10 Things From Comic-Con That You Need To Know About
Why bother going to San Diego for Comic-Con when you can just sit in your living room and read all the good coverage of it! Now, when you talk to your nerdy sci-fi friends, you won’t look like an idiot.
1. In the nerd equivalent of heaven, James Cameron and Peter Jackson attended their first Comic-Con, and did a panel together where they talk about the future of film making and Jackson reveals that a script for The Hobbit, his Lord of the Rings prequel, will be finished in a month. [Zap2It]
2. Lost isn’t known for parting with information easily, but they did have some good tidbits at their panel. Characters Juliet and Daniel Faraday will be back for the final season. Also in season six: no more time travel, the return of Charlie and Boone, the backstory for the enigmatic Richard Alpert, and some allusions to what may be alternate timelines. Damn, that shit makes our brain hurt. [EOnline]
3. Warner Bros. tried to roll out the new Patricia Heaton comedy The Middle at their Mum-A-Con. No one showed. Everyone said, “Mum, stop embarrasing me!” [THRFeed]
4. Hayden Panettiere is going to get some girl-on-girl action for the new season of Heroes. Yeah, cause that is what is going to fix this show. [io9]
5. Two scenes from the upcoming Twilight sequel, New Moon, were screened. Lots of girls screamed. [CelebrityCafe]
6. Iron Man 2 is going to fucking rule. Fans were excited by footage that shows Samuel L. Jackson’s return as Nick Fury, Mickey Rourke playing new villain Whiplash, and a bunch of awesome special effects. Robert Downey Jr, director Jon Favreau, and new additions Scarlet Johannson (who plays sexy spy Black Widow) and Don Cheadle (replacing Terrence Howard) were all in attendance. That’s either an A-List Comic-Con panel or a night at The Waverly Inn. [EW]
7. Ok, Iron Man gets two entries because the sequel is laying the foundation for Marvel’s much anticipated (among comic geeks) Avengers movie (not the one with Diana Rigg, this one has Captain American and shit). [EOnline]
8. We haven’t seen the last of Battlestar Galactica, Edward James Olmos’ career to continue. [io9]
9. You’re probably not going to see Family Guy’s “Abortion Episode.” What? Fox suddenly has standards? [LAT]
10. Alien invasion drama Vis back and the geeks love it. Is there anything left from the ’80s for us to bring back? Alf, maybe? [THRFeed]
- Next Post: YouTube Clip Of The Day »
- « Previous Post: Robert Pattinson More Popular Than Daniel Radcliffe, Mothers Cringe
Comments (AU Comments | US Comments)
The LA Times grasps the concept of standards?
Am I the only seeing that all-star lineup for IronMan 2 and thinking of the Clooney Batman movie?
Ssscorpion
Alf died with the "Project ALF" made for TV movie ABC did after NBC disowned it. It has some very underrated bits in it, but it's forgettable
Hey! That's Noel from BlazBlue! =3
Kicken
Not one item about an actual comic book? And this is supposed to be a guide for posing as a nerd? Late to the party, buddy. (Although mainstream Hollywood has discovered Comicon as a promotional tool, there are still panels about stories printed on paper that haven't even been optioned for movies yet!) PS: I went to Comicon for at least 10 years in a row and recall the squalor of the Hotel San Diego.
Carol Gardens
@LoveHandles: Zing! Pow!
Occula
@contains_hot_liquid: Miracleman was the only comic that I know of which ever carried the existence of superhumans to its logical conclusion. I am thrilled about this even if there is no good new work. I would be more than happy to be able to purchase the completed stories for a reasonable price.
@Princess Sparkle Pony: Joe Quesada announced that Marvel acquired the rights to Miracleman/Marvelman. Big news for comic nerds.
You also forgot everything about Alice in Wonderland. Johnny Depp showed up. And so did David Tennant, to the Doctor Who panel. (Not that I would know from, like, personal experience... or anything.)
@Princess Sparkle Pony: Ha! Oh, young grasshopper, someday you will learn that Hollywood doesn't make much money from comic books and therefore has no reason to advertise or promote them with "panel discussions."
Your puny convention has been successfully co-opted.
Maybe they should call it Family Guy's "Aborted Episode."
deardearfriend
Your answer to #10: Small Wonder.
My inner geek forces me state that it is: "Captain America" - not "Captain American."
QuinellaAristodemus
Wow, so apparently there was no news related to actual comics or comic books?
If Family Guy was showing an episode about an abortion doctor getting murdered, would
FOX be more ok with it?