#12556. Cut to the chase – How multimodal cohesion secures narrative orientation in film trailers
July 2026 | publication date |
Proposal available till | 30-05-2025 |
4 total number of authors per manuscript | 0 $ |
The title of the journal is available only for the authors who have already paid for |
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Journal’s subject area: |
Cultural Studies;
Communication; |
Places in the authors’ list:
1 place - free (for sale)
2 place - free (for sale)
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4 place - free (for sale)
More details about the manuscript: Arts & Humanities Citation Index or/and Social Sciences Citation Index
Abstract:
Recent years have seen a growing number of studies explore the narrative, persuasive and multimodal design of film trailers. While such work has primarily looked at the ways in which trailers realize persuasive functions, this paper examines how the (audio-visual) representational choices made by trailer editors can provide narrative orientation for the film audience. Inside a self-compiled corpus of 150 genre-stratified US-American film trailers, recurring audio-visual, cohesive patterns are elicited. It will be shown that the visual effects of this cohesive thrust can be tied to the cinematographic choices editors make in the opening shots of the trailer, by using specific shot scales, (types of) settings and (non-)human represented participants. To capture the verbal dynamics of trailer cohesion, the study explores the key semantic domains to which all lexical expressions in the trailer dialogues can be linked. Results of this study confirm that both visual and verbal elements form recurring genre-specific patterns. They unleash their multimodal potential of film trailers by tapping into the previous (genre) knowledge of trailer audiences, facilitating the cognitive uptake of audiovisual information for the audience as the trailer unfolds.
Keywords:
Coherence; Cohesion; Corpus-assisted multimodal discourse analysis; Film; Film trailer; Multimodality; Semantic domains; Telecinematic discourse
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