TheDreamMaster
The Night He Came Home...
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2007
- Messages
- 5,236
- Reaction score
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- 73
Hey, Nightmares and Dreamscapes was a great mini-series!Well, there is that awful TV show.

Well I like Under the Dome....mostly.
Hey, Nightmares and Dreamscapes was a great mini-series!Well, there is that awful TV show.
What the hell happened to all the Stephen King movies? The last ones were in 2007 (The Mist and 1408). 6 freakin' years.![]()
You are 100% right. My brother has been saying the same thing for awhile. I think this actually looks good, but the ads have not built any suspense.Every time I see a TV spot or trailer for this new Carrie film, I cringe because it feels like I'm watching the entire movie in abbreviated form.
And before anyone says "Well, everyone already knows the story of Carrie"...that's BS. Then what's the point of the remake or "re-imagining"? I mean, the trailers and even some of the TV spots I've seen show Carrie as a weird loner, Carrie's crazy mother doing evil **** to her, Carrie slowly developing her powers, Carrie getting asked to the prom, Carrie getting a slight makeover and coming out of her shell a bit...then they give away that the whole prom date thing is a cruel prank...they show Carrie "winning" prom queen...they show the iconic moment of her getting pig's blood (or whatever it is in this version) dumped all over her while she's on stage...and they even show her unleashing her powers on her fellow students and even some of the ensuing chaos in the streets afterwards (the friggin' car flip, for God's sake)!!
I mean, what's left to see? A little bit of extra chaos after the prom? A few more buildings being blown up? A couple of elements from King's novel that weren't in the original film? This has to be one of the worst "blow your load early" marketing campaigns in recent years. Aside from the initial teaser which was solid, there has been no suspense or creativity in the marketing of this film.
Trailers should be a taste of the film. In fact, I think I'd be fine with a rule for most films stating that not a single second from the third act can be revealed in pre-release footage. Give me the set-up...tell me why I should care...and then let me feel that thrill of the film as it comes at me on screen. I LIKE not knowing what I'm about to watch.
I totally agree. The marketing campaign for Gravity is a perfect example of how to get asses in seats. The footage shown in previews for Gravity were only the smallest fraction of the full film, which left people salivating to find out what it's all about. They saved all the most suspenseful sequences for the film's release.
I understand not all films or franchises can have that kind of mysterious marketing campaign, but a Carrie remake would have benefited from it. Instead, we've seen footage from 90% of the key sequences, so when we go see the film, they will have made suckers out of us.
I liked it, though the only story that I remember and REALLY liked was the one with Ron Livingston about his genius brother curing alzhiemers only to have it backfire on himHey, Nightmares and Dreamscapes was a great mini-series!![]()
How will you have been made a sucker if you get exactly what you were anticipating?
Also if you think the trailers for the new film give too much away, just look at the trailers for the original.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSF6WVx_Tdo
Pretty much the whole film is included and described in detail by the narrator.