Sunday, 5 October 2014

Hanna Trailer Analysis

Hanna, a unique teenage girl like no other, has been undergoing intense training by her father, an ex - CIA agent, to become the perfect assassin with having the strength, stamina and smarts of a fully fledged soldier. From the isolate Finland wilds, her intense training take a turning point after Hanna’s father sends her on a mission across Europe in order to take out a ruthless intelligence operative who has dispatched agents to capture and kill both of them for reasons still unknown. However as Hanna approaches her ultimate goal she is suddenly faced with the daunting truth behind her existence as well as the secrets of her father's ambitions.







The intense thrill of Hanna was captured perfectly through the trailer, having it’s exciting, original score co-exist with the visuals on beat. As usual the beginning of the trailer started off slow displaying the characters and their current position in the story and towards the end having the pace quicken to an intense action sequenced, continuously until the end cut off point; leaving the audience lusting for more.
Although the trailer was partly misleading, in some cases being good or bad, it could have set up the wrong impression for the film as the beginning of the trailer has Hanna within an interrogation room presents her almost as a young criminal and the overarching story being that she must escape for purposes that were not present in the trailer. However instead was about her being a trained assassin and taking down the head CIA experimentation facility.
this factor alone could have been the reason why the box office for Hanna wasn't as successful as it could have been, only in taking an estimate of $13,000,000 on the opening weekend in comparison to the original budget of $30,000,000. Although as soon as the film came available to DVD the over all grossing skyrocketed to $40,000,000, perhaps because of the true story being released for people to witness instead of the misleading trailer which originally set p the wrong pitch for the film.

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