Not all great movies find their audience. Sometimes they suffer from a poor release date, sometimes it’s just bad timing, but sometimes it’s all to do with the film’s marketing campaign. A bad trailer can turn off an entire potential audience, and while this isn’t an insurmountable problem, it’s certainly a hurdle.

Recently we ran down a listgreat trailers for movies that ultimately turned out to be bad, so now it’s time to look at the inverse: bad trailers for good movies. There are a number of different ways a trailer can be “bad”—it can be wildly misleading, it can give away the entire plot, or it can just be unexciting on a base level. So, without further ado, let’s take a look at some of the most glaring examples.

Crimson Peak

Guillermo del Torohimself has admitted that he was no fan of the wayCrimson Peakwas marketed, but he also acknowledges that given the size of the budget, the studio needed to target a wider audience. And thus, the trailers forCrimson Peaksuggest that del Toro has crafted a scary R-rated haunted house horror film, when instead he made a Gothic romance. That’s made particular clear in the film’s first act, which has no major scares whatsoever and is very much in the Gothic romance vein. So this trailer in and of itself isn’t terrible, it’s just selling a movie that’s completely different than the one del Toro made.

This is what we call a trailer that gives away the entire movie.Easy Ais an incredibly charming and memorable comedy anchored byEmma Stone, but for whatever reason the studio decided they needed to work overtime to convince audiences to see this one, so we get a trailer that is packed to the gills with narration that basically steamrolls over the entire film’s plot. Bad trailers are something of a refrain for directorWill Gluck’s films, as the actual movie almost always turns out to be far better than what the marketing would have you believe.

Kingsman: The Secret Service

FilmmakerMatthew Vaughn’sKingsman: The Secret Serviceis a foul-mouthed, hilarious and exciting romp, but the trailer instead essentially teases a Young James Bond movie. While the Bond influence is all overKingsman, the film itself is also an absolute blast—something you really don’t get from the trailer, which plays things straight as an arrow, backed by a pop song.

The Cabin in the Woods

The Cabin in the Woodsfamously sat on the shelf for years before it was released, so perhaps it wasn’t exactly a surprise when the marketing failed to truly telegraph how uniqueDrew GoddardandJoss Whedon’s horror film was. This trailer looks like it’s targeted directly at fans ofRob Zombiemovies, making the film look like a niche, gory horror slasher instead of a smart and sophisticated breath of fresh air for the genre. Admittedly it’s hard to promote this movie without giving away its secrets, but surely they could’ve done better than this.

FilmmakerAndrew Niccol’s sci-fi dramaGattacais one of the best sci-fi films ever made, but it got the world’s most basic trailer. The 1997 film is a brilliant rumination on eugenics and destiny, but instead it was marketed as something more in the vein ofArnold Schwarzenegger’s 90s sci-fi movies. And that dreadful voiceover, oof.

King Arthur: Legend of the Sword

For two films in a row, filmmakerGuy Ritchiecrafted wonderfully refreshing and wildly entertaining movies that failed to find an audience. And whileThe Man from U.N.C.L.E.’s marketing was actually pretty on point, the trailers forKing Arthur: Legend of the Swordbetray just how fun this fantasy actioner really is. Granted the film reportedly went through a lot of rejiggering in post-production so perhaps the movie teased in this trailer was the actual tone of the film at one point, but the final product is a flighty, charming, and unabashedly weird twist on theKing Arthurtale. Like a mix between the fun ofU.N.C.L.E.and the fantasy ofSkyrim. Unfortunately, you can’t tell any of that from this trailer.

Jennifer’s Body

Karyn Kusama’sJennifer’s Bodyis a whip smart comedy about femininity and misogyny, but it was sold as a horror monster movie with aScream-liked meta twist. That didDiablo Cody’s script no favors, as audiences were primed to see what they thought would be a scary horror film, but what was instead a dark comedy with a lot more on its mind.

The trailer forCast Awayshows just how far we’ve come in the past couple of decades in the world of trailer creation.Robert Zemeckis’ somewhat groundbreaking survival drama is instead framed as a feel-good Hallmark Original Movie with what I’m pretty sure is theBraveheartscore. And yet, this is actually kind of par for the course when it came to Oscar-y films in the 90s. Sappy and sweet, with a movie star front and center.

This is quite possibly one of the most misleading trailers in recent memory. WithDrive, filmmakerNicolas Winding Refnmade a meditative, dialogue-light drama with aJohn Hughesundertone. What FilmDistrict marketed was a thrilling getaway movie starringRyan Gosling. Audiences wereso mad.

How do you make aHellboytrailer with almost no Hellboy? Writer/directorGuillermo del Toro’s comic book adaptation was a solid start for the franchise, but it was crystal clear that the John Myers character was likely a studio request as an audience surrogate—a “normal guy” to serve as the audience’s POV into the weirdHellboyworld. And making him the focus of this debut trailer, especially when he factors negligibly into the film itself, was a mistake.