How Movie Trailers Can Help You Write Back Cover Copies






Have you ever read a back cover copy (also known as a blurb) and thought that’s not like how the book is at all, that spoils most of the book, or the copy really tells me nothing about the plot? I bet you’ve thought that about movie trailers, too.


Back cover copies are the three paragraphs-ish (around 250 words) of text on the back of a novel or on the inside jacket sleeve. This is what people normally read when they’re debating on purchasing a book. These are very handy for one sheets, book proposals, and queries. Back cover copies need to answer these eight questions:
  • Who is the main character?
  • What is the main character’s goal?
  • What is preventing the main character from reaching the goal?
  • What is the setting?
  • What is the genre?
  • What is the target age group?
  • What is the tone of the story?
  • What makes this story unique out of others similar?

After watching the absolutely fantastic trailer for Logan, I got to thinking that that movie trailers are basically back cover copies for movies. Yes, there are back cover copies that are on the back of a DVD case or on IMDB, but when you hear about movies what do you look at first? The trailer. 

A full length movie trailer is two minutes and thirty seconds or less aka short just like a back cover copy and a good one requires answers to all of the questions stated above. What both of these things are not supposed to do is:
  • Imply the wrong plot
  • Imply events that don’t happen
  • Imply the wrong tone
  • Imply the wrong audience
  • Give no clues to the actual plot
  • Be too vague
  • Give away most of the story
  • Story sounds too similar to others

I can’t tell you how many movie trailers I’ve watched and back cover copies I’ve read that have done this. I don’t want to hate on the ones I’m thinking about, but this definitely makes or breaks whether I want to read or watch this product. 

I’m going to show you examples from my top three favorite movie trailers and three back cover copies to show you how the eight questions of a good trailer/back cover copy work. Try to answer the questions on your own before scrolling to look at the answers. 



I’ve watched this trailer at least twenty times, and I love how it gives us just a taste of the story and doesn’t give away anything about the games themselves. I love how it starts with the inciting incident of the story and moves from there. 

Main Character: Katniss Everdeen
Goal: Win the Games
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: The Gamemakers, the other Tributes, President Snow
Setting: The dystopian world of Panem
Genre: Sci-Fi Dystopian
Target Age Group: Young Adults
Tone: Dark, edgy, suspenseful
Uniqueness: A girl being forced to fight in the games of a tyrannical government. 

I’ve also watched this trailer at least twenty times and it still gives me chills. Dealing with an ensemble cast is very difficult, but I feel like each were highlighted in their own way in just two minutes. When dealing with a group in a back cover copy it’s best to mention the Avengers as a whole for the sake of conciseness. 

Main Character(s): The Avengers
Goal: Stop Ultron
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: Ultron, Wanda, Pietro, the Hulk (possibly)
Setting: Modern Day Multiple Locations including South Africa, South Korea, Malibu, and Sokovia
Genre: Superhero
Target Age Group: Adults
Tone: Creepy, suspenseful, action-packed
Uniqueness: A group of superheroes having to face their greatest fears to destroy a villain of Tony’s own creation.


Logan (2017)


When I first saw this in the theaters, I was awestruck. The nostalgic, melancholy tone of an aged Wolverine is so strong. I feel like this is going to be a heartbreaker. It’s just such a well-composed trailer. 

Main Character: Logan (Wolverine)
Goal: Help the last mutant (Laura)
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: Donald Pierce and his forces.
Setting: The Mexican border far in the future.
Genre: Superhero
Target Age Group: Adults
Tone: Action-packed, melancholy, nostalgic
Uniqueness: An aged Wolverine has to protect one of the last mutants in existence from a cyborg. 


Cinder by Marissa Meyer


Humans and androids crown the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl … 
Sixteen-year-old Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past and is reviled by her step-mother. But when her life becomes intertwined with the handsome Prince Kai’s, she suddenly finds herself at the center of an intergalactic struggle, and a forbidden attraction. Caught between duty and freedom, loyalty and betrayal, she must uncover secrets about her past in order to protect her world’s future. Because there is something unusual about Cinder, something that others would kill for.

As soon as I read this back cover copy I became interested. New Beijing? Cyborg Cinderella? Count me in! What I read here is what I got in the book.


Main Character: Cinder
Goal: Save her people from a deadly plague.
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: The Lunars
Setting: New Beijing
Genre: Science-Fiction
Target Age Group: Young Adults
Tone: Suspenseful, fantasty-esque, romance. 
Uniqueness: A cyborg Cinderella has to save her country.

A Time to Die by Nadine Brandes


Three hundred sixty-four days seven hours, and sixteen–no, fifteen–seconds left to live. Like everyone else on the east side of the Wall, Parvin Blackwater has a clock counting down the days until her death. At only seventeen, she has one year left. When the authorities find out she has been illegally sharing a clock with her twin brother, she is cast through the Wall–her people’s death sentence. When she finds on the other side about the world, about God, and about herself changes Parvin forever and might just save her people. if can get the world to them before her time runs out.



Main Character: Parvin Blackwater
Goal: Take her discovers of the other side of the wall back to her people before she dies.
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: Time and the authorities.
Setting: Dystopian future
Genre: Science-Fiction
Target Age Group: Young Adults
Tone: Self-journey, Spiritual, Suspense
Uniqueness: A girl with a clock that tells her predicted time of death. 


Red Hood (My WIP)

For a half century Mor’s country has been plagued by giant werewolves sent from the north. Descended from a long line of Red Hood huntresses sworn to keep the half-mechanical beasts at bay, she is determined to become a legend like her mother and grandmother. But when a werewolf warns her of the imminent attack on her home, her perspective on the creatures begins to change.
That night her village is invaded and destroyed. During the assault, while protecting a set of documents, Mor’s grandmother is murdered, not by a werewolf but by a human. Mor is assigned the task of delivering the documents to a translator in the capital of the realm. What is on the pages could reveal important information about Red Hood abilities. While her mother pursues the killer, Mor sets out on the quest with her two best friends.Along the way they again encounter the werewolf who had warned her earlier, but this time he has information that could tip the scales of war. Now the four must travel across treacherous territory to accomplish their mission. Success could mean end of the war while failure would result in death or worse—losing the information to the enemy.
Why is this werewolf helping them in a war against his own kind? What is in the encrypted documents? Will they complete their mission?

Main Character: Mor
Goal: Deliver the documents and save her people
What’s in the Main Character’s Way: Werewolves
Setting: Ssteampunk fantasy world (Silfurlund)
Genre: Steampunk fantasy
Target Age Group: Young Adults
Tone: Action-packed, Journey, Mystery
Uniqueness: A werewolf huntress Little Red Riding Hood needs help from the Big Bad Wolf.


All of these examples are very unique. There’s no one way to do a back cover copy/trailer, but as long as they have these eight things trailers can be effective and hopefully attract consumers. That’s what we want them to do in the end, right?

What are some of your favorite movie trailers and back cover copies? Do you have any further tips about writing back cover copies? Have you ever tried writing a back cover copy? What are some of your books’ back cover copies? Post them in the comments and I’ll give critique!

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