
The ‘Warner Bros. Pictures’ logo fades in quickly then fades out into a collection of quick cuts accompanied by loud celestial white noise: inside the spaceship, close shot of her gloves. The extremely wide shot of her body flying rapidly through space with earth behind to establish her visually makes her appeal insignificant and small against her threatening situation. The hand-held, spinning camera tracking the protagonist forces the audience to feel nauseated such as she and fear for her life. The diegetic exclaimed dialogue: ‘I’m detached, yes I’m spinning’, ‘you need to focus, give me coordinates’ which later descends into her heavy breathing and panting creates unease. The increasing volume of the dramatic instrumental underneath the diegetic sound is overpowering and emulates the protagonist’s anxiety. The editing and the camerawork of the extreme close up and the fading in and out of blackness imitates the astronauts consciousness. For a second time, all sound comes to a halt and the screen fades into black. Diegetic sound of gasps for air are synched to the opening credits of the director. More quick cuts follow this: falling through space, falling into satellite, crashing, photo frame of family, fire etc complemented by a voice over of the female protagonist explaining her backstory to create context for the audience. In between the fast cuts of action, the audience is finally introduced to the main actors: ‘Sandra Bullock, ‘George Clooney’. As the trailer comes to end, the astronaut is reaching her death. The suspense reaches a breaking point with diegetic sound of grunting, screaming, non-diegetic sound of dramatic music and visuals of big machinery crushing her body as the audience fear for her life. The sound stops suddenly as ‘Gravity’ spells out, followed by the release date to inform the audience. The trailer is successful in engaging an audience interested in adventure and thriller by using film codes to create suspense.
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