“The Avengers” Trailer Joins Recycled Footage Trend: Is It Justifiable? Caleb Hamilton, October 11, 2011October 11, 2011 After watching the trailer for Marvel’s The Avengers over 20 times today, one shot stood out to me. I knew I had seen it somewhere before. I didn’t want to seem like a nitpicking fanboy (the trailer is absolutely awesome, by the way), but then I found out I wasn’t the only person who noticed it. Whoever edited the trailer threw in a shot from the Iron Man movie, and recolored it, among other adjustments, probably thinking no one would be able to recognize it. They thought wrong. To see the pic and more about recycled footage, hit the jump.The first time I watched the trailer, I was completely blown away, but when I saw the quick shot of Iron Man’s helmet closing, a little ping went off in my head. “Where have you seen that before?” I asked myself. Of course, it was a shot from one of my favorite sequences in Iron Man: when Tony Stark suits up in the Mark III armor for the first time before flying off to kick some terrorist ass in the fictional village of Gulmira.Here’s a comparison of the two shots (click for larger image): Photo Credit: @RIMBreaksOn the left, we see the original from Jon Favreau’s Iron Man. On the right we see the recycled shot with obvious tinkering. The background computer screens have changed color and moved a little. Iron Man has had some of the color drained and his eyes have been turned off. Study the image closely and you will see that it’s the exact same shot. Notice the smudges on the left side of the helmet, the exact same pattern!This isn’t the only instance we’ve seen were recycled shots have been used. In 2007, Michael Bay used footage from Pearl Harbor in Transformers. He again recycled footage from Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and The Island in Transformers: Dark of the Moon. During a highway battle between the Autobots and Decpticons Michael Bay threw in a few shots from The Island. You can see that footage below.Transformers and Pearl Harbor:Transformers 2 and Transformers 3 (not embeddable)Transformers 3 and The IslandThere are many reasons why directors would recycle footage, including no money to do reshoots. But in a trailer, why would one need to use recycled footage, from a 3 year old movie at that? I’m pretty sure that shot won’t be in the final cut of the film, I mean, why would it? It’s Tony’s Mark III armor, which is now crushed (thanks to Obidiah Stane/Iron Monger) and is sitting in Tony’s Hall of Armor. Perhaps now I am being a bit nitpicky, eh? But seriously, there wasn’t another 1 second shot from the actual movie to put there? I guess we’ll never know Marvel’s reasoning behind that move. One can never seem to get a straight answer out of them.What do you think about this recycled footage business? Is it justifiable or is it just laziness? Let us know in the comments below. Editorials News Michael BayRecycled FootageThe AvengersTrailerTransformers
The Buzz: Batman, X-Men: Days of Future Past, and Star Wars February 15, 2013The Buzz is a feature in which we round up the Top 3 most-buzzed-about movie/TV stories of the week (in more-or-less chronological order). Why go through pages of blogs just to find out what everyone is talking about? We’ve got it all right here in The Buzz. Read More
News John Green’s “Paper Towns” Bought By Fox 2000 March 25, 2014Today Fox 2000 announced their plans to bring John Green’s NY Times Best Selling novel Paper Towns to the big screen, a couple months before the studio’s adaptation of the YA writer’s acclaimed book The Fault in Our Stars (Directed by Josh Boone and starring Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elort)… Read More
20th Century Fox Revamps Their Website September 16, 2014September 16, 2014Traditionally movie studio websites highlight their upcoming films and their biggest hits. But there comes a time when these sites need to undergo a redesign. Which is what 20th Century Fox did after having hits like The Faults In Our Stars, Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes, and X-Men:… Read More
1 recycled footage I can understand and get on board with. 2 or more recycled footage is just laziness.
It’s the first trailer for a film that’s still in early stages of post-production; I can live with a recycled shot or two. You even admit that the Iron Man footage in question is one of the coolest shots in the first “Iron Man” movie.
I’m ok with it really. The trailer still gets me hyped up for the movie and if they can do that without showing too many actual shots of the film, that’s even better. I’d rather see it all for the first time when I watch the movie anyway.
guess we’ll never know Marvel’s reasoning behind that move. One can never seem to get a straight answer out of them.