Make a film trailer that entices audiences.

Film trailers can fill audiences with expectation and awe. The best ones reveal just enough to leave the audience wanting more.

A person sitting at a desk creating a film trailer in Adobe Premiere Pro

What is a film trailer?

Film trailers are more than just commercials for upcoming films. A good trailer is also a miniature film in and of itself, introducing audiences to key characters, scenes, themes or ideas in the upcoming film. The ultimate goal of a trailer is to get people to buy a ticket and watch the new film, but trailers are also compelling media in their own right. Audiences sometimes enjoy them just as much, if not more, than full-length films. Trailer making is all about distilling a film down to its essence and leaving the emotional story unresolved just enough so the audience wants to see more.

What to put in a film trailer.

A good trailer gives the audience a little taste of how the whole film will make them feel. Choose scenes that are representative of the film and show off what kind of film it is. A moody art house film should have a moody, atmospheric trailer. A preview for a romantic comedy should be funny and charming in its own right. A trailer for a horror film needs to be scary. Action movie teasers should show off stunts and explosions.

     

It doesn’t take a lot to make a trailer. “You can take one particular moment in a film and make that your trailer,” says cinematographer Joshua Martin. A few moments of a car chase, a romantic couple encountering each other at a park or a single conversation between a hero and a villain can be enough to give a trailer an emotional throughline that gets viewers invested.

     

As compelling as some elements of a film might be, it’s also important to know what not to put into a trailer. “Don’t ever reveal your twist in the trailer,” says Martin. Let the audience discover for themselves that the main character was a ghost the whole time or that the villain is the protagonist’s father.

     

Like feature films, trailers are the result of careful planning. Simply throwing together a few video clips from the film isn’t enough. A storyboard can be a useful way to establish an arc for the trailer and when to add titles and on-screen information, such as release dates.

Top image: A dramatic photo of a person walking down an airport hallway with luggage; Bottom image: A dramatic photo of a person sitting on top of a motorcycle at night

Teasers, trailers and previews.

The length of a trailer depends on where it’s going to live online or be shown to audiences and also when in the cycle of a film’s marketing campaign it will be released. Earlier previews are shorter and only a few seconds long and later previews are longer, with narrative arcs of their own.

 

Teasers

Teasers are very short, usually about 30 seconds to one minute long. Teasers are usually released early in a film’s marketing campaign and they give the audience just a small hint of what the film will look like.

     

Trailer teasers

A trailer teaser is a new kind of teaser, meant to arouse interest in the release of an upcoming, longer trailer. It’s an ad for a future ad, essentially. Marketing campaigns for big-budget films often put out a short clip to drum up excitement for a trailer prior to the release of a longer piece of video content.

     

These especially short trailers can be repurpose — and reoriented — for social media sites such as Instagram or Twitter, where audiences will see a single scene as they scroll through their feed. If the longer trailer has been released, a teaser trailer can be accompanied by a call to action (CTA) to view it. “Use a short trailer to drive traffic to a longer one,” says Martin.

     

Trailers

Trailers are the most familiar kind of preview, usually 2 to 2.5 minutes long. Trailers typically run prior to feature films, though they used to come after the feature, hence the name. Trailers contain the most information about a film. They usually show moments from several scenes in the film and run the gamut in terms of emotion or mood. Full trailers also show off the cast more than other previews. A longer trailer often shows most or all of the film’s main cast, names the director and mentions other relevant details, like if the film is based on a popular book.

 

Editing, genre and sound effects.

How you edit a trailer depends on what kind of film it is. A slow-paced period drama uses slow transitions and dissolves, but trailers for action movies can smash cut to an explosion or other burst of activity. The intro of a horror trailer might start slow with more gradual edits to build tension, but then amp up the pace with a series of quick cuts featuring brief glimpses of the enticing frights to come.

Editing a video and audio in Adobe Premiere Pro

Image by Joshua Martin 

Sound effects can also go a long way in conveying information to the audience about what type of film the trailer is for and how they are supposed to feel. The distant sounds of battle can let the audience know that this is a trailer for a war film and ambient futuristic noises can subtly suggest science fiction. “Sound effects are your best friend,” says Martin. “It’s another layer of storytelling.” Editing with sound effects or editing on beats can make transitions more natural and compelling — and better allow unrelated scenes to flow into each other.

 

There’s no single trailer template for shots or sound effects, but regardless of genre, trailers tend to start slow and have low stakes, yet end with greater energy and high stakes. Build up to an emotional or tense moment. The moment when a bit of the narrative might resolve is when the title should pop up instead. Make it clear to the audience that the trailer is only the set-up and the payoff can only be found in the feature film.  

 

To voiceover or not to voiceover.

Voiceovers used to be an omnipresent part of film trailers, with a deep-voiced narrator intoning what you’d see if you bought a ticket to an upcoming blockbuster. The narrator also announced who was in the film, who directed it and the release date.

 

For the most part, film trailers have moved on from voiceovers. Part of the reason is that Hollywood’s most prominent voiceover narrator, Don LaFontaine, died in 2008. It’s also because many trailers today tell their story just by using audio from the film they’re promoting. Trailers without narrators seem different and more contemporary. If modern trailers do have narration, usually the voiceover just provides narration at the very end of the trailer with basic info like “Now in theatres, rated PG-13” and not much else.

     

If you do decide to include a voiceover in a film trailer, it will sound and feel like something from before 2000. If you’re deliberately trying to make a retro-seeming trailer, narration can go a long way to making it feel like it’s from another era. If you want to seem contemporary, though, a voiceover won’t help with that.

A person holding their phone and watching a film trailer

Film magic, two minutes at a time.

Trailers are popular, powerful and memorable. So much so that in recent years they’ve gone beyond films and into other media. Book trailers promote literary works, YouTube channel trailers show off vlogs and other content and trailers for video games are just as strong and dynamic as trailers for major blockbusters.

     

Regardless of the film or other media you’re promoting, the most important thing to do in a trailer is to tell a story, but not all the way. Get the audience invested with the action, plot and characters, but leave them wanting more. 

Contributor

Joshua Martin

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