Ahead of its September 5th release, we now have our first look at Tim Burton's take on the afterlife, and it proves the original movie's self-aware tone hasn't gone anywhere. Check out the full teaser below.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice follows three generations of Deetz women: Delia, the fashionable stepmother played by Catherine O'Hara, Lydia, the "strange and unusual" daughter played by Winona Ryder, and Astrid, Winona's daughter, played by Gen Z scream queen Jenna Ortega. We get our first look at Astrid while a boys' choir at a funeral sings "Day-O," the Harry Belafonte song the ghosts made the Deetzes sing during a dinner party in the original film.
The use of slow, moody covers of on-the-nose songs, so-called "trailercore" songs, has been a trend in Hollywood for decades. Popularized by The Social Network's cover of "Creep," it's since popped up again and again, from "I've Got No Strings" in the Avengers: Age of Ultron trailer, "End of the World" in the Eternals trailer, and "What a Wonderful World" in seemingly every trailer for a dystopian or apocalyptic story (including Eternals, which really milked the concept).
The Beetlejuice Beetlejuice trailer uses an old cliche in a very funny way.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice seems very aware of its status as a legacyquel, and all the tropes that come with it — the callbacks, references, and strangely reverential attitudes to even the silliest movies. That tone is perfect for a follow-up to Tim Burton's raunchy take on the classic ghost story. Let's just hope that goofy trailer songs aren't the only sequel cliche Beetlejuice Beetlejuice ultimately buries.