By year three, you get nicer, bigger trailers.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If people are worried about the size of their trailers, I kind of say their priorities are off.
You get spoiled on 'Captain America,' where your trailer's two blocks long and it's got three bedrooms.
The movies that will truly be successful will feel different than the movies of the year before.
It is really cool to have created a movie that has turned out to become the biggest movie of the year.
I don't need a trailer; I don't need to have the luxuries of what is Hollywood, which is why I'm probably not so desperate to get there.
Don't spend more than 10% of your marketing/PR budget on a trailer. Trailers have to be marketed, too. So, far too many authors wind up marketing their trailers instead of their books.
I always like teaser trailers because they don't give too much away, you know? They give just a flavor of what the thing is.
The beating heart of your story... that's not what shows up in a trailer. The other stuff is what shows up in a trailer, because that's what gets people in to the seats, and that's how studios make their money.
The big budget films have money to do things that are not necessarily essential but sure are comforting. The catering is usually much better. And you have way more of anything you could possibly need. You definitely get a trailer. My shirt and suit for 'Million Dollar Baby' were tailor made.
I don't watch trailers, I like to go into every movie fresh.