Never Trust a Trailer
'Wait, wait, wait, stop! Is this another Muppet trailer parody? Why don't we just show a real trailer? I mean, what are we hiding? Did we make the movie in Swedish or something?"—Jason Segel, The Muppets
If Covers Always Lie, trailers can, too. Sometimes Tonight Someone Dies or hyping The Reveal might not be enough. And with the Internet an open window these days for writers and directors to viewers' likes, dislikes, hopes, predictions, and Shipping loyalties, it's easy to know exactly how to bait fans into watching the next episode. Be careful not to believe everything you see, though, because as all Fan Vid makers know, any scene can be mixed-and-matched with another to look completely different from their real context. In the worst examples, it'll actually drive away those who would have otherwise enjoyed it, by completely confusing the relevant demographic.
Indeed, the creation of fake trailers to make a movie look like it's from a completely different genre has become one of the Internet's most beloved recent art forms, such as The Shining as a family-oriented romantic comedy, the one that started it all, or Mary Poppins as a slasher horror flick.
Another way it can backfire is if you can't find enough good footage to make a decent trailer, Genre Savvy audiences can extrapolate just how bad the rest of the material must be.
If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.
See this list for more examples.
Specific types:
- Sir Not-Appearing-In-This-Trailer - Where a major actor doesn't show up in the trailer.
- Lady Not-Appearing-In-This-Game - The opposite of the above, a character featuring prominently in the promotional materials doesn't really play a significant role.
- Missing Trailer Scene - Where the trailer includes a scene that's been cut from the film.
- Billing Displacement - The big-name actor plays a smaller part than they were 'supposed' to get.
- Ship Tease - When the trailer includes a reel which seems to include two partners who don't actually get together.
- Bait and Switch Lesbians - When those two partners are both women.
- Tonight Someone Kisses - Full-out lying about anyone ending up in a romantic partnership.
- Covers Always Lie
- Contemptible Cover - The illustration on the front of the book is oversexualized, more violent than you'd think, or just downright wrong.
- Super Dickery - For some reason, the hero is acting like an asshole. Open the book to find out why!
- Real Trailer, Fake Movie - Someone—most likely fans—has created a very convincing trailer for a movie which will never be released.
- Advertised Extra: The guy seems to be a major character, but isn't.
Often a form of Misaimed Marketing. Contrast with Trailers Always Spoil, where the trailer is a little too honest. If it's a TV show's Title Sequence that lies, those are Bait and Switch Credits.
Advertising
- Yes, commercials count now. This trailer for Snickers' Super Bowl ad leads you to believe that the guys in it really have Betty White on their team. In the actual commercial she is called "Mike" and is told, "You play like Betty White!" She then eats a Snickers, and after a brief cutaway, she's replaced by a guy, proving that she only appears in the ad to support the Tagline: "You're not you when you're hungry." And so does Abe Vigoda.
- In the print ads for Son of Svengoolie, if a film was called "X of Dracula" or "Frankenstein's X" they always ran a picture of Bela Lugosi or Boris Karloff in costume as the title monster, even if they weren't in the film and it wasn't a Universal Horror film.
Comic Books
- This commercial for G.I. Joe a Real American Hero Marvel #30 managed to combine it with Covers Always Lie. While it sure made the three new villains look menacing, the situation depicted was, in the story, a costly Epic Fail for the bad guys that was completely the Dreadnoks' fault.
Theater
- When Waiting for Godot made its American debut in Miami, its marketing prominently featured stars Bert Lahr (The Cowardly Lion) and Tom Ewell (from The Seven-Year Itch). Posters declared the play to be "the laugh sensation of two continents."
Web Animation
- An egregious example is the trailer for the third Arfenhouse movie. The actual movie turned out to be a few seconds long (not counting credits) and was a Take That to all the creator's fans who were nagging him to deliver on his promise of a sequel, though real sequels were eventually made.
- Parodied by Legendary Frog in the One Ring to Rule Them All: Special Edition, in which a "One Ring 3" Teaser includes shout outs to the movie Speed, the Incredible Hulk, and Charlie's Angels. Lampshaded by Sauron, who asks "Will any of this be in the actual movie?" His goblin assistant, Wayne, tells him that it'll all be cut in post-production.
- The season 7 trailer for Red vs. Blue showed both Church and Tex watching over the Red and Blue teams in Valhalla. Neither actually appears in that season. In fact, according to Word of God, the "original" Church actually died at the end of the last season, so it seems likely Tex did as well.
- The difference here is that Red Vs. Blue trailers are more like prelude episodes than actual previews. The season 7 trailer contained no footage from later episodes because it wasn't supposed to. Church and Tex seem to have been inserted into it to encourage Wild Mass Guessing as to what unseen role they may have had in the season.
Webcomics
- If you aren't familiar with Sluggy Freelance, then the first half of this video would have you convinced that the comic revolves around... Well a relatively minor side character. After that it breaks down into half a dozen tiny trailers not to be entirely trusted, before finally giving up and summarizing the comic in one sentence.