Archive for the ‘movie trailer’ Category

Aug
12

What is the opening song of the Sex and the City 2 movie TRAILER? It kinda sounds like Beyonce’?

Posted under movie trailer

I’m watching the Sex and the City 2 movie trailer and i love the song that is playing right at the beginning but i can’t find it on iTunes anywhere. And i’m dying to buy it but i have no idea what the name is or who it’s by. Can someone help me?

empire state of mind – jay z feat. alicia keys

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UjsXo9l6I8

Aug
06

how would create an anime movie trailer on computer?

Posted under movie trailer

I want to create a movie trailer, with an anime character on my computer, but how would I make the character move?

Hi,
You have to use a 2D or 3D animation software. There are so many open source(free) software available. As a 3D animator I can recommend
Blender (http://www.blender.org/) best opensource 3D software available
Sinfig (http://www.synfig.org/) free 2D cartoon software
Regards,

Jul
25

Is movie trailer making a really career?

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I really think movie trailer making would be a great career for me but I am not sure how to go about it. Is it a really career? What do I need to study? Do I first have to study some other career? please if you have any info tell me I highly appreciate it.

It’s video/audio production.

Jul
24

Looking for a movie trailer about second chances?

Posted under movie trailer

I had watched a movie trailer and there was one scene where a male (maybe an angel) said ‘What if I’m an angel, sent here to help straighten out your life?" to a man. The man is getting a second chance in which he has a perfect married life with children which is different from his life before where he isn’t married and has no children. I would like to at least know the name of the movie. It might not be released yet.

The Family Man (2000)
starring Nicolas Cage, Tea Leoni, Don Cheadle, Jeremy Piven, Saul Rubinek, Josef Sommer
IMDb synopsis:
On Christmas Eve, two days before he pulls off a multi-billion-dollar merger, Wall Street hot-shot Jack Campbell gets a phone message from a woman he almost married 13 years before. He also tells a gun-toting street tough that he has everything he needs. The punk laughs. Christmas morning, Jack wakes up next to his old girlfriend, in some sort of parallel universe, in a 12-year marriage. Over the next few weeks, he gets a glimpse of what his life would have been like if he’d married her: a house in Jersey, two children, bowling trophies, a job at his father-in-law’s tire store, and a lot of love from his wife, Kate. When this Dickensian adventure ends, what will he do?
Here’s the movie trailer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pBb8jPGUT4

Jul
22

How do you make a movie trailer?

Posted under movie trailer

I’m supposed to make a movie trailer for a book for one of my classes. One of my options is to film everything using a green screen and video camera, but I was wondering if there was some kind of online movie trailer maker, or some other way to do it. Thanks in advance.

i haven’t heard about an online movie trailer maker but i believe there’s no such thing as a movie trailer maker… so instead, hmmm… i suggest you to review your homework, i mean the book you are planning to make a movie with, then know its summary and find the main thought of it… then construct a script for it and once you did, you can use that material as your trailer… there’s a lot of attact on this anyway. one is just making a cut to cut shots of the movie and do a remarkable movie tagline then compliment it with the movie stills or flicks… hope it helps

Jul
21

What would you consider the most successful movie trailer?

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What movie trailer really intrigued you?

Before I knew both of them were fake I think The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity both did a good job fooling people into thinking they were in fact true stories. Great marketing ploy.

Jul
15

Where can I find good Horror Movie Trailer sound effects and music?

Posted under movie trailer

I want genuine music and sound effects used in Horror Movie Trailers. Or at least close enough. I’m making a comedy video of a fake horror movie trailer and I need good background music and creepy sounds, thanks!

If you have a Mac, I would recommend looking around in the program Soundtrack. There are lot of nice sounds in there – wolves howling, clinking metal, generic screams, etc. Also, any music you find on there is completely copyright free.

If not (or, even if you do), you can search for sound effects online. There are a lot of websites out there that can help you.

Jun
28

Why a Killer Video Game is the U.s. Army’s Best Recruitment Tool

Posted under movie trailer

By David Verklin and Bernice Kanner

Authors of Watch This, Listen up, Click Here

Since the last draftee reported for duty in December 1972, Uncle Sam has had to hustle to staff an all-volunteer armed force. In the case of the U.S. Army, that meant recruiting 80,000 new soldiers every year — essentially replacing more than the entire workforce of BellSouth every 12 months.

Advertising did the trick initially. After “Today’s Army Wants to Join You” fizzled, in January 1981, “Be All You Can Be” became the battle cry. For two decades, wrapped around ads that made this branch look as adventurous as an Outward Bound course, it resonated with 17-to-24-year-olds (of whom the Army is the nation’s largest employer). Then, in 2001, that was scuttled for an “Army of One.” (”Even though there are 1,045,690 soldiers just like me, I am my own force . . .”) Critics scoffed that the new tin slogan was misguided (isn’t conformity more valued than individuality in the barracks?); the Army countered that it was effective.

Then Iraq exploded.

Despite adding thousands of additional recruiters, upping the enlistment bonus and funding for college, fattening the ad budget, and ratcheting up the patriotic appeal, the Army could not fill its boots.

So the Army added more marketing weaponry. It hosted town hall meetings where civilians could meet soldiers and hear about their accomplishments. It tried product placement: Army mechanics on the Discovery Channel’s Monster Garage tricked out a Jeep. And it launched a thoroughly engaging computer video game that quickly became a gold standard of “advergames” for its effectiveness and realism. Gamers take such real military roles as Intelligence (18F), Engineer (18C), Communications (18E), and Combat Medic (18D), and fire the same weapons the Army has. And when they fire on the run, their aim is less accurate.

Before it was released on July 4, 2002, many expected the $7.3 million game would join the ranks of the $436 hammer and $640 toilet seat as a study of excess. Few predicted “America’s Army” would become the artillery’s most effective marketing tool, conveying the authentic military experience in a voice that prospective recruits want to hear.

More than seven million users have registered (anonymously so as to squelch any fear of recruiter harangues) with 10,000 to 50,000 new ones downloading the shoot-em-up daily. In a dozen running and gunning missions, players advance through the stages of soldierhood — drilling in basic training, target practicing with an M-16, learning about basic emergency medicine, and, finally, diving into combat. The game has been downloaded more than 16 million times, 20 percent of entering cadets at West Point have played it, and between 20 and 40 percent of new Army recruits have played it as well.

“They seek it out rather than the other way around,” noted Chris Chambers, deputy director of the Army Game Project within the Army’s Office of Economic and Manpower Analysis. At an average cost of 10 cents per hour versus $5 to $10 per hour for a TV commercial, it delivers immersion rather than mere impression.

“America’s Army” has proven to be such powerful weaponry that an official game store does brisk business selling collectible action figures, clothes, coffee mugs, and other doodads emblazoned with the logo. The Army builds parties and tournaments across the country around it. A wireless version and sequels including “America’s Army: Special Forces,” where players try to earn a Green Beret by completing Special Forces missions, have been released. Apple created a knockoff: Boot Camp. And the Army now even uses it extensively in training.

Uncle Sam Wants You . . . to play . . . and he’s not the only one. Everyone is getting in on the virtual action. Some, like the Army, create a whole game that functions as a sales brochure. Just as the Army promoted its pro-military message through gameplay, the United Nations World Food Program aims to educate about its mission to combat hunger worldwide. In “Food Force,” players steer a helicopter over the war-torn island of Sheylan, (a fictional cross between Sri Lanka and Somalia) and drop relief supplies to a population with little shelter and less food. Or they create food rations, schedule shipments, or take a supply truck through hostile terrain.

In the racing game, “Volvo Drive for Life” (playable on Microsoft’s Xbox), players are rewarded not for finishing first, but for avoiding accidents. Wander in for a test drive at a Volvo dealer and you can try it in the showroom. Dealers can bestow game cartridges on select prospects and customers. After its royal mascot tromped through “Fight Night Round 3″ (on Xbox 360), Burger King created action games around its bizarre king and made them available for just $3.99 to customers who bought a value meal. (Most games sell for at least 12 times that). Nike went beyond athletes wearing its shoes in the video game NBA 2K6: Tournament players are given different pairs of virtual footwear and choose which to put on from their Nike shoe locker depending on the task. They can also personalize the shoes with the same customization feature that’s on Nike’s iD web site.

In other advergames, marketers hitch a ride. In “CSI: 3 Dimensions of Murder,” Visa’s fraud-monitoring capabilities shine when a suspicious charge on a victim’s credit card triggers investigation by a forensic-sciences team. In Tom Clancy’s “Splinter Cell Chaos Theory,” the protagonist, secret agent Sam Fisher, scales a bright neon sign for Axe deodorant and quietly enters a lunchroom inhabited by a Diet Sprite Zero vending machine. (Axe also created Mojo Master, an online game about picking up women.) In “Splinter Cell: Pandora Tomorrow,” Fisher retrieves a message from a Sony Ericsson smart phone to learn who the villain is. In “Burnout Revenge,” players drive and crash a Carl’s Jr. delivery-truck. And players in Activision’s ‘True Crime” titles take a break from fighting gangs to recover stolen Puma sneakers.

Some marketers install games on corporate web sites or designated URLs, like “Life Saver Candy Stand,” or FiletoFish.com, the web site where a division of McDonald’s posted “Shark Bait” (in English and Spanish). Players must protect the filet-of-fish sandwich from attacking sharks. For Wachovia, Carat’s Fusion recreated the tricky 17th-hole par 3 at the Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina. Players evaluate distance and wind conditions on this 217-yard hole to pick a club: Crowd noise lets them know if they’ve made a good virtual swing. Wachovia has sponsored the annual PGA championship since 2002: The game was fashioned to promote that, sell tickets, and create viral buzz. H&R Block’s “Deduct-A-Buck” game at the deductabuck.com web site is tax-time seasonal. Players who correctly answer questions about what they can legally write off in this Seventies-TV-quiz-show-style game win prizes.

Hollywood and Nashville hardly launch a movie or song anymore without serving up a side of game. And despite hefty royalty rates for movie titles, an action hit will almost certainly be reincarnated on a console. Turner’s “Witchblade” promoted the TV series, and games built around Men in Black II, Spider-Man, and Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course were meant to promote the new releases. Along with ads for Sprite, the sci-fi game “Planetside” featured ads for the movie Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo, and in the free version of “Anarchy Online” a 15-second trailer for V For Vendetta played in a continual loop. Ads for Batman Begins in “Splinter Cell” were timed to its release in local markets.

The Da Vinci Code got its own PS2 game. Paramount Pictures crafted a Mission: Impossible III game for cell phones while Miami Vice had an accompanying game to play on Sony’s handheld PSP.

This is about more than fun and games. Yankee Group estimates that by 2007 a serious gamer will lurk in every fourth home in America. Nielsen says three out of four residences with guys under age 34 have a game system. More people slay orcs in the medieval-style quest for virtual gold and power, “World of Warcraft,” than live in Denmark. In 2006, gamers across the globe owned more than 100 million PlayStation2s and 40 million Xboxes. In the United States, video games already raked in more money than the movie box offices, and Yankee Group says the industry will top $8.3 billion by 2008. PricewaterhouseCoopers says globally it will reach $55 billion by 2009. That explains why a cottage industry in Los Angeles builds game consoles into the backs of Lincoln Navigators.

Collectively, interactive ads embedded in quizzes and games made up more than $1 billion of the $12.5 billion in online ad revenue in 2005, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau. Nielsen (which now measures the industry) expects advertising spending within games will jump from $75 million in 2006 to $1 billon by 2010. Mitch Davis, CEO of Massive, thinks it could be almost twice that — and account for about 3 percent of all media spending, just shy of what advertisers spend on the Internet.

Copyright © 2007 Carat North America, Inc. from the book Watch This, Listen Up, Click Here by David Verklin and Bernice Kanner Published by John Wiley & Sons Inc.; April 2007;$24.95US/$29.99CAN; 978-0-470-05643-1

David Verklin And Bernice Kanner
http://www.articlesbase.com/politics-articles/why-a-killer-video-game-is-the-us-armys-best-recruitment-tool-138054.html

Mar
15

The Cardinal & The Wrath Of The Warthog – Christian Movie/Film Trailer – CFDb

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This is the Movie Trailer for The Cardinal & The Wrath Of The Warthog, Check out more info about the movie on Christian Film/Movie Database. CFDb – http://christianfilmdatabase.com/viewitem.aspx?id=821

Duration : 0:2:22

Read the rest of this entry »

Mar
14

What is the upcoming movie where in the trailer, the recovering coma patient asks what Facebook is?

Posted under movie trailer

I saw a movie trailer either in the theater or on TV recently about a guy that wakes up from a coma or something like that. A female character is pushing his wheelchair and mentions Facebook. He turns and asks what Facebook is. Does anyone know what I’m talking about or am I crazy?

sounds like "miss march"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wk1_kDJhyBk

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_march