Horror trailers generally follow conventions, this is often to indicate that the genre of the film, horrors tend to use darker colours and less lighting than a comedy would, along with different types of music. Along with following particular conventions, trailers can often break them too, in order to stand out from the rest of the genre and become unique (though this can be a risky technique). Some conventions followed by the genre are setting the scene, a show of normality, the appearance of evil, realisation of evil, a show of pain, some text explaining events, pursuit, release text and a final glimpse. All of these appear in our created media product, and have been compared to The Strangers.
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| Setting the scene |
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| A sense of normality |
These two shots represent normality; feeling secure, stable and safe, which is conventional of most horrors in the early areas of the film. While our trailer shows four characters interacting in a daily way, The Strangers features just two, and so the shot sizes are different.
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| An evil presence |
Another important point in a horror movie is the hint of an evil presence, in which we often see the character in the background subtly. They usually do not interact with the character in the foreground, but simply observe them. We chose to follow this convention as it is an effective way to introduce the "villain" character without giving much information away.
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| Realisation |
An important feature in modern horror is torture, or expressions of pain/suffering. We decided to show this more through audio than camera work (since we had minimal special effects to work with), but the relation between these two shots is still evident.
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| Pursuit |
Trailers commonly feature pursuit, a character being hunted or at least trying to escape it. Though we are never shown the result it leaves the viewer wanting to know the result and this is where the effectiveness of the shot lies. Our shot features the main character looking for the plague doctor stalking her rather than running directly from it.
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| Text teasers |
Between clips, trailers often include small chunks of text, hinting at the theme of the film or trying to capture the viewers attention. The font and size is unique to the film and contributes to the film's identity.
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| Last glimpse |
After text (and most likely appearing at the end of the clip) is a last glimpse, or jump scare of the source of horror. This is an attempt to keep it lingering in the viewers mind, wanting more. We used this method and created a short clip, appearing at the end, featuring the plague doctor standing over the main character.
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| Release date |
Following the same font rules as the text before it, the date appears at the very end of the trailer. A convention that is common with all trailers (except teasers).
Teaser trailers are a different brand of advertising completely. They intend to give little a way but draw as much attention as possible, and in doing so comply with conventions and break them. They need to be original but follow a scheme. Essentially, the purpose of a teaser trailer is to become viral, to have been seen by as many people as possible and interest those people. These are often short, showing little to no actual story but somehow remaining in the viewers memory. In horror teaser trailers, the main convention is being short with a jump scare.
Sound in a trailer (particularly horror) is very important, and so selection of the right effects, dialogue and music was crucial. It was decided that we would use a piano based song for the majority as they can generally be perceived as creepy. Most other sound effects would be string based (violin etc.) for contrast. In terms of dialogue, very little was used as trailer very rarely contain much, the lines that were used were not in a continuous streak but made sense in the sequence they were placed.


















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