Why were the trailers so different to the final film? [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?
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I don't really understand where from they took those parts. Usually trailers contain main scenes from the film to convince fans to go to the cinema. But Infinity War trailer contains scenes, that film didn't contain. They fight in the woods, Bruce turns into the real Hulk and Wakanda is left a long way behind.
Why did they include parts that were not in the film?
marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-infinity-war trailers
marked as duplicate by Ankit Sharma, JAD, Skooba, Nog Shine, mattiav27 Nov 7 at 14:06
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
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show 1 more comment
up vote
13
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?
2 answers
I don't really understand where from they took those parts. Usually trailers contain main scenes from the film to convince fans to go to the cinema. But Infinity War trailer contains scenes, that film didn't contain. They fight in the woods, Bruce turns into the real Hulk and Wakanda is left a long way behind.
Why did they include parts that were not in the film?
marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-infinity-war trailers
marked as duplicate by Ankit Sharma, JAD, Skooba, Nog Shine, mattiav27 Nov 7 at 14:06
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
1
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
2
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
3
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
13
down vote
favorite
up vote
13
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?
2 answers
I don't really understand where from they took those parts. Usually trailers contain main scenes from the film to convince fans to go to the cinema. But Infinity War trailer contains scenes, that film didn't contain. They fight in the woods, Bruce turns into the real Hulk and Wakanda is left a long way behind.
Why did they include parts that were not in the film?
marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-infinity-war trailers
This question already has an answer here:
Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?
2 answers
I don't really understand where from they took those parts. Usually trailers contain main scenes from the film to convince fans to go to the cinema. But Infinity War trailer contains scenes, that film didn't contain. They fight in the woods, Bruce turns into the real Hulk and Wakanda is left a long way behind.
Why did they include parts that were not in the film?
This question already has an answer here:
Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?
2 answers
marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-infinity-war trailers
marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-infinity-war trailers
edited Nov 7 at 11:00
asked Nov 7 at 5:57
Ver Nick
3681317
3681317
marked as duplicate by Ankit Sharma, JAD, Skooba, Nog Shine, mattiav27 Nov 7 at 14:06
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Ankit Sharma, JAD, Skooba, Nog Shine, mattiav27 Nov 7 at 14:06
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
1
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
2
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
3
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34
|
show 1 more comment
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
1
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
2
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
3
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
1
1
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
2
2
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
3
3
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34
|
show 1 more comment
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
23
down vote
accepted
They wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences.
Also notice that in trailer, Thanos is shown having 2 stones when on Titan, but at that time he had 4 !
This was done to remove spoilers.
Russo brothers said that
“We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think
audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
I agree that nowadays people judge the entire story based on trailers, even for Avengers:Infinity War, some fans assumed all will go well, and here is where they were wrong !!
Please find the source of my quote and other mismatch scenes here
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
The trailers are usually completed for screening well ahead of the film, so not only can the shots change drastically during final editing but those used in the trailer are often chosen for their impact while not spoiling any specific story points from the film.
The shot you have alluded to was created as a 'deliberate misdirect' by directors Anthony and Joe Russo, reported Collider when discussing the brothers appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast.
The duo confirmed... that when putting together the film’s trailers, they wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences. Joe Russo explained that they used footage captured for entirely different scenes to stitch together that hero shot in particular: “We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
Anthony Russo confirmed this hero shot was never in the film to begin with:
“That shot that you’re referencing was never in the movie in the version that you saw. It was never even created for the movie in that version. It was literally created in that version for the trailer.”
Collider 7/5/2018
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
23
down vote
accepted
They wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences.
Also notice that in trailer, Thanos is shown having 2 stones when on Titan, but at that time he had 4 !
This was done to remove spoilers.
Russo brothers said that
“We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think
audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
I agree that nowadays people judge the entire story based on trailers, even for Avengers:Infinity War, some fans assumed all will go well, and here is where they were wrong !!
Please find the source of my quote and other mismatch scenes here
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
add a comment |
up vote
23
down vote
accepted
They wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences.
Also notice that in trailer, Thanos is shown having 2 stones when on Titan, but at that time he had 4 !
This was done to remove spoilers.
Russo brothers said that
“We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think
audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
I agree that nowadays people judge the entire story based on trailers, even for Avengers:Infinity War, some fans assumed all will go well, and here is where they were wrong !!
Please find the source of my quote and other mismatch scenes here
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
add a comment |
up vote
23
down vote
accepted
up vote
23
down vote
accepted
They wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences.
Also notice that in trailer, Thanos is shown having 2 stones when on Titan, but at that time he had 4 !
This was done to remove spoilers.
Russo brothers said that
“We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think
audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
I agree that nowadays people judge the entire story based on trailers, even for Avengers:Infinity War, some fans assumed all will go well, and here is where they were wrong !!
Please find the source of my quote and other mismatch scenes here
They wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences.
Also notice that in trailer, Thanos is shown having 2 stones when on Titan, but at that time he had 4 !
This was done to remove spoilers.
Russo brothers said that
“We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think
audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
I agree that nowadays people judge the entire story based on trailers, even for Avengers:Infinity War, some fans assumed all will go well, and here is where they were wrong !!
Please find the source of my quote and other mismatch scenes here
edited Nov 7 at 11:32
answered Nov 7 at 7:40
master ArSuKa
1,365622
1,365622
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
add a comment |
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
3
3
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
On a non-Infinity War (but still MCU) example: In "Thor: Ragnarok" there is a scene involving Thor, Hela and Mjolnir, which was filmed in front of a green-screen. So when they put that scene into the trailer they gave it a completely different CGI background, to preserve the "surprise" and stop audiences going "yeah, we know what comes next" during the buildup.
– Chronocidal
Nov 7 at 12:47
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
yupp, like entrance of Hela in the trailer and the actual Norway greenery were same kind of example !
– master ArSuKa
Nov 8 at 4:50
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
The trailers are usually completed for screening well ahead of the film, so not only can the shots change drastically during final editing but those used in the trailer are often chosen for their impact while not spoiling any specific story points from the film.
The shot you have alluded to was created as a 'deliberate misdirect' by directors Anthony and Joe Russo, reported Collider when discussing the brothers appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast.
The duo confirmed... that when putting together the film’s trailers, they wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences. Joe Russo explained that they used footage captured for entirely different scenes to stitch together that hero shot in particular: “We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
Anthony Russo confirmed this hero shot was never in the film to begin with:
“That shot that you’re referencing was never in the movie in the version that you saw. It was never even created for the movie in that version. It was literally created in that version for the trailer.”
Collider 7/5/2018
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
The trailers are usually completed for screening well ahead of the film, so not only can the shots change drastically during final editing but those used in the trailer are often chosen for their impact while not spoiling any specific story points from the film.
The shot you have alluded to was created as a 'deliberate misdirect' by directors Anthony and Joe Russo, reported Collider when discussing the brothers appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast.
The duo confirmed... that when putting together the film’s trailers, they wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences. Joe Russo explained that they used footage captured for entirely different scenes to stitch together that hero shot in particular: “We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
Anthony Russo confirmed this hero shot was never in the film to begin with:
“That shot that you’re referencing was never in the movie in the version that you saw. It was never even created for the movie in that version. It was literally created in that version for the trailer.”
Collider 7/5/2018
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
up vote
8
down vote
The trailers are usually completed for screening well ahead of the film, so not only can the shots change drastically during final editing but those used in the trailer are often chosen for their impact while not spoiling any specific story points from the film.
The shot you have alluded to was created as a 'deliberate misdirect' by directors Anthony and Joe Russo, reported Collider when discussing the brothers appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast.
The duo confirmed... that when putting together the film’s trailers, they wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences. Joe Russo explained that they used footage captured for entirely different scenes to stitch together that hero shot in particular: “We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
Anthony Russo confirmed this hero shot was never in the film to begin with:
“That shot that you’re referencing was never in the movie in the version that you saw. It was never even created for the movie in that version. It was literally created in that version for the trailer.”
Collider 7/5/2018
The trailers are usually completed for screening well ahead of the film, so not only can the shots change drastically during final editing but those used in the trailer are often chosen for their impact while not spoiling any specific story points from the film.
The shot you have alluded to was created as a 'deliberate misdirect' by directors Anthony and Joe Russo, reported Collider when discussing the brothers appearance on Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast.
The duo confirmed... that when putting together the film’s trailers, they wanted to keep the surprises intact for audiences. Joe Russo explained that they used footage captured for entirely different scenes to stitch together that hero shot in particular: “We use all the material that we have at our disposal to create a trailer. We look at the trailer as a very different experience than the movie, and I think audiences are so predictive now that you have to be very smart about how you craft a trailer because an audience can watch a trailer and basically tell you what’s gonna happen in the film. We consume too much content. So at our disposal are lots of different shots that aren’t in the movie that we can manipulate through CG to tell a story that we want to tell specifically for the purpose of the trailer and not for the film.”
Anthony Russo confirmed this hero shot was never in the film to begin with:
“That shot that you’re referencing was never in the movie in the version that you saw. It was never even created for the movie in that version. It was literally created in that version for the trailer.”
Collider 7/5/2018
answered Nov 7 at 7:18
Stephen Francis
2,840621
2,840621
add a comment |
add a comment |
Because frikin' Mary Poppins was caught flying in the background.
– CPHPython
Nov 7 at 9:58
1
@AnkitSharma How??? It's not a duplicate!!! It is about Spider-man!!!
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 11:01
2
@VerNick But the answer to the question is universally applicable. Your question should be worded to be more general.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 13:48
@Ian But how could I know that there is such a question? It didn't find me anything like that.
– Ver Nick
Nov 7 at 15:26
3
@VerNick The title of the question is literally "Why was this scene from the trailer not in the film?". The problem was you were thinking too specific for Infinity War.
– Ian
Nov 7 at 15:34