that.
I saw a version of the trailer for Split (2016) that revealed the plot twist. I was glad I already saw the movie, but my parents did not watch it because of that.
SPOILER ALERT Not that big of a twist (let's say not the 6th sense kind), but the trailer showed the part at the end where the antagonist has his big transformation. And it was half the trailer. The whole movie slowly builds up to that moment, I thought it was a poor choice to show it. It made it look like half the movie was that when it is only the culmination of everything that happened before.
I've stopped watching them altogether. I want to be surprised by the production design of the movie, the plot, the key moments marketing loves to spoil and so on.
I will read up on what people comment on the trailer but that's it. It's so much better to jump in fresh
Astonishingly, the trailer for Triangle Of Sadness reveals a lot, even the whole timeline of the plot, while the movie achieve to surprise and astonish with how much more there is to it.
I was afraid I wouldn't enjoy it because I somehow "knew" how it was going to end, but oh, my, that was only the surface and the craziness ran m7ch, much deeper.
The trailer for Ricky Stanicky is interesting. While it does spoil most of the major beats, it doesn't exactly spoil the ending. However, I wouldn't say that it needs to. It's a little bit obvious where that movie is going if one puts two and two together given the premise and trailer. Having said that, I still enjoyed watching it.
The trailer for Late Night with the Devil was similar. But it really hooked me so I stopped watching the trailer as soon as I got hooked to avoid spoilers.
i really wish i hadn't seen the trailer for From Dusk Til Dawn. if you know nothing about the film, and have ever enjoyed a tarentino flick, just watch it blind, please.