Teasing terror: Both the Nosferatu and Longlegs trailers obscure their bad guys, and I need more horror marketing to do the same

Estimated read time 5 min read


“We suffer more in imagination than in reality,” once said philosopher Seneca. He was talking about anxiety and overthinking, but it’s no secret that the phrase applies to horror movies, too. A lot of the time, it’s the things we think we see, or simply the anticipation of seeing something truly terrible, that make the hairs on the back of our necks stand on end.

The dread-inducing trailers for Nosferatu, from The Witch‘s Robert Eggers, and Osgood Perkins’ Longlegs understand this in a big way, as they obscure their respective, eponymous villains to ratchet up the tension. The teaser for Tillman Singer’s Cuckoo kind of does it as well, only offering up quick or blurred shots of Hunter Schafer’s slack-jawed, sunglasses-wearing stalker – and all of their promo is better for it. Other scary flicks could learn a thing or two from their marketing.

I think the key thing, though, is that they don’t hide them completely. Nicolas Cage’s Longlegs is actually in almost every clip released for the film so far but only in shots where he’s covering his face, or seen from the side, or moving so quickly that we can’t really see him at all. Nosferatu is similar in its montage style: “He is coming,” several characters shout or mumble in fear as to the inevitable arrival of Bill Skarsgård’s vampiric Count Orlok, as quick snippets allow us a glimpse of him in silhouette and from behind. It forces us to pay more attention, to lean in, squint, and scour each frame for a look at something we know will frighten us, but we can’t stop. Curiosity killed the cat, and all that. 

Nicolas Cage in Longlegs

(Image credit: Neon)

It makes them seem all the more menacing, too – their visages too terrible to just reveal nonchalantly – and quite simply, it amplifies genre fans’ want to watch the film. They have to see them, to see what they look like in all their glory, even if they’ll wind up wishing they hadn’t.



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