Summary
Learn directly from an editor who works with Netflix, Max, Warner Bros. and more!
Putting together a great trailer for your own film or series can make all the difference when it comes to building an audience, getting eyes on your film, or even convincing distributors, executives and more to be interested. And editing trailers seems easy enough. It’s just the coolest bits of the movie with some awesome music behind it, right? Then why is it that when you try this yourself, the trailer just feels flat, no matter how good the track is? Why is it so difficult to make your project look engaging in a trailer when you’ve done the elevator pitch for this story more times than you care to count? Why is it that you were able to edit a whole long-form movie together, but this 2-minute trailer is giving you so much trouble?
The truth is: a successful trailer is so much more than your best shots with your best music behind them. There’s a reason that there are entire agencies dedicated to just trailers and promos along with a whole roster of “trailer editors” who specialize in this medium. Trailer editing is really its own unique art form with its own rules and its own skillsets required to make it work. This doesn’t mean you can’t make an effective trailer of your own film, but you’re first going to need to learn how to navigate this medium and approach your film with new eyes to make the trailer sing and get your project the attention you’re looking for.
Stephen Boyer is a film and video editor with nearly 10 years of experience in post-production and currently serves as a trailer editor for HBO Max, where he recuts modern trailers for existing films in the platform’s catalogue. Through his career, Stephen has edited feature films, documentaries, commercials, music videos and nearly everything in between and has cut for a litany of influential brands such as Netflix, Microsoft, SiriusXM, Nintendo, Blizzard Entertainment, and Warner Bros. A Los Angeles native with a lifelong passion for filmmaking and music composition, Stephen is well-versed and passionate in the art of trailer cutting and is bringing his years of experience exclusively to the Stage 32 community.
Stephen is going to break down what makes an effective trailer today and the steps you should take to create a great trailer for your own film or television project. He’ll first discuss what good trailers look like in general and will then delve into how to re-approach your film with new eyes to begin building your trailer and find the right clips to include. He’ll also go over how you can identify the right pieces of music for your trailer and will teach you how to build out the trailer’s story. Stephen will go over polishing the trailer with sound design and will explain the fine tuning and rewrite process necessary for any trailer. Stephen will identify some of the most common pitfalls trailer editors should avoid and will even share a case study of a real trailer he edited for HBO Max of a notable film and explain how it came together.
Through Stephen’s lessons and case study, you’ll gain a series of new strategies and techniques to tackle your own project’s trailer with confidence and create something that will stand out from the crowd.
What You'll Learn
- What Makes a Good Trailer Today?
- How trailers have evolved
- Trends
- Ideal length
- What common devices are effective?
- And what devices should you avoid?
- Re-Approaching Your Film
- How to see your film from new eyes to build a trailer
- The first steps you should take in the editing room
- Sorting through your film with your trailer in mind
- Finding story scenes
- How to best extract the style and themes from your film
- Finding Music That Actually Works
- How many pieces of music should you use?
- When in the process should you choose your music?
- Resources and tips on where to find tracks
- Building out the Story of Your Trailer
- Identifying the best dialogue
- Determining your turning point
- Where does your trailer lead?
- Nailing your final beat
- Filling in the blanks
- Polishing with Sound Design
- How to enhance your tracks
- Adding percussion, risers, and bass drops
- Making sure you can mix everything evenly
- The Fine Tune and Rewrite Process
- How to get valuable feedback
- Making multiple versions
- Other strategies to get your trailer just right
- Some of the Most Common Pitfalls Trailer Editors Should Avoid
- Trailer Case Study
- Stephen will show one of his trailers and walk through the decisions he made and why
- Q&A with Stephen
Who Should Attend
All levels of directors (advanced, intermediate and beginner) looking to learn how to make an effective trailer today and the steps you should take to create a great trailer for your own film or television project.
All levels of writers (advanced, intermediate and beginner) looking to learn how to make an effective trailer today and the steps you should take to create a great trailer for your own film or television project.
Producers looking to learn how to make an effective trailer today and the steps you should take to create a great trailer for your own film or television project.
Actors looking to learn how to make an effective trailer today and the steps you should take to create a great trailer for your own film or television project.
Executive
Stephen Boyer is a film and video editor with nearly 10 years of experience in post-production and currently serves as a trailer editor for Max, where he recuts modern trailers for existing films in the platform’s catalogue. Through his career, Stephen has edited feature films, documentaries, commercials, music videos and nearly everything in between and has cut for a litany of influential brands such as Netflix, Microsoft, SiriusXM, Nintendo, Blizzard Entertainment, and Warner Bros. A Los Angeles native with a lifelong passion for filmmaking and music composition, Stephen is well-versed and passionate in the art of trailer cutting and is bringing his years of experience exclusively to the Stage 32 community.