logo
Inside YouTube's Weird World Of Fake Movie Trailers — And How Studios Are Secretly Cashing In On The AI-Fuelled Videos

Inside YouTube's Weird World Of Fake Movie Trailers — And How Studios Are Secretly Cashing In On The AI-Fuelled Videos

Yahoo28-03-2025

EXCLUSIVE: David Corenswet's Superman lies on the ground, an open wound on his chest wells with blood. Cut to Nicholas Hoult's Lex Luthor watching on and Milly Alcock's Supergirl levitating into view. 'They are not from here,' Luthor intones in an ominous voiceover. 'And they will never be.' Cue thunderous music, the DC logo, and an aerial shot of the Daily Planet. Your new Superman trailer just dropped.
Except this montage is all fake. It is the creation of a machine that can reassemble the Man of Steel in dazzling detail, but will never understand the human world that makes him so enduring. The trailer, which Frankensteins together fleeting AI shots with legitimate footage from the Superman trailer released in December, is one of countless bogus movie teasers to have flooded YouTube in recent years.
More from Deadline
Disney Near Deal For Hawaii-Set Crime Pic With Scorsese, Dwayne Johnson, DiCaprio & Emily Blunt: The Dish
BAFTA TV Awards Snubs & Surprises: 'Day Of The Jackal' Frozen Out; Record Year For Disney+; 'Supacell' Makes Drama Series Cut
Breaking Baz: Gemma Arterton Arms Herself To Thwart A Russian Mole In Timely ITV Adaptation Of Tom Bradby Thriller 'Secret Service'
Most industry observers will recognize the pungent whiff of AI that YouTube's algorithm lifts under the nose, but for some, the movie commercials can be indiscernible from the real deal. Even French national television was duped by a fake AI Superman trailer last year, showing clips of a besuited Corenswet months before any official footage had been released. Director James Gunn made his feelings pretty clear, posting three puking emojis alongside the France Télévisions clip. He may be surprised to learn, then, that Warner Bros. Discovery is quietly cashing in on some knock-off videos.
Instead of enforcing copyright on counterfeit commercials, Deadline can reveal that a handful of Hollywood studios are asking YouTube to ensure that the ad revenue made from views flows in their direction. Quite why they are doing this is a mystery (all the majors approached by Deadline declined to comment), but it raises questions about their willingness to take cash for content that exploits their IP and talent, at a time when there is an existential crisis about how copyright collides with AI. Actors' union SAG-AFTRA describes our revelation as a 'race to the bottom.'
Step back, and a more obvious question emerges: why are studios allowing fake trailers to flourish in the first place? Those who create these videos believe they help feed the movie promotion machine, but a sceptic might argue that the trailers could serve to degrade and cheapen official marketing material, potentially imperilling perceptions of the final movie.
And what of the fake trailer creators themselves? Some do it for fun, while others are building meaningful businesses. Either way, they are generating billions of views and making money. Welcome to YouTube's weird world of fake film trailers.
In The Beginning…
People have been posting fake trailers since the dawn of YouTube in 2005. One of the earliest examples to go viral was an imagined Titanic sequel, in which Leonardo DiCaprio's Jack Dawson is discovered in a block of ice under the ocean and is brought back to life in contemporary New York — all set to a thumping dance remix of Céline Dion's My Heart Will Go On. The trailer was updated in 2018 by VJ4rawr2, an Australian YouTuber who is considered to be one of the Godfathers of so-called concept trailers. Titanic 2: Jack's Back got 53M views before VJ4rawr2's original video was blocked by 20th Century Fox.
VJ4rawr2, who prefers not to disclose his real name, creates the trailers for fun, but was able to quit his job in 2015 to focus on YouTube, where he has amassed 393M views. His videos start with a central joke and use editing techniques and AI to tease a unique story. VJ4rawr2 has imagined a Mission: Impossible sequel in which Tom Cruise runs from New York to LA, while his most recent effort pictured Macaulay Culkin returning to his Home Alone house to confront his family about childhood abandonment.
If VJ4rawr2 was creating these trailers for laughs, artificial intelligence has changed the game in recent years. Fake trailer channels are using the technology to industrialize their output and piggyback on YouTube's algorithm. Most videos posit a simple, enticing question: What would a live-action Frozen movie look like with Anya Taylor-Joy as Elsa? How would Leonardo DiCaprio fare if he entered Squid Game? Could Henry Cavill actually make a good James Bond? Sometimes, these trailers go viral enough to warrant press coverage, with the bogus Bond trailer prompting headlines in both Variety and The Hollywood Reporter.
There are big audiences for these videos, with many actively seeking out the simulacra. Other YouTube users hate-watch fake trailers and rage in the comments below. Some are completely fooled by what they are watching — particularly if they are not familiar with the telltale signs of generative AI. 'My parents watched this and thought it was real,' one person noted on the DiCaprio Squid Game video. VJ4rawr2 says: 'The majority of fan trailers today are only popular because they've effectively fooled people into thinking they're real.'
Screen Culture is perhaps the best example of a channel that has professionalized its output with the help of AI. Based in Pune, a city southeast of Mumbai in India, is Nikhil P. Chaudhari, a 27-year-old entrepreneur who has turned his Hollywood geekery into a burgeoning business. After being gifted a laptop as a child, Chaudhari (who likes to be known as Nick), has been obsessed with movie culture and amateur video editing. His skills combined in 2018 when he launched the Screen Culture channel, initially posting cut-together conversations between comedy characters, such as his debut video: Chandler Bing Vs Sheldon Cooper.
Speaking to Deadline over Zoom, Chaudhari says he noticed other accounts creating concept trailers and thought he could do a better job. He began with clunky mash-ups, including imagining an Avengers-style cut of Game of Thrones, before graduating to more sophisticated videos. Although Chaudhari was initially unhappy about AI lowering the barrier to entry to the concept trailer community, he had little choice but to embrace the technology if he was going to compete for YouTube real estate.
Unlike VJ4rawr2, or the outlandish videos of DiCaprio Squid Game creator KH Studio (viewcount: 556M), Screen Culture leans into films that are actually happening. Narrowing in on franchises and sequels, Chaudhari researches and iterates around upcoming movies, creating trailers that are difficult to differentiate from the real deal. They borrow heavily from official footage, but splice in AI imagery to tease irresistible details about a movie that appeal to their giant fandoms. 'Our goal was to create videos that were as close to an official trailer as a concept trailer could be,' he says. Chaudhari now oversees a team of a dozen editors, who churn out as many as 12 videos a week based on his instructions.
The Industrialization Of Fake Trailers
Screen Culture has created 23 versions of a trailer for The Fantastic Four: First Steps over the past year. When Deadline searched YouTube using a private browsing tool in February, two of Screen Culture's fake Fantastic Four videos ranked higher than the official trailer, which had been posted by Marvel just days earlier. The first search result was Screen Culture's The Fantastic Four: First Steps | New Trailer video, which contains obvious AI images of Galactus, even though the cosmic bad guy has not been fully pictured in official material. The second search result, another similar Screen Culture offering, used AI to tease the yet-to-be-seen female Silver Surfer.
Being early to a topic can help push a video up YouTube's search ranking, while new videos are often boosted, which is why Screen Culture hits certain franchises fast and hard. Deadline searches found Screen Culture had high-ranking results for many major upcoming movies, including Thunderbolts* and Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, with all the videos embellished using AI. YouTube's algorithm also rewarded some videos by pushing them into its recommendation sidebar and 'People Also Search For' menu. YouTube was approached for comment.
Chaudhari uses at least six AI tools to create his videos, including Leonardo, Midjourney, and ElevenLabs, the latter of which specializes in generative voiceover work. Since adopting the technology, Screen Culture's views and subscribers have more than doubled in the past two years to 1.4B and 1.4M respectively. The channel is verified by YouTube, giving it a veneer of authenticity, while Chaudhari proudly displays his YouTube gold award for hitting 1M subscribers. The success has translated into millions of dollars of ad revenue, though Chaudhari is coy about exactly how much he is earning. On his Instagram account, he looks every inch the affluent online influencer, flaunting his supercars and luxury travel escapades.
Chaudhari does have his admirers. 'He's probably the first person I know who treated the fan trailer genre seriously and built up a team around it,' says VJ4rawr2. Others are uncertain about the influence of AI. The Yeti, a movie culture channel (viewcount: 30M) that dabbles in fake trailers, says the technology has 'ruined' the art form of concept commercials.
Screen Culture's videos are not titled with 'official' or 'concept' trailer. Instead, it operates in a gray area, headlining videos 'new' or 'first,' before making clear in the small print description that it is not the real deal. Chaudhari says most YouTube users understand that Screen Culture is not stocked with official videos and that people can find the legitimate trailer by searching for the official channel. For those who are fooled by his trailers, Chaudhari exclaims: 'What's the harm?'
What's The Harm?
He believes that Screen Culture helps promote the movies, which is why studios do not enforce copyright on the vast majority of his videos. Indeed, studios are actively taking a cut of his earnings on AI-fuelled trailers, even if the money is paltry in the grand scheme of their earnings. Emails reviewed by Deadline show how Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has claimed monetization on Screen Culture trailers for Superman and House of the Dragon. This means that instead of copyright striking the videos (if a channel accrues three strikes within 90 days, it can be banned from YouTube), WBD is asking YouTube to ensure it receives the ad revenue from views. Similarly, Sony Pictures has claimed revenue on fake trailers for Spider-Man and Kraven The Hunter, while Paramount did the same on a counterfeit Gladiator II video. WBD, Sony, and Paramount declined to comment.
If Chaudhari's position is that his videos are not harmful, SAG-AFTRA disagrees. In a statement shared with Deadline, it admonishes studios for making money on videos that exploit its members without permission. 'Just as SAG-AFTRA is aggressively bargaining contract terms and creating laws to protect and enforce our members' voice and likeness rights, we expect our bargaining partners to aggressively enforce their IP from any, and all AI misappropriation,' the union says. 'Monetizing unauthorized, unwanted, and subpar uses of human-centered IP is a race to the bottom. It incentivizes technology companies and short-term gains at the expense of lasting human creative endeavor.'
Things get murkier when you consider that some channels actively sex-up images of female characters in fake trailers. Screen Culture is not averse to this engagement bait, creating an AI thumbnail of Riley Andersen with cleavage for an imagined Inside Out 3 sequel. Chaudhari defends the image, saying it is a plausible storyline as Andersen gets older. 'Every single studio is misogynistic, hence we don't really pay attention to critics,' he adds.
Chaudhari's impression is that copyright is being enforced inconsistently, with monetization claims only being made on an estimated 10% of Screen Culture's 2,700 videos. WBD did copyright strike the channel once in 2023 for a fake Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga trailer, but let subsequent Mad Max videos slide. Chaudhari received a polite email from an Amazon attorney to remove a The Boys trailer because it used 'Amazon trademarks and other intellectual property assets without Amazon's permission,' but this warning was not repeated for other bogus Boys trailers on Screen Culture. Disney very rarely copyright challenges Screen Culture's videos, despite its IP being a major resource for the channel. Disney declined to comment.
Fake trailers on YouTube are not a new phenomenon, but they are increasing in number and sophistication. At the same time, trailers have become an ever-more important part of the movie marketing machine, with studios crowing about record views in the hope this translates into cinema ticket sales or subscriptions. In public at least, the studios appear to be responding with a collective shrug to what some regard as AI slop on YouTube, despite CEOs like Bob Iger opining about the need to protect IP and respect talent. Even the studios' trade body, the Motion Picture Association, declined to comment for this article.
Meanwhile, wily creators like Chaudhari will continue to stand on the shoulders of filmmakers like James Gunn and get billions of views by playing with AI immitations of their characters. Even Superman is not immune from the machine.
Best of Deadline
'1923' Season 2 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Come Out?
Which Colleen Hoover Books Are Becoming Movies? 'Verity,' 'Reminders Of Him' & 'Regretting You' Will Join 'It Ends With Us'
Everything We Know About Amazon's 'Verity' Movie So Far

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Hamilton' Original Company Reunion Performance Rouses Tony Awards Crowd As Lin-Manuel Miranda Leads Intricate Medley Of Songs
‘Hamilton' Original Company Reunion Performance Rouses Tony Awards Crowd As Lin-Manuel Miranda Leads Intricate Medley Of Songs

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘Hamilton' Original Company Reunion Performance Rouses Tony Awards Crowd As Lin-Manuel Miranda Leads Intricate Medley Of Songs

In tip-top shape, as if no time has passed since its 2015 debut off-Broadway and immense success thereafter, the original company of Hamilton reunited for a rousing performance featuring an intricate medley of songs from the hit soundtrack, bringing the audience to its feet. Host and Tony winner Cynthia Erivo introduced the castmembers, stating the musical 'changed not just Broadway, but how Americans view their own history — or so I'm told,' to crowd laughter. Calling it a 'cultural force' and 'explosion of joy that spilled onto Broadway's sidewalks,' she wasted no time in ushering the grand anniversary showcase, a true masterclass in rapid-fire onstage choreography and breathwork. More from Deadline Sarah Snook Doesn't Know How Cate Blanchett Would Turn "Picture Of Dorian Gray" Into A Film, But Would Love To Help Her Try Deadline's Tony Awards Live Blog Cynthia Erivo's Original Song Provides Lively Opening To Tony Awards As She Earns A Standing Ovation Beginning with Hamilton (Lin-Manuel Miranda) and Aaron Burr (Leslie Odom, Jr.) themselves, the medley swelled first with 'Non-Stop,' with the former then taking over for 'My Shot.' Enter stage left Phillipa Soo with 'That Would Be Enough,' later completing the beloved trio also featuring Jasmine Cephas Jones and Renée Elise Goldsberry for a brief snippet of 'The Schuyler Sisters.' Then came Daveed Diggs with 'Guns and Ships' and King George III himself (Jonathan Groff, his second time on the Tonys stage tonight). The quick transitions also gave way to 'Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down),' 'The Room Where It Happens,' 'Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story' and 'History Has Its Eyes on You,' ending with a short reprisal of 'My Shot.' Upon the conclusion of the reunion performance, which clocked in under five minutes, the crowd broke out into uproarious applause and a standing ovation. The reunion was announced late last month, featuring original cast members coming together to mark the 10th anniversary of the groundbreaking musical from Miranda, who led the performance alongside other original castmembers Carleigh Bettiol, Andrew Chappelle, Ariana DeBose, Alysha Deslorieux, Diggs, Goldsberry, Groff, Sydney James Harcourt, Neil Haskell, Sasha Hutchings, Christopher Jackson, Thayne Jasperson, Jones, Stephanie Klemons, Morgan Marcell, Javier Muñoz, Odom, Jr. (who will be reprising his Tony-winning role as Aaron Burr on Broadway this fall), Okieriete Onaodowan, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Jon Rua, Austin Smith, Soo, Seth Stewart, Betsy Struxness, Ephraim Sykes and Voltaire Wade-Greene. Hamilton debuted off Broadway at the Public Theater in 2015, transferring to the Great White Way's Richard Rodgers Theatre that year. At the 70th annual Tony Awards, it made history with a record-breaking 16 nominations and 11 wins including Best Musical. The show went on to receive the Grammy Award, Olivier Award, Pulitzer Prize for Drama and a special citation from the Kennedy Center Honors. Most recently, its Original Broadway Cast Recording became the first in history to be certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America. The 78th Tony Awards are being broadcast live on CBS and Paramount+ from New York City's Radio City Music Hall this evening. Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series

Sarah Snook Doesn't Know How Cate Blanchett Would Turn 'Picture Of Dorian Gray' Into A Film, But Would Love To Help Her Try
Sarah Snook Doesn't Know How Cate Blanchett Would Turn 'Picture Of Dorian Gray' Into A Film, But Would Love To Help Her Try

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Sarah Snook Doesn't Know How Cate Blanchett Would Turn 'Picture Of Dorian Gray' Into A Film, But Would Love To Help Her Try

Sarah Snook, who won a Tony Award for Best Performance By a Leading Actress in a Play for The Picture of Dorian Gray, is stumped about how it would ever be turned into a film. That's the aim of Cate Blanchett's Dirty Pictures, as Deadline was the first to report in 2024. The vision of the current stage adaptation of Oscar Wilde's novel sees her playing 26 different roles in a highly stylized production, which took London by storm before heading to Broadway. More from Deadline Deadline's Tony Awards Live Blog Cynthia Erivo's Original Song Provides Lively Opening To Tony Awards As She Earns A Standing Ovation How To Watch Sunday's Tony Awards: Red Carpet, Preshow & Cynthia Erivo-Hosted Ceremony Asked for the latest on the Blanchett-backed film adaptation during an appearance in the Tonys media room Sunday, Snook replied, 'I have as much idea as you do about where that is.' She continued, 'I don't know how this gets turned into a film. It's a particularly complex piece to do as a theater show. I mean, dramaturgically it holds up and I think Kip [Williams, the show's director] would be an incredible director for that project. If she were able to take part in the film version, Snook added, 'it would be a dream come true, but who knows?' The Succession alum was asked about the theater accomplishments of its cast and creative team since the series wrapped its HBO run in 2023. 'It's such a special group chat,' she said. 'We're all big theater nerds deep down. It's been really nice to have that revealed and shared with each other.' The ritual of being a Tony nominee, and now winner, was a new experience for Snook. 'I didn't even know Tony season even existed!' she laughed. 'You end up seeing all of the people who are nominated with you for other shows. … It's really nice because you get to meet the person who is creating art at the same time as you are.' Sarah Snook, a #TonyAwards winner for her performance in 'The Picture of Dorian Grey,' was asked backstage about Cate Blanchett's production company acquiring film rights to the stage adaptation — Deadline (@DEADLINE) June 9, 2025 Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series

How Actress Samantha Williams Harnesses the Headstrong Heroine In Tony-nominated ‘Pirates! The Penzance Musical'
How Actress Samantha Williams Harnesses the Headstrong Heroine In Tony-nominated ‘Pirates! The Penzance Musical'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Actress Samantha Williams Harnesses the Headstrong Heroine In Tony-nominated ‘Pirates! The Penzance Musical'

'I'm just happy that our work is being recognized. [It's] super crazy,' says actress Samantha Williams on a Zoom call, just hours after finding out 'Pirates! The Penzance Musical' has been nominated for the Tony Award for best revival of a musical. Perhaps nearly as thrilling as the Tony nom, Williams is also fresh off a performance for a group of young students, which she says felt like headlining at Madison Square Garden. For Williams, the journey with this New Orleans-set, jazz-inspired adaptation of the comic opera 'The Pirates of Penzance,' has been this exhilarating since Day One. Williams stars as Mabel, the headstrong heroine, alongside David Hyde Pierce (who plays her father), Jinkx Monsoon and Ramin Karimloo in 'Pirates! The Penzance Musical' at the Todd Haimes Theatre through July 27. More from WWD EXCLUSIVE: Kiehl's Is Back in the Locker Room With Life Time Nicole Scherzinger Makes a Fashion Statement in LaQuan Smith and Thigh-high Boots at Broadway's Big Luncheon Honoring Idina Menzel Ana de Armas on 'Ballerina,' Breaking Barriers and Finding Balance in Hollywood 'Pirates! The Penzance Musical' follows a young man, Frederic, accidentally forced into being a pirate until he turns 21. Gearing up for his birthday, he meets and falls in love with Williams' character Mabel. However, a slew of challenges arise, deterring their relationship — and hilarity ensues. While many theater fanatics are familiar with the original Gilbert & Sullivan work, this adaptation has been surprising attendees since its opening night with this new setting and 'silly' approach, according to Williams. It also surprised Williams, who was originally reluctant to audition for the role when she was first approached about a one-night-only concert rendition in October 2022. According to Williams, it was a complete change of pace from the type of work she'd been doing. 'I was like, 'Girl, I don't really think that's my vibe,' because I was doing more serious contemporary theater,' she recalls. 'I was like, 'A lot of young people don't really know it.' I learned about it in theater school, but I passed on the original audition for the concert. Then the team, specifically Joseph Joubert, who rewrote all the music — he was my music director and the orchestrator on 'Caroline, or Change' — wrote to my agents like, 'She has to come in…it's not what she thinks it is. They've changed it all.'' Williams adds: 'The world of Gilbert and Sullivan, I'd never seen a Black girl. I was like, 'I don't really see where I would fit in that world,' and so it was more like the preconceived ideas of what that [world] is and what that looks like, that society has put on all of us, actors and theater makers alike, that I was giving into.' Upon digging into the updated score and production, Williams was hooked and did go on to star in the concert alongside many of her current cast members. The jazzy orchestration and new take on the character of Mabel in particular stood out to her. 'Mabel is very headstrong and in tune with her sexuality in this version. She knows what she wants, and she gets it,' Williams says. 'She's the one sister that's always up to her own thing, whereas the rest of the sisters work as a school of fish… It's been fun to dive into bringing this character back in a way that's not so much damsel in distress and has more ownership over what she wants.' Of the vocals, Williams says: 'It has the jazz, the soprano, a little belt. It is all over the place, so it's been really fun and a great challenge for me.' The show comes with some other challenges, most notably holding in laughter, particularly in scenes with costars Pierce and Karimloo, Williams says. 'We laugh a lot on stage… The audience loves when you break during a comedy. They eat it up,' Williams says, adding this was especially true of the student audience. In terms of who breaks the most with laughter, Williams immediately says: ' It's me, and [the cast] would all say me too.' While Monsoon, Pierce and Karimloo are constantly causing Williams to crack up on stage, she's grateful to be working with such a stacked cast. 'All three [are] so gracious and humble… We're only around each other. We don't really have lives, and so [I] kind of forget who they are until someone [is like] 'how is it working with these icons?'' she says. 'My mom is obsessed with David Hyde Pierce and 'Frasier.' She was fan-girling when she met him at opening. David is just so subtle with everything, which is what makes him so good, and Ramin [has] that voice, and Jinx is just such an icon.' Upon opening, 'Pirates! The Penzance Musical' was already set for a limited engagement, something that Williams is used to as she completed a short run of 'Titanic' at New York City Center last summer alongside Karimloo. 'I love being able to be like, 'OK, we did that. Now, let's jump to the next thing.' There's always something to learn with that,' she says. 'At the same time, it is a little bit scary because you just don't know what the next thing is going to be, and you have to just trust that something will come that's meant to be.' As far as what is next, Williams jokes about writing a 'Cheetah Girls' musical with her friends, adding that she's always been a Galleria, the character played by Raven-Symoné. 'It would be for a very specific audience, though, like our age girlies, [but] we can we make a dent,' she jokes, adding that she's been listening to the song 'Cinderella' from the first movie. As thoughts of a potential 'Cheetah Girls' musical rattle around Williams' brain, she says a bit more seriously that she is a part of several hopefully Broadway-bound new musicals. She's also ready to do something on television. 'What's next?' she asks herself. 'Lots of fun!' Best of WWD Celebrating Lenny Kravitz, Rock Icon, Actor, Author, Designer and Style Star: Photos Cannes Film Festival 1970s: Flashbacks, Celebrities and Fashion Highlights from WWD's 'Eye' Pages [PHOTOS] A Look Back at Cannes Film Festival's Best Dressed Red Carpet Stars: Blake Lively, Angelina Jolie, Princess Diana and More Photos

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store