The technology of making movies gives us the constant assault on our senses that occurs in contemporary sci fi and comic book movies.
This happens in documentaries now as well, especially the trailers.
I just no longer bother watching trailers for documentaries on Discovery, Nat-Geo or the History channel. I have had about as much of the visual battering from the rapid fire FLASH - FLASH - FLASH shot sequences that I can take. They run sequences of ½ to 1 second shots (or even shorter) in quick succession, accompanied by loud, melodramatic, over the top music, for example...
...about 150 separate shots in 154 seconds. At one stage in the middle part of the promo, the shots come at between three and four each second
I like a trailer to show me a little of the documentary's subject material, not batter the hell out of me with a flashing light-show that is little more than a vehicle for the video editor to show off his editing skills. I find these sorts of things difficult to watch, so I usually mute the TV and go make a coffee.
If you look at older sci fi movies they tended to use all the traditional theatrical techniques of drama to force the audience to fill in the gaps in the visual presentation within their minds.
Forbidden Planet?
2001: A Space Odyssey?
Even the original Star Trek (if you can get past Kirk/Shatner's massive ego) made you
think. The special effects were excellent for the time but they merely added to the story, they didn't dominate it.