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Jaybird

Jaybird is Birdmojo on Xbox Live and Jaybirdmojo on Playstation's network. He's been playing consoles since the Atari 2600 and it was Zork that taught him how to touch-type. If you've got a song for Wednesday, a commercial for Saturday, a recommendation for Tuesday, an essay for Monday, or, heck, just a handful a questions, fire off an email to AskJaybird-at-gmail.com

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25 Responses

  1. Kazzy says:

    When Jurassic Park came out, I remember thinking what an experience would be if the trailer never revealed the escape and mayhem. If they billed it as “March of the Penguins… But with super realistic CGI dinosaurs” and then *BAM* a raptor eats your face.

    You’d see that opening scene and be like “WHAT THE F?” Then you’d see the scene where Dr. Grant first sees the dinos and the score kicks in and you’d be all “Wow majestic!” Then the real shit goes down and you’d be flabbergasted.

    The problem is keeping families with young children or others who’d be harmed by being mislead out. “Marches with Penguins but with super realistic CGI dinosaurs and oh yea boobs too so no kids or anyone with a pacemaker.”

    Hm… Maybe not the best idea. But still…

    What if this movie pitched itself as a Sandlot reboot? Only James Earl Jones and his dog ate people? Oh man I could do this all day!

    ID4: A family reunion at a 4th of July BBQ with some unexpected guests (“Look Whos Coming to the 4th”?)
    Indiana Jones: “Not-so-Dangerous Minds”
    Star Wars: Cosmos Part IVReport

    • Mike Schilling in reply to Kazzy says:

      The Godfather: A close-knit immigrant family faces challenges together.

      Godfather II: Hardships made the family stronger, but success drives it apart.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Kazzy says:

      Jurassic Park: Man builds dinosaur park but hubris results in nature re-asserting itself. ALSO NEUMAN FROM SEINFELD BETRAYS EVERYBODY FOR MONEY.

      ID4: Space Aliens attack earth but Earth Fights Back. ALSO DATA FROM STAR TREK REVEALS THAT AREA 51 WAS REAL.

      It’s not that the main plot can’t be revealed, Kazzy. It’s not even that the first twist can’t be revealed. (e.g., the heist was supposed to be a cakewalk… BUT IT WASN’T) It’s that they give away important stuff from the second half of the movie that would detract nothing if they kept it just a hair closer to their chests.

      (Also, with regards to Don’t Breathe, I’ve heard, and I have no idea whether this is true, that the second twist was added after test audiences responded to the movie by saying something to the effect of “so… kids break into a blind guy’s house, he defends himself, and they’re the heroes? That’s kind of muddled.” If that’s true, and I have no idea whether it is, I can easily see there being a group of folks saying “I want to see the story from his perspective!” after the test screening. Hence making him a creepoid.)Report

    • DensityDuck in reply to Kazzy says:

      IT: Friendly clown wants to play with all the children in town.Report

  2. Agree 100%. The best trailer I’ve seen in a long time is the one for Zootopia, which was the DMV scene. It showed how funny the anthropomorphic animals were without revealing anything about the plot.Report

  3. Burt Likko says:

    Quick reminder: fantasy football draft is in three hours.Report

  4. Saul Degraw says:

    I’ve been reading the Cunning Man by Robertson Davies and enjoying it. Then I left my copy at my parent’s house.

    For non-fiction Paris between Empires: 1814-1850 by Philip Mansel.Report

  5. Saul Degraw says:

    3 minutes seems awfully long for a trailer. Aren’t most trailers around a minute or less?

    For what it’s worth, all the reviews I have seen of the film do not mention the twist and present the movie as you do.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      There are the “we’ve got a time out, so let’s hear some messages” trailers (aka commercials) for the television and there are the “you got here at 1:40 for your 1:50 showing of Everybody Will Talk About This Movie, but first, some trailers!” trailers that are around 3 minutes each.Report

  6. Brandon Berg says:

    Maybe that’s not actually the twist. About fifteen years ago, I noticed a pattern where the previews for the next episode of some shows would regularly have what appeared to be major spoilers, but they’d turn out to be misleadingly edited, so that what actually happened was very different from what the preview implied.

    If you saw prisoners, there are probably prisoners, but maybe that’s something that comes up in the first fifteen minutes anyway, and the real twist is something else.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Brandon Berg says:

      I have seen exactly what you’re describing for television shows.

      That strikes me as being a significantly different phenomenon than this one.Report

    • What makes me crazy is when the “COMING NEXT EPISODE” shows the cliffhanger scene from the end of the next episode.Report

      • DavidTC in reply to DensityDuck says:

        I don’t watch ‘Coming Next Episodes’ anymore.

        No, seriously. If they start one, I stop the video. Why would I? I’m going to watch the next one anyway. Why would I have watched the series to this point and just…stopped right there?

        I mean, yes, if it’s a horrible episode, in *theory*, I might stop, but honestly, if I have any real investment in the show, it’s going to take a few bad ones to get me to stop…and if I don’t have any investment, is a tiny preview really going to give me it?

        The contest *used* to be ‘Can we leave them in suspense so they will tune in next week?’, but that is not how TV works anymore.

        That was actually a pretty weird paradigm to start with. Have a self-contained episode so that everything wraps up at the end and the status quo is restored…and then make a tiny tiny mini-episode out of the next episode to make a cliff hanger. It’s something that could only make sense in the medium of network TV….all other forms of fiction that wanted cliffhangers just *made cliffhangers*, but TV couldn’t do that for the same reason they couldn’t change things…because it *used to be* that people would maybe miss several episodes, so everything had to make sense standalone.

        But at this point in time, most people who watch TV watch every episode, in order. Either via a DVR, or via streaming. And they don’t need to ‘remember’ to watch the next episode, it just collects. (Well, sometimes they don’t know the next season is out, but this doesn’t help with that.)

        So the question…why even do this anymore? What is it actually accomplishing? Is there really some large segment of ‘I don’t know if I’m going to watch the next episode or not?’ watching past episode 4 or so that isn’t due to the show turning to crap. (Which isn’t going to be solved by tricking them into watching the next episode!)

        (This of course doesn’t really have anything to do with movie previews, which do serve a purpose.)Report

  7. Will Truman says:

    I watched Stranger Things! It was good! I will probably be sharing my thoughts on it later at some point.

    I also watched three different versions of Count of Monte Cristo. That’s probably going to get a post.

    I’m not sure if I am going to make it through The Americans before Clancy and Lain get back from back home. Sigh. I really needed to watch that one because that one is not Lain-in-the-room-friendly.Report

  8. Maribou says:

    Augh! This is not Jaybird! It is Maribou! (2nd time today on 2 different computers. I’m starting to feel cursed. Cursed by user error on my part, mind you, but still. CURSED!)Report

  9. Aaron David says:

    Ordinary times bookclub, of course. And to back that up, Murakamis Hear the Wind Sing. Which was the novel he wrote fist, won a competition and started his career. It was never officially available in the states, only translated for a dual language version. Until last year. It was published with Pinball, 1973 last year. Very good, though a bit different than his later works. Still finding his style.Report

  10. Patrick says:

    Postulate: Bad Movies oversell themselves.

    Given that this is true, if you’ve made a bad movie and you know it’s bad and nobody is really going to give all that much of a crap about it, showing the twist is overselling.

    “If we’re willing to show you ***this*** in the trailer… IMAGINE what the ***REAL*** twist is going to be like!”

    And then you don’t need to deliver on the second, non-existent twist, because really the trailer was just the chance to front-load opening weekend so that you could make your didge before you slide to 7th place on the list in the next week.Report