These Are the 8 Best Movie Marketing Campaigns of 2018 (So Far) – Info Advertisement

2018 has been a weird year for marketing. Overall theatrical ticket revenue is up, but actual ticket sales are down, with the increased revenue coming mainly from a handful of early-year releases. A handful of titles have been sold off by the studio that produced them to Netflix when it was determined the movies had limited box office potential. MoviePass’s organs continue to shut down one-by-one even as AMC Theaters and others launch their own subscription ticketing service.

Amid all that, a handful of have really jumped out as being notable both for their creativity and their ability to drive audiences to theaters. Some of these are for significant blockbusters, others are for smaller films that might not have played near you. But all are worth paying attention to for the ways they helped the movies they supported stand out in people’s minds.

Black Panther

You can’t create a list of the most successful/interesting movie campaigns of 2018 and not include Black Panther. The marketing sold what should have been just another Marvel Cinematic Universe release as an event that couldn’t be missed, even more so than Avengers: Infinity War that came out just a couple months later.

What Made It Special

  • Large chunks of the campaign — from earned media to the trailers — emphasized the soundtrack produced and curated by Kendrick Lamar. His music was all over the push and helped reach the target audience in a real and powerful way.
  • The film was positioned even more as coming from director Ryan Coogler than from Marvel Studios. Coogler was front and center throughout the publicity campaign, talking to the press about the story and what it meant to helm the first Marvel or DC movie featuring a black hero and cast.
  • It was evident that the movie’s enormous success profoundly influenced the last few months of the campaign for Infinity War. Suddenly that film’s marketing featured a lot more scenes in Wakanda and included a lot more focus on T’Challa and the other characters.

A Wrinkle In Time

Ava Duvernay made history here by being the first black director to helm a studio film with a budget over $100 million. The box office take for the movie, based on the popular book of the same name, just cleared that same number but it didn’t even matter because the whole affair had everyone excited.

What Made It Special

  • Oprah, for one thing. The multi-hyphenate starred in the film, was a producer and utilized her significant fan base to hype up the movie.
  • The campaign made no bones about its multiethnic cast. Storm Reid, who played Meg, was a big part of the marketing, as were Mindy Kaling, Reese Witherspoon and others.
  • While the campaign did hit a “chosen one” theme, it made it clear Meg would not be saving the day by shooting arrows or embracing her mutant powers. Instead, it was math and science that helped her get her dad (Chris Pine) back.

Annihilation

Writer/director Alex Garland’s follow-up to the critically-acclaimed Annihilation was sold as a science-fiction mystery starring Natalie Portman, Tessa Thompson, Gina Rodriguez and others. The movie didn’t fare well at the box office, and Paramount sold overseas rights to Netflix when it became clear it had little potential for success there.

What Made It Special

  • One of two campaigns this year along with that of Ocean’s 8 that featured predominantly female casts that never once mentions that fact in the trailers or other marketing materials.
  • Again, the inclusive nature of the cast was worth noticing and came up quite a bit in the publicity push and was noticeable in the trailers.
  • It did what it could to capitalize on how, post-Thor: Ragnarok, everyone loved Tessa Thompson.

Ready Player One

The campaign for Ready Player One, directed by Steven Spielberg and based on an immensely popular book, was not well-received by many. It was quickly derided and dismissed as “Nostalgia: The Movie” as trailers and posters that went out of their way to reference as much of 80s pop culture as possible were released.

What Made It Special

  • That pushback was surprising in that weaponized nostalgia has been part of movie marketing for decades now. Perhaps this took it just a tad too far for people not to feel exploited by the effort.
  • A mixed-media activation including VR experiences and a recreation of the stacked trailers where characters live was brought to SXSW and San Diego Comic-Con to really bring people into the world of the movie.
  • It’s the only campaign this year to use both Rush’s “Tom Sawyer” and Van Halen’s “Jump” and is therefore unequivocally the best campaign of the year.

A Quiet Place

Director and star John Krasinski offered mainstream audiences an excuse to check out a horror flick by wrapping it inside a family drama, telling the story of how people have learned to survive in near silence following an invasion of aliens who attack at any sound.

What Made It Special

  • Krasinski was out in the press constantly, along with on-screen and real-life wife Emily Blunt, talking about how it really was a family drama at heart, helping to make it accessible to a broader group.
  • There’s almost no dialogue at all in the trailers, which can’t have been an easy proposition for the studio to sell. Those trailers helped set the stage for a situation where the slightest sound could get you killed.
  • Word-of-mouth was incredibly strong, beginning with a screening at SXSW and continuing through release, when your friend told you if you do go see it to not open your candy wrappers in the middle of the movie.


Article Prepared by Ollala Corp

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