San Diego Comic-Con 2017 has ended, but the news is still rolling in. Who walked away from the worldâs largest pop culture party a big winner? And who just walked away? Weâre rounding up the greatest moments (and cosplay) from this yearâs Comic-Con.
âReady Player Oneâ cast on the time Steven Spielberg broke a million points on âMissile Commandâ on the set of âE.T.â
At Comic-Con Steven Spielberg unveiled eye-popping footage from his upcoming âReady Player One,â offering a first glimpse at the tale of a young gamer searching for the ultimate Easter egg in a virtual reality game packed with a brain-boggling array of pop cultural references.
Not that the Oscar-winning director needs to prove his gaming-nerd bona fides. During a visit to the L.A. Times studio âReady Player Oneâ author Ernest Cline revealed how the filmmaking legend earned his stripes decades ago.
â[Spielberg] used to have a little arcade at Amblin back in the â80s and he was obsessed with breaking a million points on âMissile Command,ââ said Cline. The only problem? He had a movie to make. So what was a director hell bent on notching his high score to do?
Haul âMissile Commandâ out into the woods, hook it up to production generators on the set of âE.T. â the Extraterrestrial,â and keep playing, naturally.
âAnd there, out there in the forest, playing between setting up shots,â Cline said approvingly, âhe broke a million points on âMissile Command.ââ
That level of hardcore dedication and nerdery will be on full display in âReady Player One,â co-scripted by Cline and Zak Penn, which stars Tye Sheridan as Wade Watts, a teenager in a ravaged future circa 2045, in which people escape their grim real lives by escaping into the virtual world of the âOASIS.â
When the creator of the OASIS dies, Wade adopts the avatar Parzival and embarks on an epic quest to win ownership of the realm, a la Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, by finding the aforementioned Easter egg.
The 2018 Warner Bros. release is primed to hit all the right retro-nostalgia buttons with âcameosâ by iconic characters such as Gandalf, the Iron Giant, Duke Nukem, Freddy Krueger, the car from âChristine,â and the DeLorean from âBack to the Future.â
Joining Sheridan as Wade/Parzival are T.J. Miller as i-R0k, the worldâs âfirst virtual hitman,â Olivia Cooke as Art3mis, an ally who drives the sleek red cycle from âAkira,â and Ben Mendelsohn as Nolan Sorrento, the nefarious head of a corrupt corporation known as IOI whoâs also after the Easter egg.
Working with Penn and Cline to adapt the VFX-heavy âReady Player Oneâ to the big screen, Spielberg pushed to expand certain characters from the book into bigger roles, such as Millerâs i-R0k.
Miller, who arrived in cosplay dressed as Duckie from âPretty in Pink,â shared another tale of nerdery from his director: What does Spielberg geek out over?
Billy Wilderâs Oscar-nominated 1957 drama âWitness for the Prosecution.â
âHeâd been watching this movie over and over and over again for like a week, or weeks, because heâd become very obsessed with it,â recalled Miller. âWe watched it and heâd ask us questions like, âDonât you love that first tracking dolly shot when they first come into the courtroom?â He just had the whole thing completely memorized and wanted to ask all about the little tiny things. Thatâs pretty nerdy.â
Watch the full L.A. Times interview with the cast and writers of âReady Player Oneâ â including Pennâs own âJurassic Parkâ pinball high score story and Mendelsohnâs eerily accurate impersonation of the pterodactyl from âJoust.â
Cast of âReady Player Oneâ at Comic Con.
âStar Trek: Discoveryâ cast excited for new seriesâ idealism in current political climate
The cast from Star Trek: Discovery chats with Sarah Rodman in the Los Angeles Times Video studio at Comic-Con.
âI was frozen,â said Anthony Rapp, when asked about the cast reaction to seeing the âStar Trek: Discoveryâ trailer for the first time at Comic-Con this past weekend. âIt was overwhelming. Itâs extraordinary.â
Rapp pretty much summed up the feelings of the entire crew from the USS Discovery, who stopped by the L.A. Times photo studio to chat about joining the proud âStar Trekâ TV family, Sept. 24 on CBS All Access.
âI donât know how to process it,â said Shazad Latif, about becoming a character in the beloved franchise as Lt. Ash Tyler in the series, which is set about 10 years before the original voyage of Capt. Kirk, Spock, Scotty and the gang.
James Frain, who will be playing a younger version of a character well known to fans, Spockâs father Sarek, says the show will continue the âTrekâ tradition of being âabout humanityâs endless thirst for knowledge.â
Mary Wiseman â who plays Cadet Tilly â contrasted this new âTrekâ with the current crop of dystopian-focused media, ââStar Trekâ is so idealist because it could feel like the end of the world right now, America feels extremely divided. People canât hear each other people canât have compassion for each other⌠What âStar Trekâ [asks is], âWhat qualities are we going to have to have, and what ways are we going to have to think to move forward to a better future? Not just survive in a dystopian one.â And I think those qualities are compassion, openheartedness, open-mindedness, respect for difference, teamwork, rigor, strength.â
Sonequa Martin-Green, who will lead the ensemble as First Officer Michael Burnham, was both giddy and humbled about joining the beloved franchise but admitted she had not previously been a Trekker. She remembers both the original series and âNext Generationâ often on TV in her house, she wasnât necessarily attentive. But Martin-Green feels like it is a testament to the franchiseâs far-reaching impact that âThough I didnât watch it, I feel it is a part of my upbringing.â
David Tennant says Scrooge is lovable in âDuckTalesâ despite being a coin-diving billionaire
The fun was infectious when the new âDuckTalesâ stars David Tennant (Scrooge McDuck), Ben Schwartz (Dewey), Danny Pudi (Huey), Beck Bennett (Launchpad McQuack), Kate Micucci (Webby Vanderquack) and Toks Olagundoye (Mrs. Beakley) stopped by the L.A. Times studio during Comic-Con.
While a number of cast members have their own fond memories of the original show, itâs clear Schwartz was the biggest fan of the group. His fellow Duck-mates pointed to him immediately and unanimously as the one able to sing the infamous âMoon Themeâ from the âDuckTalesâ Nintendo game.
But itâs not just fond memories and nostalgia that the new show is up against. There is also the likelihood of people who grew up watching the original âDuckTalesâ now having a different understanding (and opinion) about income inequality than they did when they were kids.
How do you create a billionaire for whom people want to root in 2017?
âI donât think he worries about being lovable,â Tennant said of his Scrooge McDuck. âI think thatâs probably the key to him, if there is a key to him, and who says Iâve got it right.â
His âDuckTalesâ family was quick to point out that heâs definitely got it right.
âI think you play him for what he is,â Tennant added. âHeâs irascible and he can be tricky, and I think you love him in spite of that.â
As for whether this version of Scrooge hangs out with his fellow billionaires in some sort of exclusive setting, Tennant played it a little more coy.
âProbably,â he said. âI donât want to give away any plot spoilers.â
Viewers will just have to wait and see whether this means theyâll get a glimpse of Duckburgâs version of Mar-a-Lago.
The new âDuckTalesâ premieres Aug. 12 on Disney XD.
Lupita Nyongâo just won Comic-Con (three days later)
Radiant human and all-around delight Lupita Nyongâo shocked Twitter users Wednesday morning when she posted a video to her Twitter account asking, âDid you see me at Comic Con?â
In the video, a dancing, prancing individual dressed as a pink Power Ranger boogied through the streets of the Gaslamp Quarter and halls of the San Diego Convention Center.
Dancing to Kendrick Lamarâs âi,â the disguised Power Ranger exalts at the back of the crowded Marvel booth (Nyongâo attended SDCC in promotion of the 2018 Marvel release âBlack Pantherâ) and points, well, pointedly at a figurine of Maz Kanata, the character voiced by Nyongâo in âStar Wars: The Force Awakens.â
The end of the video reveals that it was Nyongâo beneath the mask all along, perhaps the most successful celebrity SDCC disguise since Bryan Cranston wore a Bryan Cranston mask to the âBreaking Badâ panel in 2013.
Still, Nyongâoâs video makes it clear that no one had more fun secretly cosplaying at Comic-Con than she did.
We asked âBlade Runnerâ director Denis Villeneuve: Is Deckard a replicant?
Director Denis Villeneuve talks about âBlade Runner 2049â at Comic Con.
Androids may or may not dream of electric sheep, but movies are living creatures, âBlade Runner 2049â director Denis Villeneuve said during his visit to the L.A. Times studio at Comic-Con.
âThe movieâs alive. It has its own soul, its own personality,â said Villeneuve, whoâs still in post wrangling the ambitious sci-fi sequel, which arrives three decades after Ridley Scottâs grimy-neon classic introduced Harrison Fordâs futuristic, replicant-hunting gumshoe Rick Deckard.
Along with Villeneuve, âBlade Runner 2049â is stacked with cinema icons. Ford reprises his famed role as Deckard, now long in hiding. And new blade runner played by Ryan Gosling, Officer K, is on his trail.
Original screenwriter Hampton Fancher returned to script the sequel with Michael Green, and as soon as Villeneuve landed the directing gig he brought on veteran cinematographer Roger Deakins (âThe Shawshank Redemptionâ), whose lush and atmospheric lensing already has fans buzzing from the trailers alone.
âBlade Runner 2049â marks the first franchise outing for Villeneuve, who was Oscar-nominated for last yearâs similarly ambitious sci-fi flick âArrival.â
âThe biggest challenge for me was to take someone elseâs universe, someone elseâs dream, to digest it and make it my own dream,â he told The Times (watch our full chat above). âFor instance, one of the toughest [things] for me was to figure out where Harrison Fordâs character will be in the future.â
In order to conceive how Deckard would have spent the last three decades following the events of âBlade Runner,â Villeneuve went to the source.
âRight from the start, Harrison told me that he needed me to find him in the future,â he said. âAnd me, I deeply needed Harrison Ford. We talked a lot together and thought a lot about that for several months, to imagine what Deckard would be like.â
Even at Comic-Con, where Alcon Entertainment and Warner Bros. mounted a massive, immersive âBlade Runner 2049â fan experience, filled with props, fully constructed sets, incredibly believable character performers and an Oculus VR ride, Villeneuve found himself dodging The Question: Is Deckard a replicant?
âWhat interested me is the question itself,â he said, referring to author Philip K. Dickâs original novel, âDo Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?â âThe characters in the book sometimes doubt themselves, and they want to test themselves because they are unsure sometimes if they are natural or designed, if they are artificial beings or real human beings. And that doubt, in their paranoia, I think is more interesting than the answer.â
As for said answer, Villeneuve isnât spilling, despite the fact that Ford and Scott have voiced their opinions on Deckardâs humanity â and fallen on opposite sides of the debate.
âIt would put myself in danger because Harrison Ford strongly believes heâs human, and Ridley is convinced that Deckard is a replicant, so I donât want to be in that war! They are still arguing about it.
He also played coy when it came to describing Goslingâs role, âbut I will say that the part was written for him,â he added. âIt was not my idea to offer the part to Ryan. Hampton Fancher thought about him when he wrote it ⌠and when I read the screenplay, I just felt he was right.â
For now, chew on this thematic link between the âBlade Runnerâ flicks.
â[It is] a continuity of the reflection of what it is to be a human being, our relationship with memories and the importance of memories and the importance to the past,â Villeneuve said. âWhat we are taking from the past inside us to transform our destiny, itâs something that I feel is an extension of the first movie.â
âBlade Runner 2049â will premiere Oct. 6.
âRiverdaleâ stars on Season 2 âships, Toni Topaz, and the great debate: Should the show go supernatural?
âWill âRiverdaleâ go supernatural?â Thatâs the question fans canât seem to stop asking â especially since the hit CW show seems perfectly set up to introduce zombies, a certain teenage witch and other otherworldly elements into its deliciously twisted take on the classic Archie comics.
When they stopped by the L.A. Times studio at Comic-Con, the cast members swore they werenât just putting on their poker faces to avoid giving anything away.
âWe donât need to practice a poker face,â laughed Camila Mendes, who plays Veronica Lodge. What about zombies? âThatâs not happening!â
Co-star Casey Cott sees the potential â even if it might not happen any time soon. âThere is a very mythical element to our show that supernaturalism is possible â I think it is possible,â he said. âBut right now itâs fun to have this thriller aspect.â
The cast of âRiverdaleâ talks about what to expect in season two at the L.A. Times Comic-Con studio.
The problem with going supernatural so soon, even if itâs what âRiverdaleâ fans crave?
âI think when it goes there, it doesnât really come back,â said Cole Sprouse, who plays narrator and resident Riverdale amateur sleuth Jughead Jones. âI think it will break the world a little bit.â
âWe have to ask ourselves, and the creative staff has to ask themselves if they ever do choose to include a supernatural element, how do they do it without destroying the universe that has already been built?â
He cautioned against fans âbullyingâ creators into writing the things they want to see, rather than trusting in the showâs vision. âThe key to continuing to make an interesting kind of narrative for season 2,â said Sprouse, âis to stick to your guns.â
After a whirlwind day at Comic-Con where they joined showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa on the CWâs âRiverdaleâ panel to answer fan questions and drop a Season 2 trailer, the cast members were experts at keeping mum about the things fans are dying to know after that dramatic Season 1 finale.
They kept tight-lipped about Fred Andrewsâ fate (âbut Luke Perry is breathing in this world somewhere,â Madelaine Petsch offered) and went over their dream âRiverdaleâ âships.
âNana Rose and Pop Tate!â
âJosie and Reggie!â
âCheryl... with anyone?â
âHot Dog and Jughead,â a pairing henceforth lovingly dubbed HotJug. Or would it be JugDog?â
âThis is a spoiler,â said Sprouse. âHot Dog does make a reappearance.â
Another romantic pairing is already set to bring even more conflict to Riverdale when the new season debuts Oct. 11.
Torn between worlds, his friends and his new Southside family, Jughead will just keep getting sadder, lamented Sprouse.
Enter Toni Topaz, the bisexual Southside Serpent who will complicate Bugheadâs romance even as Bettyâs role at the center of a new mystery grows, according to Lili Reinhart.
âShe becomes a kind of peer mentor for Jughead,â said Sprouse. âItâs not really certain whether sheâs more of a siren welcoming Jughead to the worst side of himself, or if sheâs an ally in a dark place. But sheâs a cool character.â
Is Kevin going to survive his breakup? When will Veronica finally get to confront her father? Will growing tensions tear the Pussycats apart? And which âRiverdaleâ character should everyone really be worried about going dark in the new season?
The answer, the cast agreed, is Archie Andrews himself.
âIâve been wanting Archie to go a bit darker,â said Apa. âWhen I first read that first episode of Season 2, it was what I needed.â
The cast of âPreacherâ on the ways in which New Orleans plays a vital role in season 2
The stars of AMCâs supernatural drama âPreacherâ stopped by the L.A. Times photo studio to chat about the new season currently in progress.
Some of the shooting took place in New Orleans, and Dominic Cooper (Jesse Custer), Graham McTavish (the Saint of Killers) and Joseph Gilgun (Cassidy) discussed what the distinctive atmosphere of the Crescent City added to the proceedings. (For Gilgun at least, a first timer to NOLA, it included cannabis and voodoo.)
Watch one dedicated Comic-Con cosplayer transform into âGuardians of the Galaxyâs Nebula
Dedicated fans who dress up as their favorite Jedis, Wonder Women, Spider-Men, and anime characters (shout out to Ezra Miller!) help make the annual San Diego Comic-Con International a special place where fandoms from all universes come alive.
For third-grade teacher Amber Malinski (a.k.a. AmberSkies), the lure of cosplay was impossible to resist.
âInstead of just going to the Comic-Cons, I started to look around me and get jealous and go, âHow come they get to dress up and I donât?â I could do that!ââ she told The Times.
Malinski taught herself special effects makeup and costuming from watching YouTube videos, drawing from her favorite sci-fi and fantasy films.
Cosplaying truly is a labor of love for the whole family; Amberâs father, Randy Malinski, is her handler. The role of a handler is to assist the cosplayer with things like holding their bags or offering a straw when theyâre thirsty -- so as not to smudge the intricately lined makeup on the characterâs mouth.
Theyâre a father-daughter team, and Amber wouldnât have it any other way: Dad was the person who âstarted her in art.â
Even within the cosplay community thereâs no competition, she says, only mutual admiration: âAt the end of the day, weâre all just adults playing pretend and dress up.â
This year Malinski came to Comic-Con with four different costumes -- one for each day.
She spent Thursday as Queenie from âFantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,â Friday as Nebula from âGuardians of the Galaxy,â Saturday as Alan Rickmanâs Doctor Lazarus from âGalaxy Quest,â and Sunday as Gal Gadotâs Diana Prince from âWonder Woman.â
âIt all stems from a love of art and paying tribute to characters that have influenced you in one way or another,â she said.
The painstaking process of transforming into the blue-skinned Nebula of Marvelâs âGuardians of the Galaxyâ began early Friday morning at Comic-Con. To Malinski, becoming Nebula, the part-cyborg warrior played by actress Karen Gillan in âGuardians of the Galaxyâ and âGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,â was worth the extra effort.
âNot to say that Iâm a raging, space alien serial killer or anything like that,â she said and laughed. âI love Karen Gillan and I loved this little unknown Nebula character as soon as she came on screen for the first time.â
âI knew everyone was going to pay attention to the big Guardians. What about the little Guardians? What about those interesting characters in the background? Thatâs how I fell in love with Nebula.â
Below, watch Malinski as she transforms into Nebula and steps out in full cosplay at Comic-Con.
âSilver & Blackâ director Gina Prince-Bythewood discusses landing the âSpider-Manâ spinoff
âThereâs this really idiotic belief that women donât have the desire to do these kind of films,â said Gina Prince-Bythewood to a captivated audience at Comic-Con. âThese kinds of filmsâ being superhero franchises.
But the âBeyond the Lightsâ director is on a mission to break that belief. Prince-Bythewood recently signed on to direct Sony Picturesâ next superhero flick and spinoff from the new âSpider-Manâ franchise âSilver & Black,â featuring the comic book characters Silver Sable and Black Cat.
Prince-Blythewood had assembled along with directors Tina Mabry (âDear White Peopleâ), Rosemary Rodriguez (âJessica Jonesâ), Victoria Mahoney (âGypsyâ), Aurora Guerrero (âQueen Sugarâ) and Angela Robinson (âProfessor Marston and the Wonder Womenâ) as well as Women in Film L.A. executive director Kirsten Schaffer for the âWomen Rocking Hollywood: Female Directors Changing the Faces of Film and Televisionâ panel on Saturday.
Though Prince-Blythewood couldnât say much about her next, top-secret film, she was able to talk about the process of getting hired for the job.
âI had my next film ready and set up to go and I get a call about [âSilver & Blackâ],â she said.
Despite originally declining, Prince-Blythewood recircled the project after learning who the characters were. She was only 10 pages into the script when she changed her mind.
âI was just so excited about these two women and the story that Iâd able to tell and the world Iâd be able to play in. I went in and talk to the producers,â Prince-Blythewood said. âItâs not always this quick but [I had] an innate feeling that I was the right person for it and I really had to believe it.â
It was during these talks when Prince-Blythewood envisioned her film as a âa very grounded story in this fantastic world of Marvel.â
âSilver & Blackâ is not Prince-Blythewoodâs first venture into the superhero world. She also directed the pilot of the upcoming TV series âMarvelâs Cloak & Dagger.â The director explained that while she loved being a part of Marvelâs venture into the young adult world with âCloak & Dagger,â a large reason she took part in the show was because of her son.
âFour years ago now, [my younger son and I] were sitting watching something and he turned to me and asked âhow come we never get to see black superheroes?ââ Prince-Bythewood said. âAnd that stuck with me.⌠That got me into the world.â
The finest freakouts, reveals and moments at Comic-Con 2017
Thatâs a wrap on San Diego Comic-Con!
But before you pack away your cape for the next convention, letâs take a minute and reflect on the great moments that can happen only at this gigantic festival of pop culture. Did you catch Wonder Woman using her powers for love? Or Jason Momoa telling everyone Superman is dead? Or how about the resurrection of what is arguably the greatest science-fiction series in the universe, âStargate?â
Here are the canât-miss moments from Comic-Con 2017:
Gal Gadot comforts a little Wonder Woman
Wonder Woman returned to Comic-Con, presumably to take several victory laps around Hall H and then spike her tiara. But actress Gal Gadot was calm, collected and appeared to be humbled by the outpouring of love from fans. Cut to the âJustice Leagueâ autograph signing/fan meet-and-greet. A young Wonder Woman fan (complete with adorable T-shirt cape) got a little emotional while talking to the Amazonian princess.
In response, Gadot held her hand and assured the wee warrior that it was OK. And Ezra Miller (the Flash) even offered the fan a spot on the âJustice Leagueâ when she was ready.
Glitter bombs away! âThor,â âStranger Thingsâ and more celebrity boomerangs from the L.A. Times studio at Comic-Con
From âThor: Ragnarokâ and âStranger Things â to âPreacherâ and âSupergirl,â all of your favorite film and television stars stopped by the 2017 L.A. Times studio at Comic-Con to have a little boomerang fun.
Check out more photos and gifs from the annual pop culture bonanza on todayâs L.A. Times Instagram story.
Celebrity guests at the 2017 L.A. Times Comic-Con photo studio had a good time with confetti, silly glasses, and other props in our Boomerang Booth.
The greatest cosplay of Comic-Con 2017
Gender swaps, genre mash-ups and âpunkâ versions of your favorite Batman characters, the cosplay creativity on display at this yearâs Comic-Con was truly worthy of being labeled âepic.â
Take a video look back at some of the greatest cosplay on display from Comic-Con 2017.
Everything you want to know about âBlack Lightning,â âSupergirl,â âArrow,â âFlashâ and the rest of the CW lineup
The traditional CW block of Comic-Con panels added a new show this year. âBlack Lightningâ joined âSupergirl,â âDCâs Legends of Tomorrow,â âThe Flashâ and âArrowâ for a three-plus-hour extravaganza touting the networkâs super-heroic TV slate.
The new kid on the block, âBlack Lightningâ brought a level of social awareness to the proceedings that most of the fantastical other shows didnât particularly touch on (this year, at least). The show is grounded in family and community, specifically black families and black communities, and according to the showrunners it will not shy away from addressing the concerns that are current.
âYes thereâs a problem with police brutality and we will get into that. Thereâs also a problem with us killing each other,â said Salim Akil, one of the executive producers of the series alongside Mara Brock Akil. They were joined on the panel by lead actor Cress Williams, who plays the titular character, and his TV daughters China Anne McClain (playing Jennifer Pierce) and Nafessa Williams (Anissa Pierce), and his TV ex-wife Christine Adams (Lynn Pierce).
âBlack Lightningâ follows Jefferson Pierce (Black Lightningâs real-life persona), who is a man wrestling with a secret. He has the superhuman power to control electricity but gave it up for his family and others. But when his family is threatened heâll have to don the suit and use his powers again. Fun side note, his daughter (McClain) exhibits special powers as well.
âWhatâs going to make this so fun for the writers and others is that this is going to come from an authentic black male voice,â Salim said. âI think this character will give back to the culture. Black culture specifically, but American culture.â
âThe biggest challenge was accepting that this black man was running around town in this suit. Thatâs the easiest way to get shot,â Salim said as the audience laughed. â[The show] is about balancing out when he uses his powers [and] how he uses his powers and why.â
Another âBlack Lightningâ surprise was the announcement that James Remar and Damon Gupton would be joining the cast.
Salimâs closing remarks circled back to representation, and the desire to give little kids the opportunity to choose between being Batman or Black Lightning for Halloween -- highlighting the fact there should be a choice.
Hereâs a breakdown for the rest of the CW panel:
âSupergirlâ
- Katie McGrath (Lena Luthor) is now a series regular, and her character immediately makes an enemy of a powerful person.
- We will get to see Martian Manhunterâs father.
- Supergirlâs sister Alex popped the question to her girlfriend at the end of last season. Exec Jessica Queller is happy that they get to portray a relationship that is âemotional, modern and honors the love between these two women.â
- Melissa Benoist wants a puppy on the show. David Harewood wants the Martian to get drunk and sing karaoke.
âDCâs Legends of Tomorrowâ
- Last season the Legends were the only game in time, so to speak, but now Rip Hunter will head a group that can help fix time alongside the heroes..
- Neal McDonoughâs Damien Darkh will return.
- A new character, Zari, joins the cast. Sheâs a hacker from the future played by Tala Ashe who will butt heads with the positivity of Ray (Brandon Routh).
- There will be a character called Fireshine. Itâs a âFreaky Fridayâ situation for the Firestorm duo where Victor Gabler will most likely be the physical manifestation of the hero instead of Franz Drameh.
- There have been conversations with Matt Ryan about Constantine coming on the show.
- They are having an â80s episode in which they investigate Ray Palmerâs childhood.
âThe Flashâ
There was a sneak peek of exclusive footage from Season 4. The whole cast was once again present for the panel. Exec Todd Helbing, Keiynan Lonsdale, Jessie L. Martin, Candice Patton, Grant Gustin, Tom Cavanaugh, Danielle Panabaker and the always-popular Carlos Valdes.
- Jesse L. Martin was happy he got to work with Victor Garber on the musical episode. âAs a New York kid, that means a lot.â
- The Thinker is the new big bad for this season, and will be played by Neil Sanderlands from âThe 100.â
- Gypsyâs (Jessica Camacho) father will be showing up, and heâll be played by Danny Trejo.
âArrowâ
- Responding to the inquiry of why the island was blown up, producer Wendy Mericle said: âWeâre good at blowing things up. Thatâs what we do.â
- Exec producer Marc Guggenheim: âWe are going to see a different Oliver Queen. The last five years have really changed him.â
- Stephen Amell on his characterâs changes: âTo start on episode 116 and be able to do fun, new stuff has been great.â
- Katie Cassidy, who played Black Canary, on returning: âSo excited to be back. It feels like I never left. Itâs been pretty easy getting back in the swing of things.â
- There will be a super group of villains, including one played by Michael Emerson, though we donât know who he is or who theyâll be.
- Amell has apparently mentioned that heâd like to see a âSupernaturalâ-âArrowâ crossover, so a member of the audience asked him how that could possibly happen.
- The character Richard Dragon will be among the villains this year as well.
- One of the first questions from the audience centered on the identity of the mysterious âvigilanteâ from last season. The only reveal from Guggenheim was that the character is someone we already know.
Harley Quinn celebrates 25 years at Comic-Con
Itâs been 25 years of cartwheels, giant mallets and saying âMISTAH JAY!â Harley Quinn turns 25 this year, and at San Diego Comic-Con the already exceedingly popular character was celebrated.
Cosplayers gathered to share their love Harleen Quinzel (her real name) and explain why they find themselves attracted to such a complicated character.
More are Harley:
Harley Quinn and the Jokerâs bonkers âSuicide Squadâ costumes are full of insane details
Best Cosplay of 2017 Comic-Con: âGoldfingerâ cosplay comes with Bondâs romper
The cosplay game has stepped up at San Diegoâs Comic-Con extravaganza. Shout out to the âGoldfingerâ cosplay for going all the way with the short, blue romper Sean Connery sported in the Bond flick.
Here are a few favorites from our gallery roundup.
Fun with Melissa Benoist in our L.A. Times studio
Fun having Melissa Benoist stop by our LA Times studio
When you get Naomi Watts, Kyle MacLachlan and Tim Roth in a room with confetti
When you get #NaomiWatts @Kyle_MacLachlan and #TimRoth in a room w confetti! #twinpeeks #sdcc
The Doctor and Bill will be reunited in the âDoctor Whoâ Christmas special
Pearl Mackie has one last âDoctor Whoâ hurrah left.
A trailer for the upcoming âDoctor Whoâ Christmas special debuted at the showâs Hall H presentation at Comic-Con on Sunday, and the audience cheered as the familiar companion appeared during the final moments of the video.
While exactly how Bill will make her return is unknown, the upcoming special âTwice Upon A Timeâ will also feature Peter Capaldi as the 12th Doctor, David Bradley as the First Doctor and will also feature writer-actor Mark Gatiss.
Unfortunately, the reveal was bittersweet. During the presentation, Mackie confirmed that the Christmas special is, for now, the last fans will see of Bill.
Of course, Mackie is not the only person departing the series. The 10th season marks the last for both Capaldi and showrunner Steven Moffat.
Starting next season the Time Lord will be played by Jodie Whittaker and Chris Chibnall will take the reins of the series.
âI think Jodieâs going to be amazing. I spoke to her the other day, and sheâs so full of excitement and so full of passion about the show,â said Capaldi.
âItâs really, really thrilling to know that itâs in the hands of somebody who cares for it so deeply and is going to do really really exciting things with it,â said Capaldi. âSheâs a great choice.â
Moffat then added his thoughts about how the news of Whittakerâs casting has been received.
âThere is so many press articles about a backlash among the âDoctor Whoâ fandom against the casting of a female Doctor. There has been no backlash at all,â said Moffat.
âThe story of the moment is that the notion of the conservative âDoctor Whoâ fandom has utterly embraced that change completely,â Moffatt continued. âEighty percent approval on social media, not that I check these things obsessively.â
âSo many people [are] wanting to pretend there is a problem. There isnât,â added Moffat. âIn fact it strikes me that âDoctor Whoâ fans are more excited about the idea of a brilliant actress playing the part than the fact that sheâs a woman.â
âItâs been incredibly progressive and enlightened and thatâs whatâs really happened. I wish that every single journalist thatâs writing the alternative will shut the [heck] up. Itâs not true,â Moffat concluded.
(Whether Moffat was aware that fifth Doctor actor Peter Davidson lamented Whittakerâs casting as a loss of a role model for boys during an appearance earlier during Comic-Con is unknown.)
In addition to Capaldi, Mackie, Moffat and Gatiss the panel featured Matt Lucas (Nardole), Michelle Gomez (Missy).
The presentation also included a Capaldi highlight reel to look back at his time as the Doctor. Watch the clip below.
Watch Kansas surprise âSupernaturalâ fans with a live performance at Comic-Con
âSupernaturalâ fans celebrated the soon-to-be 13th season of their series with a surprise live performance from the rock band Kansas.
Kansas performed the âSupernaturalâ staple song âCarry On My Wayward Sonâ for an elated audience right before the âSupernaturalâ panel kicked off San Diego Comic-Conâs Hall H.
Because at Comic-Con, Kansas opens for âSupernatural.â
For those not in the know, âSupernaturalâ played âCarry On My Wayward Sonâ in the finale of its first season, and the song has reappeared in every season finale following.
After the performance series actors Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles, Misha Collins and executive producers Robert Singer and Andrew Dabb took the stage for their traditional panel.
Tom King explains what a Batman-Catwoman marriage would look like -- and what Mister Miracle is escaping
Batman proposed to Catwoman recently. You may have heard.
Late in his Sunday morning spotlight panel at Comic-Con, the writer who scripted that moment, Tom King, answered a fanâs question about what that marriage would look like.
âIâm married to the best woman who ever lived, and she guides me through everything,â the now double Eisner Award-winning King said. âShe sees how messed up I am, and she loves that part of [me]. And I see how messed up she is, and I love that part of her. Because of that, we can live together and be happy. So I think thatâs how it would work.â
Robust applause followed.
It was a rollicking (albeit maybe too early) hour in which King rewarded readers with insights into his work on âBatman,â âThe Visionâ and the upcoming âMister Miracleâ -- and dropped good-humored f-bombs in equal measure.
King understands that the 10 a.m. Sunday comics creator spotlight panel is for the dedicated readers, those bookish souls who have read even his most obscure work and can appreciate a joke about how Steve Ditko handles things being stolen from him.
He also understands that Saturday night celebrations at Comic-Con International extend close to dawn Sunday, that breakfast may consist of a sugar-and-butter covered pretzel and a Diet Pepsi.
After wondering aloud whether the few people sitting in the very back of the room were Russian agents (King is a former CIA officer), he took a poll of how late people had been up, and found only one attendee who, like him, had been going until at least 4 a.m.
âWere you just sitting around complaining about your editors?â King asked the man to laughs. âYeah, thatâs a comic book party.â
King displayed the two Eisner Awards he had won Friday -- the limited series prize for âThe Visionâ with artist Gabriel H. Walta at Marvel and the short story honor for his dog story âGood Boyâ with artist David Finch in âBatmanâ Annual No. 1. He spun the balls on the upper parts of the trophies.
âCanât spin the Academy Award,â he quipped. âTake that, Meryl Streep.â
Turning to âMister Miracle,â he said the new series will open and close with words the characterâs creator, the legendary Jack Kirby, used in the original run, with a new comic in between, âas a sort of tribute to the king of comics and itâs also to show that what the whole series is about is taking these huge, expansive Kirby concepts that he put in that seems like itâs an epic about space, and itâs actually an epic about the human soul.â
For the uninitiated: Mister Miracle, who debuted in 1971 as part of the Kirby-created-written-and-drawn Fourth World at DC Comics, is the son of the chief of the New Gods, Izaya, and was traded in a diplomatic deal to the evil Darkseid in exchange for one of his heirs. On Darkseidâs planet Apokolips, Mister Miracle rebels, falls in love with future wife Big Barda, and escapes. Escaping may be what Mister Miracle does best. (Hey, his other name is Scott Free.)
The new title, which King calls âthe best, most ambitious thing Iâve ever written,â is drawn by his âSheriff of Babylonâ collaborator Mitch Gerads and will be out Aug. 9.
King said it is influenced by a string of events that included a panic attack as he was taking over âBatmanâ after Scott Snyder and Greg Capulloâs bestselling run, his beloved grandmotherâs death on the same day, and how the world has âgone crazyâ since: the Patriotsâ comeback Super Bowl victory, the Cubsâ World Series win and Donald Trumpâs election.
âItâs about the feeling of being trapped and about trying to escape that,â he said. âItâs about a man and a woman. Itâs about Scott and Barda, and them trying to find love in the midst of hellâŚ. Mister Miracle is the son of God, but unlike Jesus he wasnât given to the people, he was given to the devilâŚ. He went to that hell and met the love of his life and he escaped it, but that pain of his childhood is still in him, and itâs the trap heâs trying to escape fromâŚ. Plus, there are jokes.â
King has an exclusive contract with DC. Asked what characters he might want to write if he returned to Marvel, he said: âThe long, philosophical answer is that I donât careâŚ. A character is not about what that character is, itâs about what you bring to it and what the fans bring to it and what the passion of the two of us or billion of us together can bring to it. I was assigned âThe Omega Men.â I was assigned âVision.â I was given âMister Miracle.â You find whatâs in it that appeals to you. Thatâs the long, philosophical answer.
âThe short answer?â he continued, âIt would be the Fantastic Four.â
Watch Jeff Goldblum achieve peak Goldblum-talking-mode on the âThor: Ragnarokâ Comic-Con panel
Saturday at Comic-Con, Jeff Goldblum joined his âThor: Ragnarokâ castmates to preview the Nov. 3 space adventure for 6,500 screaming fans in Hall H.
A rollicking panel ensued led by director Taika Waititi, who joked that most of his actors never learned their lines.
Tom Hiddleston caught the crowd up on what Lokiâs been up to since seizing Asgardâs throne at the end of âThor: The Dark World. âLoki has devoted most of his efforts to narcissistic self-glorification,â he said. âNot so much on good governance.â
They brought a sneak peek at a scene in which Chris Hemsworthâs Thor is captured and brought to the gilded-disco domain of the Grandmaster, the gaming-obsessed Elder ruler of Sakaar who pits his latest acquisition â Thor â in a gladiator battle to the death... against his own Avengers teammate, the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo).
In one wonderfully sublime moment onstage, the entire room fell silent as Goldblum went into peak Goldblum mode to describe his character. Even Cate Blanchett, who plays Hela, the self-professed Goddess of Death, sat rapt as he entranced the crowd.
Behold: Your moment of Goldblum.
A âRunawaysâ reunion at Marvelâs Cup oâ Joe with a new creative team -- plus Quesada takes questions on Captain America
âThe Runawaysâ has been missing from Marvelâs lineup since 2009.
Now, with a Hulu TV adaptation on the way, writer Rainbow Rowell and artist Kris Anka have been entrusted with bringing the young superteam home to comics readers.
Rowell, who will be making her Marvel debut with the Sept. 13 release of No. 1, was brought on board, editor Nick Lowe said at the publisherâs Cup oâ Joe panel Saturday afternoon, after he read her young adult novel âEleanor & Parkâ and contacted her to see if she would be interested in writing comics. She told him her favorite characters were the Runaways. Anka (âCaptain Marvelâ) has established himself as a go-to artist at the publisher.
Created by writer Brian K. Vaughan and artist Adrian Alphona and debuting in 2003, the acclaimed Runaways started as a group of teens who saw each other once a year when their parents gathered -- and discovered their folks were supervillains. Surviving members -- including the witch Nico, alien Karolina, super-strong Molly, son of mad scientists Chase and his telepathically linked dinosaur Old Lace -- will reunite in the series.
Rowell said it âjust felt wrongâ that they werenât already in a book together and that the appeal in writing the characters is that âthe Runaways mess up constantly; they try to do the right thing, but itâs just a series of screw-ups. They hurt each otherâs feelings, they say the wrong thing. They find themselves in bad situations. But they try so hard. And they talk a lot.â
Anka recalled being a freshman in high school when the original series debuted. âIâm from L.A.,â he said, âI grew up with people like this. I approached it as these are all people I grew up with and I end up meeting them again after a long time.â
The creative team said they quickly fell into rapport about characters it felt like they knew personally. But Rowell had a head start -- she scripted six issues before Anka signed on. The artist said he was all in before he was allowed to start drawing pages -- âspending weeks building Pinterest wardrobes for everyone.â
Rowell has since tailored edits on the scripts for Anka -- âbasically people just start taking off their shirts.â (Hey, as Ankaâs Twitter bio says, âdang draws great abs.â)
In the grab-bag panelâs question-and-answer session, the final fan query was about what Marvel had learned from the sharp criticism over having Captain America revealed as a Hydra agent -- a story still playing out in the âSecret Empireâ event -- and what they would do differently.
Marvel Chief Creative Officer Joe Quesada, the panelâs host, fielded that one.
âWe would not have done anything differently,â he said. âWe have a great story, we know exactly how it ends, and we cannot let the Internet dictate our creative [decisions].... The kind of outcry weâre getting, it comes in earlier than ever beforeâŚ. Do you really think that this is where Marvel ⌠is going to go with the character? No, of course not. We have a story to tellâŚ. Thatâs the beauty of these characters: You throw them to the point where you think, âOh my God, theyâre broken foreverâ and then you realize, âWow, look at that turn.â
Quesada compared the recent firestorm to anger at what âCivil Warâ did with Tony Stark before the resolution. Lowe chimed in that it was the same with âSuperior Spider-Manâ (killing Peter Parker incited death threats to writer Dan Slott; the series with Doctor Octopusâ mind in Peterâs body was a hit, and, yâknow, Peter eventually returned).
âWe canât be reactive,â Quesada said. âWe just have to tell our stories.â
Real politicians explain how government would pay for all those cities Thor, Spider-Man, and the X-Men destroy
Comic-Con is, at its root, an escapist event for fans and obsessives of pop culture. This year it made room for public policy wonks as well.
While that sounds a bit like an uncomfortable intrusion of the real world in a weekend built on fantasy, itâs also a tidy reflection of 2017 given the always-on state of politics. In a lively panel Saturday morning in room 29AB called âWho Cleans Up the Mess?â a collection of politicians and civil servants looked at how civic life would rebuild if the dazzling (but dangerous) superhero battles seen in blockbusters year after year came to life. And given the good-sized crowd it drew, fans were ready to listen.
âI canât believe anyone showed up to this panel. Thatâs a good sign of who we are as people,â said San Diego Councilman David Alvarez, who was one of six city and state officials weighing in on governmentâs role in the aftermath of not-so-natural disasters.
Moderated by activist/blogger Rena Marrocco, the bulk of the conversation took place after watching clips of some particularly destructive superhero scenes, including Magneto relocating the Golden Gate Bridge in âX Men: The Last Stand,â and the Avengers laying waste to a city center in the first installment of that franchise.
Former California State Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher referenced his military training in first restoring communications, order and human needs in crisis areas. And California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones looked at the potential for a homeownerâs recovery.
âThe problem with this one is you have a government actor, right? Captain America. Insurance is not going to cover it,â he said as laughter filled the room. âAnd then youâve got a deity, Thor. Thereâs an act of god exclusion. If this becomes the norm, weâve got to change the law to stop insurance companies from putting these exclusions in there.â
Portions of the panel focused on the real-world policy in place to address disasters closer to home. California State Treasurer (and gubernatorial candidate) John Chiang used the âX-Menâ footage as a jumpingoff point to talk about the need for infrastructure repair, and a scene of Tobey Maguireâs Spider-Man damaging high-rises while trying to stop a runaway train spurred talk of the need for more affordable housing. But the tone quickly turned more playful.
âWithin minutes of this happening, Gov. Jerry Brown would say, âThis is why we need high speed rail,ââ joked Fletcher, who sported a Wonder Woman T-shirt. âPresident Trump would have tweeted, he wouldâve blamed Obama. The rest of us here we wouldâve tried to figure out what to do.â
Other topics included the limited capabilities of FEMA at least in the earliest moments after a disaster, and the levels of cooperation required among government agencies to rebuild. After talk of other recovery efforts after the San Francisco earthquake of 1989, Marrocco posed the question of who or what was the greatest real-world supervillain. The room erupted in laughter.
âDid you say who? Because thatâs a really easy one,â replied Jones. But the conversation quickly turned to climate change with the response of Esther Sanchez, councilwoman from nearby Oceanside. Fletcher, who recently announced a run for supervisor in San Diego County, brought that idea into focus.
âThe convention center youâre in has pumps in the basement, to pump the water out from rising seawater,â he said, and murmur of surprise ran through the crowd. In a blockbuster-worthy twist, the villain was with us all along.
Ryan Coogler explains why Kendrick Lamar is the perfect sound for âBlack Pantherâ
After making a historic splash on the Hall H stage last year, the âBlack Pantherâ squad returned to Comic-Con with dazzling new footage that brought the room to its feet and left the 6,500-strong audience with one song buzzing in their heads.
This time it wasnât Run the Jewels, whose âLegend Has Itâ soundtracked the first trailer for âBlack Pantherâ earlier this summer.
Director Ryan Coogler and his stars debuted an extended fight scene set in a casino before the reel segued into a montage set to Kendrick Lamarâs âDNAâ -- the perfect track to mirror TâChallaâs journey from Wakandan king to superhero.
The lyrics, after all, are uniquely suited to âBlack Pantherâ: âI got, I got, I got, I got / Loyalty, got royalty inside my DNA ...â
âHe comes from a long lineage of kings, of royalty,â Chadwick Boseman said of his onscreen alter ego, still energized from the panelâs rapturous reception moments later. âYouâre talking about a world that would exist if the Egyptians were never conquered, if Sumeria was never conquered and was allowed to progress -- thatâs what Wakanda is.â
âAs soon as I heard it on his album for the first time I said, âThey should use that song,ââ Boseman added. âI just thought it would fit. I didnât know if theyâd do it or not, but I thought it was perfect.â
Coogler, also a K-Dot fan, concurred.
âThe lyrics are amazing -- a lot of Kendrickâs are,â said Coogler, who also co-wrote âBlack Pantherâ with Joe Robert Cole. âItâs actually oddly literal for our trailerâs purposes -- and I think a lot of the cultural things weâre dealing with in Wakanda are in the zeitgeist in the African American community.â
The footage that wowed the Comic-Con crowd, which Marvel Studios honcho Kevin Feige promised wonât yet be seen anywhere else, opens on TâChalla a.k.a. Black Panther and his right-hand operatives Nakia (Lupita Nyongâo) and Okoye (Danai Gurira).
The trio infiltrates a sumptuously appointed casino on the trail of Ulysses Klaue (Andy Serkis), where theyâre promptly engaged in hand-to-hand combat.
Boseman effortlessly leaps up and across the room in a single bound. Gurira dazzles while wielding a long staff; at one point, she snatches her wig off and hurls it at an enemy.
Nyongâo, too, shows off a fighting style of her own in the film, but the most glorious moment might be the sight of her kicking a man in the face with action heroine precision.
âBlack Pantherâ opens Feb. 16, 2018.
New SyFy series âKryptonâ showcases Supermanâs grandpa and will include Hawkwoman and Adam Strange
To the relief of people in the audience at the debut Comic-Con panel for the new Syfy series âKrypton,â the creators revealed that they didnât totally disconnect from the current DC Universe.
DC Entertainmentâs Geoff Johns moderated the Indigo Ballroom panel Saturday, which included Cameron Cuffe, who stars as Supermanâs grandfather Seg-El, and executive producers Cameron Welsh and Damian Kindler.
The presentation opened with a sneak peek at footage from the show, which premieres in 2018. It highlighted the Romeo-and-Juliet situation in which Seg-El finds himself due to a romantic relationship with a woman from the House of Zod, a name Superman fans know well.
In the narration, Supermanâs grandpa tells Kal-El (aka Superman) that heâs about to learn more about his history, and not just about the planetâs demise: âOurs is a story of sacrifice and triumph.â
It was clear that Cuffe knew his character, the lore surrounding it, the back story of Superman in the comics and just comics in general.
âThese are my people. I was, am, just like you,â he said gesturing to the crowd, recounting meeting Johns prior to his involvement in âKryptonâ because the writer signed a copy of âTeen Titansâ for him.
Johns revealed two characters who would be making appearances on âKryptonâ: Adam Strange and Hawkwoman. (She may not be the Hawkwoman comics fans are used to, but her ties to the planet Thanagar and Strangeâs ties to the planet Rann will be what gets them on Krypton.)
The series revolves around a nefarious plot to erase or affect the legacy of Superman by going back into the past on Krypton. Johns recounted that at the start of the show someone from Earth relays the message to Seg-El that he must thwart this plan.
The show, Johns said, âwill answer the question of how the [the iconic Superman âSâ] symbol comes to mean everything that it means today.â
The show will include familiar places like Kandor and the Fortress of Solitude, and will feature a number of other heroes and villains that the panel didnât want to spoil, but they did spill that Brainiac and Doomsday will make an appearance.
Although set in the past, the producers said âKryptonâ needed to connect to the present day DC universe because it changes the stakes when viewers know it could affect what they know to be canon in the world of Superman.
Asked how he felt, as a fan, to be stepping into this role, Cuffe said, âTo be the origin of the symbol to my favorite character, it means everything to me.â
Ultimately, said Kindler, âWe want to make a show where the DC fan says âThey got it right.â â
Ezra Miller went to all his âJustice Leagueâ Comic-Con obligations dressed as anime character Edward Elric
Ezra Miller is the Flash for Warner Bros.â next big superhero production, âJustice League.â So naturally, he was on hand at Comic-Con to rally the geek troops for their premiere in November.
However, Miller isnât just any old celebrity putting in the basic due diligence at the comic book convention. Miller came to play.
He came to cos-play.
Because Miller is a human treasure that all the world should enjoy, he showed up to all his âJustice Leagueâ appearances dressed as anime character Edward Elric.
âEdâ is a popular anime and manga character from âFullmetal Alchemistâ created by Hiromu Arakawa. He has long, blond hair and a braid that drapes over his shoulder, and for one beautiful day, so did Miller.
The idea that someone had to explain to Millerâs co-star Ben Affleck who Ed Elric is and what this wig was all about is a gift that keeps on giving.
This isnât the first time Miller has arrived to Comic-Con in in costume. In 2016 he wore a pretty spectacular âLord of the Ringsâ ensemble.
For all of us, Miller, please keep on shining.
âStar Trek: Discoveryâ panel reveals new family connections
The cast and creators of âStar Trek: Discoveryâ came armed with plenty of treats for fans who made it out to the showâs spotlight presentation on Saturday at Comic-Con. In addition to debuting a brand new trailer, the cast shared some details about the show that had yet to be revealed.
The âDiscoveryâ cast members in attendance included Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Shazad Latif, Mary Wiseman, Anthony Rapp and James Frain. The actors were joined by producers Alex Kurtzman, Gretchen J. Berg, Aaron Harberts, Heather Kadin and Akiva Goldsman in the panel moderated by Rainn Wilson, who will play classic âTrekâ character Harry Mudd.
Martin-Green, who plays the showâs lead, First Officer Michael Burnham, proved she was cut out for everything Starfleet represents very early during the event when she was asked to address the backlash against âDiscoveryâsâ open push for diversity.
ââStar Trekâ has always been [a champion] of diversity and of universality and of unity. I truly believe itâs one of the main reasons why it is so important to so many people still to this day,â said Martin-Green. âAnd if you say you love the legacy of âStar Trekâ but you donât love that, then youâve missed it.
âI encourage you to join with us,â Martin-Green continued, offering an olive branch to the detractors. âCome on the journey with us. Hopefully, it will help you learn something about yourself and the people around you because thatâs what our story does.â
But what excited âStar Trekâ fans the most were the details revealed by the cast and creators.
It turns out Martin-Greenâs Michael is not just Sarekâs protege in the show -- their relationship is much more familial.
âI was basically committed to [Capt. Georgiou] through my surrogate dad, Sarek,â said Martin-Green when asked about how Michael came to serve under Michelle Yeohâs character. âThatâs a little bit of a reveal.â
âI was raised on Vulcan by him and Amanda [Grayson] after the murder of my parents,â Martin-Green said.
Speaking of relationships, Rapp announced his character, the first openly gay character in a âStar Trekâ television series, will indeed have a romantic interest.
âWilson Cruz will be playing my love interest. My partner,â Rapp revealed. âWeâre both officers on the ship.â Rapp also shared that Cruzâs character is a fellow scientist.
Finally, fans also learned that they might want to spend some time before the âStar Trek: Discoveryâ premiere brushing up on their Klingon. The warrior-species will be speaking actual Klingon so those without proficiency should be prepared to read subtitles.
As a bonus, here is footage of Jones, who plays Saru, the tall Kelpian, demonstrating his characterâs unique strut. Lt. Saru is not only extremely tall, he has hooves.
Cate Blanchett goes FULL villain in âThor: Ragnarokâ trailer
Taika Waititi and the rest of the âThor: Ragnarokâ crew debuted a brand new trailer to the denizens of Hall H. In it the mighty Cate Blanchett takes center stage as does her equally fabulous evil headdress. This is Marvelâs new villain Hela.
But of course, no âThorâ story is really complete without the Asgardianâs brother Loki. Tom Hiddleston himself shared that Loki has spent the last four years ruling Asgard (as Odin) -- though not doing a very good job of it.
As for âRagnarokâ specifics, Hiddleston reminded the audience that Loki is still the God of Mischief but declined to share any more, urging fans to wait for the film to find out where his ultimate allegiances may lie.
âCaptain Marvelâ will take place in the 1990s
President of Marvel Studios Kevin Feige announced a bit of âCaptain Marvelâ news on the Hall H Marvel panel at Comic-Con.
The first woman-lead superhero film from Marvel, starring Brie Larson in the title role, will be set in the 1990s. And that means, âNick Fury will have TWO eyes,â Feige explained, âBecause this film is set in the early 1990s. The villains will be the first MU appearance of the Skrulls.â
Yes, thatâs right the Skrulls are entering this already pretty well-populated, superhero world. And thatâs double confirmation that Samuel L. Jackson will be in âCaptain Marvel.â
Also joining Jackson is Hannah John-Kamen as Ghost, Walton Goggins as Sonny Butch, Randall Park as Agent Jimmy Woo and Laurence Fishburne as Dr. Bill Foster.
âItâs a prequel.â Feige added.
Directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck will helm the MCU standalone.
âCaptain Marvelâ will hit theaters on March 8, 2019.
New âWestworldâ trailer offers a peek at bloody times ahead
HBOâs sci-fi western âWestworldâ wonât be returning until 2018, but that didnât stop the premium cable provider from treating San Diego Comic-Con fans to a glimpse of whatâs to come.
And what does the future hold for the android hosts of Westworld? Blood, mostly. Lots and lots of blood.
The trailer begins with a close-up the showâs famous player piano, lurching into action playing a blood-smeared copy of Sammy Davis Jr. classic âIâve Gotta Be Me.â
From there, things were mostly a bloodbath. Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) was on horseback, teeth bared, firing a shotgun and mowing down humans, while Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) looked befuddled by the corpse of a dead tiger. And, of course, a bloodied -- but not beaten -- Man in Black (Ed Harris) smirked his way into the future.
Itâs not much to go on, but given that the second season has only been filming for a week (!) itâs not too shabby.
Ben Affleck squashes Batman exit rumors, and Jason Momoa spills all the âJustice Leagueâ goss
Contrary to recent fanboy-panicking reports, the Batfleck will stay in the picture. At least, according to Ben Affleck.
On Warner Bros.â Comic-Con panel Saturday, the âBatman v. Superman: Dawn of Justiceâ star made sure to address the elephant in the room -- a very, very large room packed with 6,500 eager fans.
A day ago, a Hollywood Reporter article cited a source claiming that Warner Bros. is angling to push Affleck out of his Batman role in its massive DC Extended Universe franchise.
âLet me be very clear,â he said, leading off the âJustice Leagueâ panel in Hall H with so much emphasis he dropped three f-bombs in the process. âI am the luckiest guy in the world. Batman is the coolest (âŚ) character in any universe â DC, Marvel â and Iâm so thrilled to do it.â
âItâs (...) amazing. I still canât believe after two films⌠we have this history with this great studio,â he said. âKevin Tsujihara and Sue Kroll and Toby Emmerich said to me, âWe want you to be our Batman.ââ
Affleck also raved about director Matt Reeves, who replaced him at the helm of the highly anticipated standalone film âThe Batman.â
âI would be a (âŚ) ape on the ground for Matt Reeves, never mind being Batman! Iâm really blown away and excited. Itâs a great time in the DC universe.â
Whether Affleckâs assurances put the DCEU fandom at ease remains to be seen.
Joining Affleck on the Hall H dais were âJustice Leagueâ co-stars Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman), Jason Momoa (Aquaman), Ray Fisher (Cyborg) and Ezra Miller (The Flash).
The squad played an action-packed âJustice Leagueâ trailer for the capacity crowd and briefly addressed the exit of director Zack Snyder, who handed the reins of finishing the film after a family tragedy to âAvengersâ director Joss Whedon.
âJoss is a great guy and Zack picked a great guy to come in and finish up for him,â said Fisher.
The actors described the thrill of suiting up as a full team for the first time on the âJustice Leagueâ set.
âIt was very much a high geek-level moment, it was just electrifying,â said Affleck. âIt was incredible.â
âI kept trying to touch everyone and they had to tell me, âStop! Stop!â It looked so cool and real,â said Miller, who threw gentle shade to DC rivals Marvel. The DC Comics world is âthe first comic universe⌠are there other comic houses?â
Gadot thanked fans for embracing her âWonder Womanâ this summer, making the first female superhero movie a box office topper.
âThis character is just so incredible,â she said. âShe stands for everything that is good, for love and compassion and truth and justice and peace. There is nothing not to love about her.â
But it was Momoa who stole the show from the very start, making a rock star entrance from the back of the room, trident in hand.
And when one fan inquired about Henry Cavill -- whose dearly departed Superman is mourned heavily in the trailer -- Momoa pulled no punches.
âSon, I donât know if your parents showed you the last movie but Supermanâs DEAD.â
Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo discuss Batman vs. âhis nightmare versions of himselfâ
The dynamic duo of writer Scott Snyder and artist Greg Capullo have reunited to put Batman through more hell -- and to poke some fun at each other.
Before getting down to the nitty-gritty of their Bat-crazy DC Comics event âDark Nights: Metal,â which launches next month, the fan-favorite personalities behind a bestselling 2011-2016 run on âBatmanâ did some impersonations.
Introduced as Capullo by DC co-publisher Dan DiDio, Snyder walked onstage in a custom bald cap with dark sunglasses and a fake mustache attached, and proceeded to talk about what an awesome writer and collaborator Scott Snyder is.
The real Capullo entered, pulled off his palâs mask, and sat down to do his high-pitched impersonation of Snyder: âThis is really the most meaningful story ⌠that Iâve ever written, even though I say that about every other project,â he said to a large room of laughing fans.
âThatâs his voice for both me and his wife,â Snyder said.
âYouâre my comics wife,â Capullo replied.
Then it was time for serious business. Very serious, if youâre Bruce Wayne.
In âMetal,â Batman and his fellow heroes will have to face the Dark Nights -- characters Snyder called âBruceâs nightmare versions of himself.â The new villains are from worlds in the new Dark Multiverse where âanything you fear becomes material and real,â the writer said. The Batmen of the Dark Multiverse have made choices that went horribly wrong.
Capulloâs fearsome, metallic designs for six of the Dark Nights were shown on a screen by the stage.
âThey really are pretty Gwar,â Snyder quipped.
The seventh characterâs look is being kept secret for now, but an ominous name was given: The Batman Who Laughs. Keep in mind that the Joker was in part inspired by Conrad Veidtâs disfigured clown character in the 1928 silent horror film âThe Man Who Laughs.â
Among the projects revealed in the presentation: Jeff Lemireâs return to DC Comics to write âThe Terrifics,â one of the Dark Matter crop of titles that spin out of âMetalâ; the team will feature Mr. Terrific, Metamorpho, Phantom Girl and Plastic Man. The Canadian graphic novelist entered to cheers. He said heâd also be doing a series titled âHawkman Foundâ with artist Bryan Hitch.
In the question-and-answer session, a grade-school reader named Christopher said to Lemire, âYou may have not noticed, but Plastic Manâs suit is white [in the art for âThe Terrificsâ]. Thatâs kind of like how his sonâs suit is, Offspring âŚâ
âI did notice that,â Lemire said to laughs. âAnd thatâs a very good clue as to some things that are going to happen in the book.â
The insightful young reader got his own round of applause.
Video: Shannon Purser crashes the âStranger Thingsâ panel to question Barbâs fate
Shannon Purser asks the âStranger Thingsâ question weâve all been wondering about.
Internet folk hero Shannon Purser, better known as Barb from âStranger Things,â dropped by Hall H on Saturday afternoon to ask the panelists what weâve all been wondering: Will Barb return for Season 2?
Watch above to learn Barbâs fate and whether or not fans will ever see #JusticeForBarb.
âStranger Things 2â trailer doubles down on nostalgia bait
If you liked âStranger Things,â chances are you are also a fan of kids riding bikes, Dungeons & Dragons, Rubikâs Cube, scraped knees, and all things adorably â80s.
Netflix knows this and theyâve pumped up the nostalgia bait for the next season of âStranger Things,â courtesy of one Vincent Priceâs voiceover from âThrillerâ and the âDragonâs Lairâ video game.
Vader Trump Cosplay wants to âMake the Death Star Great Againâ
James Cherry of Redlands is cosplaying as Darth Trump. Note the lightsaber golf club.
James Van Der Beek totally thinks Diplo would survive the zombie apocalypse
Somehow we never noticed what an uncanny resemblance electronic music megastar DJ Diplo bears to actor James Van Der Beek, yes, the erstwhile Dawson Leery. But some things you canât unsee.
Van Der Beek plays the celebrity DJ -- at least, a mythic, Instagram-happy, slightly dim version of Diplo -- on the new Viceland series âWhat Would Diplo Do?â premiering Aug. 3.
It might, in fact, turn out to be one of the Great Roles that Van Der Beek was born to play. He not only plays Diplo, but he also writes on the show and serves as executive producer (the real Diplo is also an executive producer).
He stopped by the L.A. Times Comic-Con studio to discuss the artistic hunger that drove him to portray one Thomas Wesley Pentz, how he prepared for the role, and if learning how to let the beat drop is, in fact, an art unto itself.
Also: How Diplo would survive the zombie apocalypse. And radioactive spiders. And more. We are at Comic-Con, after all...what would Diplo do?
âRiverdaleâ drops Season 2 trailer and some tantalizing tidbits at Comic-Con
âRiverdaleâ is going even darker for Season 2.
The first season ended with a bang â literally â so fans were understandably bursting at the seams in anticipation of learning anything from the upcoming season.
Of course, instead of providing any immediate answers, the showâs Comic-Con presentation Saturday kicked off with a blooper reel. But that video was immediately followed with a trailer teasing âRiverdaleâ Season 2.
Then, âRiverdaleâ showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, cast members KJ Apa (Archie), Lili Reinhart (Betty), Camila Mendes (Veronica), Cole Sprouse (Jughead), Madelaine Petsch (Cheryl), Ashleigh Murray (Josie), Asha Bromfield (Melody), Hayley Law (Valerie), Casey Cott (Kevin) and executive producer Sarah Schechter took the stage to spill some secrets about the upcoming season.
Here are some highlights:
- Fans will learn the fate of Fred Andrews by the end of the first episode.
- No relationship is safe. Plenty of new characters are on the way to shake things up. This includes Toni Topaz, who becomes Jugheadâs guide to everything Southside Serpents. She will be played by Vanessa Morgan.
- It seems like trouble is on the way for the couple fans have dubbed âBugheadâ (Betty and Jughead), but there could be bit of a twist. In the comics, Toni is an established bisexual character, and Aguirre-Sacasa confirmed that her sexual orientation will remain intact for the series. The panelists remained mum on the possibility of who exactly Toniâs romantic interest may be.
- Also on the way? A love interest from Veronicaâs past. Mendes described this ex-boyfriend as a âbad boy.â
- Aguirre-Sacasa also implied that they are still looking for ways to bring Sabrina Spellman, a.k.a. the Teenage Witch, into the âRiverdaleâ fold before being cut off by Schechter. âI love horror stuff and I love dreams and jump scares and stuff like that, so weâre always looking for ways to put [the supernatural] into âRiverdale,â â Aguirre-Sacasa said.
Watch the âRiverdaleâ blooper reel and Season 2 trailer above.
âJustice Leagueâ trailer brings back Wonder Woman and delivers a mighty Aquaman hair flip
Since its debut last month, âWonder Womanâ has grossed over $770 million worldwide -- so Warner Bros. knows what it has in Gal Gadotâs beloved superhero.
It stands to reason, then, that Wonder Woman is featured prominently in a new âJustice Leagueâ teaser that debuted at Comic-Con on Saturday. The film, which hits theaters Nov. 17, was directed by Zack Snyder and features all of the most popular characters in the DC universe: Batman (Ben Affleck), Aquaman (Jason Momoa), Cyborg (Ray Fisher) and the Flash (Ezra Miller).
So far, thereâs no Superman to be seen, as the character played by Henry Cavill was killed off in âBatman v Superman.â But Cavill was spied on the London set of âJustice League,â so donât count him out just yet.
Denis Villeneuve on âBlade Runner 2049â: I didnât want anybody else to mess it up
The âBlade Runner 2049â portion of Saturday morningâs Warner Bros. panel at Comic-Con kicked off with a Jared Leto hologram following a timeline of the entire history of the âBlade Runnerâ universe unfurled on wraparound screens in Hall H.
Veteran âBlade Runnerâ actor Harrison Ford joined newcomer Ryan Gosling and director Denis Villeneuve during the presentation, alongside Ana de Armas, Sylvia Hoeks, Robin Wright, Lennie James and Mackenzie Davis. Writers Hampton Fancher and Michael Green also joined the cast onstage.
Villeneuve was transparent with what drove his interest in continuing the âBlade Runnerâ mythology, explaining that he did it âbecause I didnât want anybody else to ... it up.â
In a delightful turn of events, Ford also seemed willing to open himself up to questions from the audience.
When asked by an audience member whether his intent was to reboot every great film heâd been in, a reference to Fordâs appearance in âIndiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,â âThe Force Awakensâ and âBlade Runner 2049â in recent years, Ford gamely answered, âYou bet your ... it is.â
When asked the lingering question of the possibility that his character Rick Deckard is a replicant, though, Ford pulled no punches.
âIt doesnât matter what I think,â the legendary actor snorted.
As for Gosling, heâs still struggling to believe the film is happening.
âIâm not sure this isnât a giant episode of âPunkâd,â â the âLa La Landâ star marveled.
Audience members were treated to a new clip from the upcoming film, scheduled for release Oct. 6, featuring Goslingâs character walking through a hall of replicants.
The panel also featured the latest trailer for the film, released July 17. Check it out below.
âReady Player Oneâ trailer debuts, and Spielberg says Iron Giant is âreal major playerâ in film
Steven Spielberg unveiled a first-look at his âReady Player Oneâ in Hall H Saturday, and the filmmaker promised that the Iron Giant is a âreal major playerâ in the sci-fi adaptation.
Based on Ernest Clineâs 2011 novel about a teenager on the hunt for valuable treasure in a virtual reality game, the movie stars newcomer Tye Sheridan in the lead role.
Spielberg called the filmâs world âa flash future that is awaiting all of us whether we like it or not.â
âThis movie is going to expose so many people to the concept of virtual reality, and I think itâs going to change the speed of adoption,â said Cline.
The Iron Giant -- an old animated character -- will feature prominently in the film, and the trailer reveals plenty of other pop culture references too, including Freddy Krueger and the âBack to the Futureâ DeLorean. Check it out above.
Gal Gadot is here and Comic-Con is losing its mind
âGAL GADOT #SDCC2017 OMGJDJDâ says it all. But if that werenât enough, check out the accompanying video capturing crowd reaction to Diana of Themyscira herself walking among the common folk.
Gal Gadot, a.k.a. Wonder Woman, has arrived at San Diego Comic-Con, on her way to the Warner Bros. panel currently in progress in Hall H.
Expect updates for Gadotâs upcoming film âJustice Leagueâ imminently.
Wayne Brady pops in at the Oscars of comics to take them to âLevel Next.â See all the Eisner Award winners
At the Eisner Awards on Friday night, actor-comedian-singer-TV host Wayne Brady took the stage as a surprise guest, announcing he is working to add âcomics creatorâ to his list of professions with a new publishing imprint to be called Level Next.
Among the winners, Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staplesâ sci-fi epic âSagaâ continued its award-winning ways with four prizes: continuing series, writer, cover artist and penciller/inker.
And Wonder Woman had a big night during a ceremony that celebrated diversity, with wins for a recent Jill Thompson book and a posthumous honor for the warrior princessâ first artist.
Thompson dedicated the new graphic album prize to âevery girl who might see Wonder Woman for the first time ... and [she] inspires them to be stronger, or inspires them to do something that might be difficult, or something they may have been told that theyâre not supposed to do â because there is nothing that theyâre not supposed to do because theyâre supposed to do everything.â
See a complete list of winners and more photos from the show here.
Peek at Episode 1 of âMarvelâs The Defendersâ reveals fighting, lawyering, drinking and an intimidating Sigourney Weaver
If there was one takeaway from the surprise Hall H screening of the first episode of âMarvelâs The Defenders,â itâs that fans of the four previous Netflix series approve. There was plenty of applause throughout the episode.
While no specific spoilers will be included below, those wanting to avoid any impressions from the episode should stop reading here.
The initial episode serves as a quick refresher on where each heroâs solo story left off, while planting seeds about how all the characters will very much exist in the same world.
While watching every single episode of âDaredevil,â âJessica Jones,â âLuke Cageâ and âIron Fistâ isnât necessarily a prerequisite for understanding the show, being familiar with each character will be helpful. And there is definitely some nuance that will be missed by brand new viewers.
Respectively, Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) is still a blind attorney with heightened senses, Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter) is still rough edges and whiskey, Luke Cage (Mike Colter) is still an (ex-)con with principles and Danny Rand (Finn Jones) still has a glowing fist.
Because âThe Defendersâ is an eight-episode series, this first installment is not in any rush to bring the characters together. But rest assured, there is forward progress in the narratives for each soon-to-be Defender.
As fans of the previous Marvel Netflix shows have probably come to expect, the episode includes fighting, lawyering, drinking, destruction of property, and, yes, even a little bit of physical loving.
The first episode also introduces viewers to Alexandra (Sigourney Weaver), whose attitude and appearance (sheâs usually wrapped in white) are more than intimidating. She seems thoughtful and calculating and is clearly no stranger to wielding power. Maybe not superpowers, though at this point in the series itâs tough to say. But she has a plan, and sheâs going to see it through. She is also acquainted with a very familiar face.
Familiar faces actually appear throughout the episode, which is why those who have watched the previous shows will have an enhanced (and probably positive, if the cheering is anything to go by) overall viewing experience.
Finally, if every episode of âThe Defendersâ ends in a similar way to this pilot, fans may end up binge-watching the show without being able to help themselves.
âMarvelâs The Defendersâ will be released Aug. 18.
(Warning: Graphic language)
The History Channel has a Viking funeral at Comic-Con -- for a fictional character
The History Channel had a celebratory Viking funeral for the âVikingsâ series. And a lot of people showed up to watch it burn.
(Beware: Spoiler ahead.)
Presumably the funeral was to honor fictional character Ragnar Lothbrok (played Travis Fimmel), who died after being thrown into a pit of venomous snakes. In 2016.
But hey, Comic-Con is sad now.
Spending the night in the Hall H line is a âpsychotic, living nightmare,â but worth it
One does not simply walk into Hall H at San Diego Comic-Con. To gain access to the hallowed hall of pop culture madness, first you must pass the trials of the line.
We spent the night talking to the folks who spend the large majority of their Comic-Con waiting in line. How can a mere mortal survive this test of patience? What does one need? The answer: friendship.
No, really, everyone was pretty insistent that you shouldnât brave the wait alone.
Also, bring sunscreen.
Watch Sigourney Weaver receive a standing ovation at âThe Defendersâ panel
Marvel had plenty of surprises for the Hall H faithful during its presentation of âThe Defendersâ at Comic-Con on Friday. But it saved the biggest twist for the end.
Fans were treated to a surprise screening of the first episode of the upcoming Netflix series. The packed house couldnât help but cheer.
The pilot was not the only surprise Marvel had on hand for its first TV presentation in Hall H.
Before cast members Charlie Cox, Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter, Finn Jones, Sigourney Weaver, Ălodie Yung, Jessica Henwick, Deborah Ann Woll and showrunner Marco Ramirez were even introduced, another familiar face crashed the panel.
The Punisher himself, Jon Bernthal, came to the stage, which led to a clip from his upcoming standalone Netflix series being shown to the assembled audience.
Marvel TVâs Jeph Loeb, who was presiding over the panel, also shared some news: There will be an âIron Fistâ Season 2.
(Warning: Graphic language)
The panel closed with the premiere of a new trailer for âMarvelâs The Defenders,â which you can watch above.
There was, however, one more surprise that even Loeb was not prepared for.
The longtime face of Marvel TV was presented with Comic-Con Internationalâs Inkpot Award at the start of the panel. The award recognizes individuals for their contribution to the world of comics, science-fiction, fantasy, film, television, animation and more.
Loeb was nearly speechless and clearly touched by the recognition. He closed his thank yous by urging everybody to ânever give up on your dreams.â
Watch the moment below.
Three recurring themes to watch for in the âOutlanderâ Season 3 premiere
Far be it from us to spoil what we saw during the surprise Comic-Con screening of the âOutlanderâ Season 3 premiere, âThe Battle Joined,â but we would be remiss not to give fans of the Starz series a hint at what to expect when the show returns in September.
Here are the three themes already found in spades in the first two seasons of the historical time-travel drama that viewers can rest assured will continue anew.
To Have and To Have Not: Intimacy
Intimacy, both desired and forced, has always been a bit of a bear in the âOutlanderâ universe. Dealing as it does with difficult issues of infidelity, rape, grief and forgiveness, the showâs characters consistently find themselves at odds with each other, struggling to connect and disconnect from people in their orbit. In some cases, that fosters love that can withstand space and time and in others, allows that kind of familiarity that only breeds contempt.
In Season 3, these same chickens will come home to roost, in as nuanced a fashion as fans have come to expect from the series.
Sometimes Itâs Hard to be a Woman
Poor Claire. After spending several seasons as a fish-out-of-water in the past, she finds herself as a fish-out-of-water in the present.
Having relocated with Frank to Massachusetts, Claire has about as easy a time adapting to the anti-feminist strictures of the time as she did in 1740s Scotland, but for the fact that in the past, there was a war on and in times of war, exceptions are made for women willing to fight.
Season 3 suggests that the battle for womenâs equality is far from won, something that may resonate with audiences during our fraught modern times.
Objectifying Beautiful Men: Check
Again, no spoilers but there are, like, a lot of kilts and menâs thighs in the âOutlanderâ Season 3 premiere. If you like that sort of thing. Which we do.
If all of this has you salivating for more Scottish melodrama, check out the new series recap video released by Starz Friday in anticipation of Season 3.
Look for âOutlanderâ to return to Starz on Sunday, Sept. 10 at 8 p.m. PDT.
Watch âOutlanderâsâ cast dance-filled SDCC panel with Jenna Dewan Tatum
To squeals of delight resounding all over San Diego, âOutlanderâ arrived at Comic-Con ready to tease fans of whatâs to come when Season 3 debuts Sept. 10.
Moderated by celebrity superfan Jenna Dewan Tatum, the panel offered plenty of opportunities for attendees to scream with cast members Caitriona Balfe, Sam Heughan, Tobias Menzies, Sophie Skelton and Richard Rankin all in attendance.
Joining them were creator and showrunner Ronald D. Moore, âOutlanderâ novel series author Diana Gabaldon and executive producer Maril Davis.
âRichard, are you Scottish?â Heughan teased after an extended answer by series newcomer Rankin, who portrays Roger Wakefield.
âIâm just always in character,â Rankin replied, before adopting an American accent, âIâm actually from The Valley.â
Though the panel touched on some specifics, like how the series will address the Battle of Culloden and the continued relationships between Jamie and Claire Fraser (Heughan and Balfe), far more fun was had with the questions that werenât answered.
Dewan Tatum introduced a bit of a game part of the way through the panel, titled âTruth or Dance.â She posed a question of each cast member and gave them a choice: Answer truthfully or dance.
Balfe refused to choose who sheâd rather kiss between love interests Frank Randall (Menzies) and Fraser, calling the query âthree horrible optionsâ before dancing.
Heughan was asked where and when his most recent date night was, a question he shied away from answering. He danced with Dewan Tatum, but not before making sure her husband, actor Channing Tatum, wasnât nearby.
âHer husband is a lot bigger than you, Sam,â Balfe cautioned.
âHe watches the show,â Dewan Tatum assured Heughan. âHe gets it. He said, âYes, please dance with him.ââ
And dance they did.
But the line of the panel went to Gabaldon, creator of the âOutlanderâ universe.
When questioned about if she had contributed an episode in Season 3, Gabaldon said no.
âI didnât write an episode this season. I wrote a book. I thought that was enough,â she quipped.
The panel concluded with a special surprise screening of the Season 3 premiere, âThe Battle Joined.â
âPreacherâ panel at Comic-Con strikes a similar tone as the show (minus the violence)
Walk around Comic-Con, and itâs the branded bags of freebies that begin to stand out â after all the elaborate cosplayers, of course.
And whether youâve watched AMCâs âPreacherâ or not, you know just about everything about the series in that the promotional swag passed around Hall H was a paper mask that would let fans replicate the sphincter-as-mouth affliction featured during the showâs first season with a character known only as Arseface (Ian Colletti).
The second season of the series is in progress, and panel moderator Chris Hardwick asked Seth Rogen, who adapted the 1995 comic for AMC with partner Evan Goldberg, if he had ever imagined that a show as proudly violent and inappropriate as âPreacherâ would make it on the air.
âThere were no shows that would let you do this kind of thing,â Rogen said. âLuckily peopleâs sensibilities have declined in recent years. . . we live in an age of decline and are able to contribute to that decline,â he added with a laugh.
âWe blew up Tom Cruise in the pilot,â he later said incredulously, citing all the support the show has received from the network for all its odd flourishes. (And, no, Cruise wasnât a fan of that scene, according to Rogen.)
Oscar nominee Ruth Negga, who portrays Tulip on the show, lent an extra layer of gravitas to the panel as she spoke about her character and gender fluidity.
But for a show that specializes in outrageousness, the tone of the panel was predictably similar.
After blowing up the entire town where the first season was set, the show has since moved to New Orleans, a shift reflected in a rollicking Crescent City brass band that opened the panel. There was also a tease of the next episode that involved the sadistic Herr Starr (Pip Torrens) training to become part of an organization called the Grail. Suffice to say, many scenes ended with harsh, played-for-laughs violence, in one instance at the hands of a brutally swung golf club. âHeâs a very therapeutic character to play,â Torrens said.
Naturally, the clip came with a warning, delivered by Hardwick, that it was not suitable for all audiences. âNo, itâs really not,â Rogen said.
âToughen up,â Joseph Gilgun, who plays vampire Cassidy, warned the crowd before the clip. âYouâre going to ruin 2017, sensitive people.â
âIt sounds so much better with your accent,â Hardwick joked.
They also shared a new trailer previewing the rest of the upcoming season.
Rogen was later asked during the audience Q&A if he would ever appear on the series, but he was cagey about the possibility â at first. âI donât want to say it, but Iâm going to replace Dominic with myself. The show is called âRabbiâ now.â
How Donald Trumpâs inauguration almost affected the new crop of âStar Warsâ kidsâ books
When readers left the young would-be heroes of âStar Wars: Join the Resistanceâ at the end of the first book earlier this year, the kids were in the clutches of the dreaded First Order.
But how dark is too dark for a middle-grade novel series?
Ben Blacker, co-writer of the books with his âThrilling Adventure Hourâ co-creator Ben Acker, told âStar Warsâ readers Friday afternoon at a panel at Comic-Con that he had to dial it back some in the upcoming second book.
Why?
âWe started writing it in January, and the [Donald] Trump inauguration was coming up, and it got darkâŚ. It impacted it so much that our editor sent us a note that said, âDonât forget this is for middle-grade readers. It should be kind of funnyâŚ.,â Blacker said.
The writing process also came soon after the death actress Carrie Fisher, who portrays Gen. Leia Organa. Blacker said the first chapter includes a passage in which the 15-year-old main character, Mattis Banz, thinks about what Leiaâs strength and humor mean to him.
The second âJoin the Resistanceâ book is set for an October release.
Organa is the subject of the next young adult âStar Warsâ book from panelist Christie Golden, who said âLeia: Princess of Alderaan,â part of the recently announced âJourney to the Last Jediâ collection, would show how the eventual general first became part of the Rebellion (emerging as a leader by age 19!), and that the story would spend time with her parents on their ill-fated planet.
Many of the books discussed had already been revealed, but writer Kevin Shinick (Marvelâs âSuperior Carnageâ) was brought up at the end to tease a childrenâs book heâs writing.
He wouldnât say the main characterâs name, but let loose an âAwwwrrrrrrrr.â
Fans cheered immediately, and then the cover was shown on a screen by the stage.
Shinickâs âChewie and the Porgsâ is set for a Dec. 15 debut.
How does the âTwin Peaksâ cast love David Lynch? Let them count the ways.
Though David Lynch was absent from the Hall H panel celebrating the ânewâ iteration of cult classic âTwin Peaks,â he was present in spirit, through the loving tales told by the assembled cast members. Oh, and by the brilliant video intro he sent.
Fridayâs panel kicked off with a brief video from Lynch, thanking fans for joining the cast at Comic-Con before repeatedly cutting to static as chaos broke out off-screen, involving a horse, a gun and Lynchâs cat.
But even after the video ended, Lynch loomed large over the panel. Though the cast couldnât do much to illuminate the mystery unfolding on âTwin Peaks,â they did have plenty to say about what a genuinely lovely individual Lynch is.
âHeâs a fantastic human being,â Matthew Lillard, who plays Bill Hastings in Showtimeâs revival of the series, gushed about Lynch.
âHis belief in his process and his vision and his point of view is so focused,â Kyle MacLachlan said of the man who launched his film career with the 1984 sci-fi classic âDune.â âHe inspires me in that way, because he follows this dream in his mind.â
Naomi Watts, a veteran of Lynchâs classic âMulholland Drive,â explained his relationship with his actors saying, âYou want to please him in everything you do.â
She paused.
âThat sounds weird,â she added, before adding, âOn set.â
Lynch is not, however, without a stern side.
MacLachlan shared an anecdote about a famous co-star who made the poor choice of ad-libbing during filming.
âJim Belushi decided that he was going to ad-lib in the middle of a heightened state of euphoria and all of a sudden we heard, âCut.â
âDavid had a megaphone and he said, âMr. Belushi, do I have to report you to the principalâs office?ââ MacLachlan recalled, employing his finest Lynch impression.
âAnd Jim said: âNo sir. Got it.ââ
But it was accomplished âKnots Landingâ and âPlayhouse 90â actor Don Murray who had perhaps the kindest words for Lynch.
âThe most impressive thing about David is he shows appreciation for other peopleâs work,â Murray explained. âYou go home after a dayâs work with David and you feel good about yourself and about the world, for having had that experience.â
Fans at San Diegoâs Comic-Con will get an opportunity to see Sundayâs episode of âTwin Peaksâ early, at a screening held Friday night at 10.
And fans of the show in general should look out for an upcoming schedule change. On Sunday, Aug. 6, âTwin Peaksâ will begin airing an hour earlier, at 8 p.m. PDT.
David Ayer says âBrightâ is the âwokeâ R-rated Will Smith fairytale police action movie America needs
Will Smith describes âBright,â the upcoming Netflix fantasy actioner set in a world where humans and fairytale creatures co-exist in a gritty modern day Los Angeles, as ââTraining Dayâ meets âLord of the Rings.ââ
Director David Ayer made another promise at Comic-Con this week: âItâs woke AF.â
He reunites with his âSuicide Squadâ star in âBright,â which debuted at Comic-Con with a new trailer and clip teasing the filmâs genre-blending world of humans, orcs, elves and fairies.
Ayer and cast stopped by the L.A. Times studio to talk about loading pointed social commentary into their high concept fantasy action pic: âFor me itâs an opportunity to stir some awakening in people -- to maybe help people with closed minds open up a little bit.â
âGame of Thronesâ panel deflects questions but has a cute dog
As if âGame of Thronesâ wasnât already one of the most popular kids in class, Alfie Allen (Theon Greyjoy) brought what looked to be a miniature cross between a wide-eyed Pomeranian and a dire wolf to cradle in his lap for the duration of the showâs panel at San Diego Comic-Con Friday. (And the dogâs name was Abby, by the way.)
Not that the show is struggling to attract attention. Last weekâs season premiere devoured much of pop culture both before and after its air date. And with the series entering whatâs now itâs final dozen episodes (to be spread out over the next two seasons), the Friday afternoon panel â up until the reveal of a new trailer at the close â had the casual, breezy feeling of an early victory lap.
With Kristian Nairn (all together now: âHodorâ) presiding over the bulk of the panel as a sort of master of ceremonies with a handful of prepared questions, the nine cast members on hand cracked jokes and projected a chatty warmth.
âDo you miss me?â Nairn asked his former life partner Isaac Hempstead-Wright (Bran Stark) as the questions traveled from one end of the table to the other. âItâs been so empty without you,â Wright replied.
Of course, the benefit of keeping Nairn in charge of the questions for the bulk of the panel further limited the prospect for spoilers. And there was little new information to be gathered in Hall H (even the panel-opening trailer had been on YouTube for months), but, to be fair, answers are now forthcoming on a weekly basis.
Jacob Anderson (Grey Worm) was asked what he thought the prospects were for the budding affections apparent between Grey Worm and Daenerysâ advisor Missandei (Nathalie Emmanuel). (The actress was decked out in an SDCC-appropriate blue cape and matching lipstick). âI want them to find happiness with each other, everythingâs so sad,â he replied.
Given the size, scope and scheduling demands of a cast the size of âGame of Thrones,â not even Hall H has a big enough stage to hold the full cast, so the likes of Peter Dinklage (Tyrion), Emilia Clarke (Daenerys) and Lena Headey (Cersei) were not on hand (nor were any dragons, but those were available, in a way, outside as part of a photo opportunity).
Gwendoline Christie (Brienne of Tarth), who said she was âdesperateâ to be cast in a musical one day, was asked about the romantic prospects with gigantic ginger wildling Tormund Giantsbane (Kristofer Hivju) and whether she secretly appreciated being appreciated as a woman and warrior. âWhat I love about Brienne of Tarth, I donât think at the foremost of her consciousness is based on a value system of how men appreciate her,â she said, to a smattering of woos. âBut, who doesnât like being appreciated as both, really?â
Along those lines, Sophie Turner fielded a question from Nairn about Sansaâs views on romantic love, given her grim marriage. Turner was doubtful. âShe doesnât really see the world through rose-colored glasses anymore,â she said. âSheâs woke now, guys. Sheâs real woke.â
A light, bantering tone made up the bulk of the panel which also included John Bradley (Samwell Tarley) and Conleth Hill (Varys).
Liam Cunningham (Ser Davos), offered his own breaking news as Nairn asked the panel about future projects. âI can announce that the HBO spinoff has been decided itâs going to be called âBetter Call Davos.ââ Others on the panel shared support for what was said to be Peter Dinklageâs idea of the series finale being done in the style of a musical.
But when it comes to irreverence, âGame of Thronesâ has some catching up to do with SDCC. After the audience Q&A began, a cosplaying Night King stepped forward and, after raising his arms, asked the panel with attempted sinister drawl, âAre you looking forward to rising again as children of the cold?â
âWeâve never heard the Night King speak,â Cunningham exclaimed in surprise. âI didnât realize the Night King was from California.â
âIâm from Philadelphia.â
âPreacher,â James Van Der Beek and more at L.A. Times Comic-Con studio
âWe didnât really know if we should do this panel todayâ â âWalking Deadâ creators talk new season, loss of crew member
âWeâre hear to talk to you tonight about our friend John Bernecker,â said executive producer Scott Gimple of AMCâs âThe Walking Deadâ to kick off their panel in Hall H.
Gimple went on to glowingly speak of the late stuntman and his work on the show as well as âHunger Games,â âGet Outâ and âBlack Panther,â as creator Robert Kirkman sat at his side. Bernecker died âdoing something he lovedâ on set last Wednesday, Gimple said, going on to describe how beloved he was in the stuntman community.
Given that loss, Gimple said, âWe didnât really know if we should do this panel today, but we wanted to be here for you, and we wanted to tell you about John, and we wanted to show you what weâve all been working on.â
The lights then went down for the new seasonâs trailer (warning: adult language), which offered its usual pleasures for âWalking Deadâ fans. Whatâs in store, other than Neganâs concerns that everyone is wearing pants suitable for soiling? The war rages on, Daryl rides a motorcycle, Shiva the tiger roars and many walkers and their expensively rendered decay meet violent (second) endings. In short, all the things fans love.
Then came the Q&A. One early highlight addressed the showâs oppressive darkness, as someone asked âDo you ever crave a comedic scene?â
âIâve been pushing for a musical episode for years,â Norman Reedus (Daryl) said wryly, which led into a somewhat random follow-up question of whether there could ever be an onscreen karaoke night in Alexandria for the show.
âFirst of all, every night is karaoke night for Negan,â Jeffrey Dean Morgan said of his murderous character. âHeâs having fun.â
One fan, greeted as âthe button ladyâ because of what looked to be a bulletproof vest of buttons across her chest, asked if anyone had a memorable experience watching a George Romero film, referencing another loss in the extended family of âThe Walking Dead.â
âThey all obviously mean a lot to me,â said Kirkman, who went on to say he watched âNight of the Living Deadâ growing up in Kentucky. âJust to go on that ride for the first time, to see what it is a zombie story can be,â he said. âLeading all the way to the insanely poignant ending. I was instantly in love with the genre and instantly in love with the man as a filmmaker. I couldnât be more upset about that loss.â
A bit of politics briefly entered the room later as one fan, asked if he had a follow-up, posed the question of whether anyone had any opinions about President Trump. He was playfully shooed away.
âLetâs not bring the room down,â Kirkman said quickly. âVote in 2018.â
âSteven Universeâsâ Rebecca Sugar confirms Fluorite is a representation of a polyamorous relationship
âSteven Universeâ keeps paving the way for representation.
During the audience Q&A portion of the showâs Comic-Con panel on Friday, âSteven Universeâ creator Rebecca Sugar confirmed that Fluorite is a representation of a polyamorous relationship.
âOh, yes,â Sugar said. âAbsolutely.â
One of the newest characters introduced in the show, Fluorite is a fusion of six (unknown) gems. In âSteven Universe,â fusion occurs when two or more gems reach a state of emotional harmony. They are a physical manifestation of the relationship between these fused individuals.
Sugar then went on to share the inspiration for this representation.
âIt was a little over a year ago, I got to visit this incredible place called The Center, an LGBTQ center in Long Beach, and talk to some of the kids there,â Sugar said.
âWe were all chatting together about some things weâd just love to see on the show. That was one of the things that we all agreed we really wanted to find a place for in the show.â
Watch: âDeath Noteâs Lakeith Stanfield stays in character all day at Comic-Con, makes three costume changes
In character with Lakeith Stanfield from âDeath Note.â
âDeath Noteâ star Lakeith Stanfield did Comic-Con the right way â and managed to out-cosplay the cosplayers â by spending his entire day in character at the nerdiest place on Earth.
Stanfield was all smiles as he walked into the L.A. Times Comic-Con studio Thursday afternoon. It was only when the cameras started rolling that he settled into the quietly twitchy stance of L., the quirky, brooding detective of Netflixâs upcoming manga adaptation.
(Watch above to experience one full glorious minute of Stanfield in character as L. discusses cosplay and superheroes at Comic-Con.)
Earlier in the day, the âGet Outâ actor had taken a break from filming Boots Rileyâs âSorry to Bother Youâ in the Bay Area to join his âDeath Noteâ cast and crew mates in San Diego for Netflixâs first-ever Hall H panel, where his committed act was a source of delighted puzzlement.
âL.â was quiet onstage for the most part as director Adam Wingard, co-stars Nat Wolff and Margaret Qualley, and producers Roy Lee and Masi Oka unveiled a new clip from the Americanized adaptation about a teenager who comes into possession of a book that kills all whose names are written on its pages.
Quiet that is, until the moment he professed his admiration for Heath Ledgerâs Joker. âI like the Joker,â Stanfield said softly â maybe as himself, maybe as L. âNot necessarily the latest version. Heath Ledger. Love âBrokeback.ââ
And then there were the costume changes, three in total, because Hollywoodâs fastest rising star also came to Comic-Con to serve lewks to the cosplaying masses.
First up: A Thom Browne suit and shorts combo, accompanied by a black mesh mask that L. might wear in an alternate universe to obscure his face from detection by his enemies.
Swinging by the L.A. Times Comic-Con studio, he sported his second outfit, a laser-cut black leather harness with striking shoulders by Los Angeles-based designer Merlin Castell and holsters.
âHe likes to play,â said stylist Daryl Glover. âItâs not often you get a client who is willing to take risks.â
By nightfall, Stanfield debuted his third and final costume change of the day at the theatrical world premiere of âDeath Note,â which screened to a packed house in downtown San Diego: a webbed kimono-esque number that made him resemble something of a chic Jedi, proving that not all superheroes wear spandex capes â some wear couture.
âStar Wars,â Marvel, âGame of Thronesâ and more: Some of the best cosplay at Comic-Con
âRobot Chickenâsâ ninth season will include President Trump: âJust take a look at the puppetâs handsâ
There is no pop culture or political figure safe from the claymation-style harpooning of Adult Swimâs âRobot Chicken.â For eight seasons the creators of the stop-motion sketch show have poked fun at âStar Wars,â âMad Men,â âMy Little Ponyâ and even former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
And as the show readies for its ninth season debut in the fall of 2017, fans are curious to see how the current political climate affected the âRobot Chickenâ writers room. We chatted with show creator Matt Senreich, producer Tom Root and writer and director Tom Sheppard at Comic-Con before their big panel presentation and can confirm that, yes, President Trump will appear in the ninth season.
âWe have a couple sketches that will involve [President Trump],â Senreich revealed. âOne is a horror movie type of thing, and the other is a Willy Wonka type of thing. If that doesnât spoil things.â
âWhen it finally airs just take a look at the puppetâs hands,â added Sheppard.
The show is famous for the wide variety of talent it pulls in for voice cameos and this seasonâs list includes Sherilyn Fenn from âTwin Peaks,â Christina Hendricks, the cast of â13 Reasons Why,â Parker Posey, Luke Evans and Jason Isaacs. The 45th U.S. president will be handled by veteran voice actors Fred Tatasciore and Ralph Garman.
But it wonât all be political satire. The ninth season of âRobot Chickenâ will tackle all sorts of genre staples including a âWalking Deadâ special voiced by the cast.
And yes, of course, there will be plenty of âStar Warsâ to be had. âWe fell into this weird gap, because of the way we make the show, where we didnât get to hit âStar Wars VIIâ last season,â said Root. âAnd âRogue Oneâ came out right as we were starting to write Season 9. So weâre going to hit both âStar Warsâ movies this season. So thatâs exciting, itâs a big, new landscape for us to play in.â
So which âStar Warsâ character gets the most hits from the âRobot Chickenâ writing staff? âThe âRobot Chickenâ nerd has seen âGirlsâ and has some opinions about âGirlsâ and wants to share them with Kylo Ren,â Root joked.
âAlso not real crazy about Han Soloâs demise,â said Sheppard.
You can get married by a celebrity at Comic-Con
Comic-Con has everything: posters, buttons, pedicabs and onsite celebrities who can marry you.
Esteben Martinez wanted to get married at Comic-Con because his (new) wife, Melissa Martinez, was the first person to bring him to the convention, for his birthday. So they were wed in a makeshift Geek Love Chapel (lightsaber salute not included).
Offering ceremonies officiated by actor Orlando Jones, who stars in the Starz series âAmerican Gods,â the cable network Syfy has set up the station for any and all geeks who want to get hitched during the convention.
And for those already wed, the chapel is offering vow-renewal services too, which âSharknadoâ actor Ian Ziering and wife Erin took advantage of Thursday.
Jones will be officiating weddings at the Geek Love Chapel on Friday and Saturday between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Honestly, it seems less permanent than the free âGame of Thronesâ tattoos HBO was giving out on the convention floor years back. Well... maybe.
âStan Against Evilâ unveils premiere date, Season 2 trailer and promises âdemon babiesâ
IFCâs punny and acerbic horror comedy âStan Against Evilâ came to San Diego Comic-Con on Thursday to announce its second season premiere date and unfurl a new trailer.
Creator Dana Gould and stars John C. McGinley and Janet Varney stopped by the Los Angeles Times photo studio to discuss the second season, McGinley being mistaken for someoneâs baby daddy and, jokingly, Gouldâs working out of his family issues through the show.
âStan is my dad,â said the comic and former âSimpsonsâ scribe of McGinleyâs irascible title character, whose ornery wisecracks have occasionally come straight from the elder Gouldâs mouth. âThe whole premise of the show is: âWhat if I just wrote a horror show and put my dad in the middle of it?â
Gould, McGinley and Varney, who also discussed the fine art of balancing humor with horror, promised more frights and laughs in Season 2.
âStan Against Evilâ returns to IFC with a marathon of Season 1, fittingly, on Halloween and the premiere of Season 2 on Nov. 1.
âInhumansâ Anson Mount and Serinda Swan explain how they created Black Boltâs sign language
A new âMarvelâs Inhumansâ trailer was revealed today at SDCC.
Fans got a better look at Marvelâs âInhumansâ series at Comic-Con on Thursday. And inside that new footage were two new âInhumansâ reveals, fans got to see Black Boltâs sign language and Medusa using her signature weapon, her hair.
Turns out actor Anson Mount (Black Bolt) and Serinda Swan (Medusa) worked together to develop the super-powered King of Attilanâs mode of communication.
âI wanted to take it very seriously and not just at face value,â Mount said when asked about creating the language on the âInhumansâ panel. âI knew I was going to begin by learning how sign systems work. I started watching not just the signers but orchestra conductors and I started building a lexicon.â
And he didnât do it alone. It was working with Swan, who plays Black Boltâs wife, Medusa, that really made it work.
âI think what helped me most was having a collaborator who took it as seriously as I did and asked for me to send her videos of my homework,â explained Mount. âSo I had to do my homework. I think that Serinda and I worked very well in that capacity. I couldnât have done it without her.â
In the show, Black Boltâs language was created so he could communicate with Medusa. So itâs fairly fitting that the pair worked together to make it for real.
And while Black Boltâs sign language is not an actual language like ASL, there is a system built in.
âHe would send the videos and we would sync them, so itâs not just him doing hand puppets and Iâm talking,â Swan said. âWe have it synced ... so I know the words. And if you pay attention throughout the whole show, youâll start to recognize words and moments.â
And the actors suggest that learning Black Boltâs language will also help fans understand the pairâs dynamic.
âThere is a really interesting relationship you guys might catch because I donât always say what he signs word for word,â revealed Swan. âThatâs one of the best things about Medusa. She has a strong opinion.â
And speaking of Medusa, the characterâs superpower (super strong red hair she can control with her mind) fans got to see her mighty hair flip on character Maximus (played by Iwan Rheon).
The entire âInhumansâ cast made an appearance in Ballroom 20 including Mount, Swan, Rheon, Eme Ikwuakor, Isabelle Cornish, Ken Leung, Ellen Woglom, Sonya Balmores and Mike Moh. Joining the actors were director Roel ReinĂŠ and writer Scott Buck.
Watch the new âInhumansâ trailer that debuted at the panel above.
Noah Hawley is making a Doctor Doom movie for Fox
At the end of the âLegionâ panel at San Diego Comic-Con, showrunner Noah Hawley dropped a pretty spectacular announcement on the attendees.
Toward the end of the discussion, he decided the comic book convention and pop culture carnival was the perfect place to drop a little bit of news.
âI thought it might be worth mentioning a film that Iâm developing, at Fox, which you guys might be excited about,â Hawley said. âIâll just say two words to you. The first one is âDoctorâ and the second is âDoom.ââ
Needless to say, fans were pretty excited. Clearly Hawleyâs interest in the comic book culture isnât limited to his very well-received take on âLegion.â And since Hawleyâs vision is so deeply different from the source material, hereâs hoping he brings that new feel to the much needed world of superhero movie making.
Just imagine the dance sequence possibilities!
See how âRockoâs Modern Lifeâ has been updated for 2017
The first footage of the âRockoâs Modern Lifeâ resurrection has debuted at Comic-Con. If you were looking for a way to blend your love of nostalgia with a hatred for all things 2017, then this is the movie for you.
Officially titled âRockoâs Modern Life: Static Cling,â the feature film jettisons Rocko (Carlos Alazraqui), Heffer (Tom Kenny), Filbert (Doug Lawrence) and the rest of the gang to present day. And everyoneâs favorite wallaby is having a difficult time adjusting.
âStargateâ returns! New series âStargate Originsâ will relaunch the franchise
Finally, a â-gateâ people can believe in!
On Thursday, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced plans to relaunch its expansive sci-fi âStargateâ franchise with âStargate Origins,â a 10-episode digital series airing exclusively on MGMâs new dedicated digital platform Stargate Command.
âWeâve been eager to revisit the âStargateâ franchise, and create an all-new story that honors the founding mythos and gives loyal fans more mystery and adventure,â said Kevin Conroy, president of digital and new platforms at MGM, in a statement released Thursday. âWe view âStargate Originsâ as a thank you to fans who have been keeping the spirit of the franchise alive for nearly 25 years.â
The franchise began in 1994 with the Roland Emmerich film of the same name and spawned three separate TV series, âStargate SG-1â (1997), âStargate Atlantisâ (2004) and âStargate Universeâ (2009). This is in addition to an animated series âStargate Infinityâ (2002), two direct-to-DVD films released in 2008, âStargate: The Ark of Truthâ and âStargate: Continuum,â and several affiliated novels and comics.
âStargate Originsâ will be a new chapter in the life of franchise stalwart Catherine Langford, whose father, archeologist Paul Langford, discovered the eponymous Stargate in 1928, when Catherine was a young girl.
âOriginsâ will see a young Catherine â whose death as an elderly woman is depicted in the eighth season of âStargate SG-1â â exploring the mysteries of the Stargate in an attempt to save Earth.
The series is scheduled to begin shooting in August, helmed by Mercedes Bryce Morgan and written by Mark Ilvedson and Justin Michael Terry.
Fans can expect the new Stargate Command fan experience to launch this fall.
âWe saw a need for a definitive hub for the âStargateâ fanbase to continue to enjoy news and content, both old and new,â said Chris Ottinger, president of worldwide television distribution and acquisitions at MGM, in Thursdayâs statement. âStargate Command will open a new door for the community to celebrate and interact with all content in a way that has never been done before.â
Ron Moore explains how âBattlestar Galacticaâ would be different if it was on now
âBattlestar Galacticaâ was a product of its time.
On Thursday at Comic-Con, eight years after the series finale, âBattlestar Galacticaâ executive producers Ron Moore and David Eick joined cast members Mary McDonnell, Tricia Helfer, Grace Park, Tahmoh Penikett, Michael Trucco and Aaron Douglas for a reunion panel. The gathering reinforced the showâs particular place in television history.
During a conversation peppered with references to VHS tapes and Internet message boards before the prevalence of social media, Moore was asked how different the show would be if it was airing right now.
âIt would be fundamentally different because we wrote the show and made it at a very specific time in the countryâs history,â said Moore. âWe were reflecting things that were going on around us and watching through a science fiction prism.â
Moore explained how a âBattlestar Galacticaâ created in 2017 could not possibly ignore the current events and divisive political climate that dominate headlines.
âIf you were doing it today, yeah, you would have to take into account this world that we live in now and find a way to not just mock it, but try to find some way to talk about it in a way that was different,â he said. âOne of the things we did successfully on the show, I think, was to look at issues from different points of view that werenât the obvious parallel for what was going on.â
What would remain the same, Moore continued, would be how the show approached these current events.
âIf we were doing it today we would want to find similar off-the-notes ideas and ways of coming at issues that are all around us by doing it with some interesting analogy.â
One topic fans could probably expect this hypothetical show to address? Probably a âcrazy, unqualified captainâ and themes about colluding with the enemy.
Real-life Iron Man flies around Comic-Con in a jet-powered suit
The future is now. Inventor Richard Browning just took cosplay to a whole new level.
Displaying his creation on the streets of San Diego at Comic-Con on Thursday, Browning was able to levitate above the pavement thanks to his jet-powered super suit.
Iron Man is real.
Are you a replicant? Go inside the immersive, insanely real âBlade Runner 2049â experience at Comic-Con
Human or replicant?
Three decades after Ridley Scottâs original âBlade Runnerâ film and itâs still pretty tough to tell.
This week at Comic-Con fans are being treated to the ultimate immersive experience, transported onto the grimy neon streets of a futuristic Los Angeles straight out of the Oct. 6 sequel âBlade Runner 2049,â directed by Denis Villeneuve (âArrival).
The ambitious undertaking took months to build offsite before Warner Bros. shipped in the most complex studio event of this yearâs confab, turning a massive standalone space opposite the San Diego Convention Center into a multi-phase immersive experience.
The âBlade Runnerâ blowout begins in a darkened hallway adorned with vibrant concept art from the new film, in which Ryan Goslingâs next-gen blade runner embarks on a quest to find his long-lost predecessor, Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford).
Guests then strap in for a wild, immersive virtual-reality replicant chase (powered by Oculus and rumbling D-Box chairs) that drops them right into the familiar world of âBlade Runnerâ in the year 2049. You can belly up to the noodle bar, check out RFID-enabled vending machines, take the âVoight-Kampffâ test, and best of all, go deep into canon with dozens of incredibly committed actors in full cyberpunk hair, makeup and costumes.
On display in one corner: The costumes of âBlade Runner 2049,â where you can get up close and personal with Harrison Fordâs dadcore chic and wonder exactly how chill the last 30 years have been for Deckard.
This is the biggest Hollywood studio effort weâve seen this year at Comic-Con, where activations of this scale come with hefty price tags. But the best part is the freedom it gives you to just live in the world of âBlade Runner.â
As you enter the scene, gruff Los Angeles Police Department officers bellow around a downed ship cordoned off by yellow police tape and usher you along as they investigate the crash, mingling with the colorful and combative street denizens of a gritty, rain-soaked downtown set.
You can order drinks at Bibiâs Bar, silhouetted by the suggestive shadows of dancing figures, where the house serves three blends of whiskey in tiny vials courtesy of sponsor Johnnie Walker.
The whole immersive experience was so impressive, we couldnât help but go straight to the source for answers to the most important lingering question in the âBlade Runnerâ âverse.
So we pressed the deeply committed in-character âcitizensâ of âBlade Runner 2049â: Is Deckard a replicant?
Watch Halle Berry chug âbourbonâ like a champ at the âKingsman: The Golden Circleâ panel
How early is too early to start drinking when youâre at Comic-Con? According to the âKingsman: The Golden Circleâ panel, the answer is never.
Actors Taron Egerton, Colin Firth, Halle Berry, Channing Tatum, Jeff Bridges and Pedro Pascal took the stage at a packed Hall H with screenwriter Jane Goldman and âKingsmanâ co-creator Dave Gibbons on Thursday morning for an action- and âalcoholâ-fueled presentation to promote the upcoming film.
Playing a role in the upcoming âKingsmanâ sequel is a bourbon called Statesman Reserve, which serves as the business that fronts for the U.S. equivalent of the Kingsman organization.
After wowing the crowd with a few clips from the movie â including the action-packed opening sequence in which Egertonâs character has to fight a foe in and around a speeding taxi â the panelists broke out the bourbon bottle.
Thatâs when the real party started.
When faced with a difficult-to-answer question during the audience Q&A portion of the proceedings, Berry chose to flaunt her ability to chug a glassful. It was magical.
Fans got to see plenty of footage from the upcoming movie. In addition to the crowd-pleasing opening sequence -- which definitely needs to come with a âdo not try this at homeâ warning -- the presentation debuted a clip where those in attendance learned exactly why Egerton told the crowd earlier, âDonât get into a fight with Channing Tatum.â
The third and final clip introduced the audience to Julianne Mooreâs character Poppy, a very disturbing villain. Letâs just say you should be more than understanding of any panel attendees who choose to avoid eating hamburgers for a while.
Whatâs more American than hamburgers and bourbon?
âKingsman: The Golden Circleâ is scheduled for a Sept. 22 release.
#JusticeForBarb: Fans can pay tribute at the âStranger Thingsâ memorial
Barb Holland may have perished in Season 1 of âStranger Things,â but her memory â and #JusticeForBarb â live on at Comic-Con.
A candlelit shrine to Barbâs memory is the first sight that greets fans inside Netflixâs intricately detailed installation at Comic-Con, where you also can visit the New York streets of Marvelâs âDefendersâ and step inside the ghoulish, gritty world of their upcoming original film, âBright.â
Flowers, sympathy cards and childhood photos of the Hawkins high schooler line the memorial, where you also can get a glimpse of props from the show: Barbâs pink binder, her glasses, that can of beer she didnât want to shotgun in the first place ...
The Barb love was so strong it nabbed actress Shannon Purser a surprise Emmy nod.
At Comic-Con, lucky fans can nab all sorts of âStranger Thingsâ swag in anticipation of its second season. The best promotional item there so far? Tiny vigil candles emblazoned with âRIP Barb - Missing but not forgotten,â ready to keep the flames of #JusticeForBarb alive.
âOutlanderâsâ shirtless street team is loud, proud and shipping hard for Jamie and Claire
The street team for Starzâs âOutlanderâ hard at work at San Diego Comic-Con.
Itâs Thursday morning at San Diego Comic-Con and already street teams are hard at work hyping their metaphorical wares.
Several strapping young men took to the streets to promote Starzâs time-traveling action drama âOutlanderâ wearing only their clan-aligned tartan kilts and (hopefully) fake tattoos dedicated to Claire and Jamie Fraser and other show-related ephemera.
Accompanied by bagpipes, the crew stomped and clapped with great intensity (and muscle-tone). No longer marketing to the superhero fanboy, Comic-Con is.
Stay tuned for more live updates (and bagpipes, hopefully) from The Timesâ live SDCC coverage.
Luke Skywalkerâs landspeeder is for sale, but only for the tiniest of padawans
Get ready to witness a lot of adult freak-outs. Luke Skywalkerâs landspeeder (the hovercraft he uses to pick up power converters at the Tosche Station) is for sale at Comic-Con, but only for children.
Radio Flyer â yes, the maker of that little red wagon â has upgraded and is peddling toys from a galaxy far, far away. Meanwhile, larger-sized adults still must walk, like some boring nonforce-sensitive Stormtrooper.
The toys are on display on the convention hall floor. And letâs be real, they look slightly less dramatic being marketed in the commercial. But already folks are freaking out.
The Landspeeder seats two people with a maximum weight capacity of 130 pounds. The vehicle includes a 12-volt rechargeable battery that allows speeds up to 5 mph.
Also, this PR picture is sheer joy while simultaneously being absolutely hilarious. Enjoy your upgraded power wheel, tots!
Out with the old and in with the TV and movies: The shifting power dynamics of Comic-Con
Wielding Sharpies, foam swords and protective tubes to guard the exclusive treasures they hope to find, more than a hundred thousand pop culture and comics aficionados are descending on San Diego for Comic-Con International, the annual gathering for all things geek.
But for some longtime fans and retailers, a tipping point has been reached in the profitable but uneasy alliance between the comic-book world and Hollywood.
For the first time in 44 years, retailer Mile High Comics will be skipping the convention. Considered the countryâs largest comic-book dealer, Mile High regularly brought 100,000 comics to sell on the convention hall floor.
âSan Diego has grown far beyond its original premise,â Chuck Rozanski, founder and president of Colorado-based Mile High Comics, wrote on the retailerâs website, âmorphing from what was originally a wonderful annual gathering of the comics world, into a world-renowned pop culture and media festival.â
Itâs no secret that Comic-Con went Hollywood years ago, but with each new convention itâs harder for independent comics retailers to make an impression, especially when they not only have to compete with major studio presentations in the famed Hall H and displays from DC and Marvel that dominate the convention floor, but also with a growing number of attractions outside Comic-Con, open to anyone who happens to be in the area.
âWestworldâ is real at Comic-Con: Walking through HBOâs recreation of the robot fantasy land
âWestworldâ comes alive this week at Comic-Con, but the fans who visit will have to make the ultimate choice: white hat or black? (Watch the exclusive LA Times video above to see which one this reporter picked.)
HBOâs immersive, theatrical, and 21+ only âWestworld: The Experienceâ runs Thursday through Saturday here at the San Diego pop culture confab, offering treats far more intimate than the deluge of marketing that lines every square inch of Comic-Con.
A limited number of fans will have the chance to visit âWestworldâ this week at the Comic-Con activation, located just outside the convention center, which runs about 30 minutes long and in small groups of only a half dozen guests at a time.
Greeted by two hosts dressed all in white, guests are first led through the Delos Destination offices and into a slick gallery stocked with costumes, props and weapons.
âI like things that I can easily conceal,â our hostess offered with a smile. âBecause we all have secrets.â
You head down a hallway lined with the ghoulish heads of Fordâs previous models and into your own one-on-one personality assessment session. Itâs meant to determine just what sort of âWestworldâ experience it is youâve come to find, but like the sorting hat at Hogwarts, the decision has serious consequences.
Even before you get to âWestworld,â itâs a dream come true for fans of the show. Easter eggs teasing the upcoming second season are planted throughout the space. Guests have the chance to interact with several of the parkâs âhostsâ and staff as theyâre transported to Sweetwater to sip handcrafted libations in the Mariposa Saloon.
And at times, itâs also just as nightmarish as youâd expect. Keep your eyes open at all times and you might get a surprise or two, some stimulating conversation with the barâs resident hostess (our fave topics: consciousness and robots) -- even a glimpse of the Man in Black.
Appointments will be taken in the lobby of the Hilton San Diego Bayfront on Thursday, Friday and Saturday starting at 9:30 a.m., and the experience runs through Sunday.
Comic-Con 2017 preview night: The best bits and strangest attractions from the convention floor
San Diego Comic-Con opened for preview night Wednesday, revealing row upon row of oddities, art and swag. But how does one distinguish between the treasures and the trash? Is it worth sacrificing an hour of your life just to stand inside a giant pineapple from the animated series âSpongeBob SquarePants?â Weâre here to answer these pressing questions.
We combed through the body pillows, DVDs and limited-edition enamel pins to bring you the most interesting and innovative things hiding inside the massive convention hall. This is your guide to the Comic-Con floor.
Disney vinyl â Disney Music Emporium
Old meets new. One part optical illusion, the rest is vinyl. Feel the warmth of listening to âCaptain Americaâsâ score on old technology.
SpongeBobâs house â Nickelodeon booth
The giant under-the-sea pineapple has been recreated much to the delight of screaming kiddos (and adults) everywhere.
Giant collection of Jack Kirby art â IDW booth
Comic book publisher IDW honors Jack Kirbyâs 100th birthday with a massive collection of original art from âThe Forever People,â âFantastic Four,â âMister Miracleâ and âThor.â
There are over 1,300 gigantic images of original Kirby art in this work and lots of notes in the margins from the creator.
A taste of Comic-Conâs Hall H: the history (and smells) of Hollywoodâs most important stage
This week, celebrities and studio marketing execs head south to the biggest stage of the year to woo the hardcore fans who can make or break their most anticipated blockbuster offerings, in the most important room in Hollywood: Hall H at Comic-Con.
The 2017 edition of San Diegoâs annual nerd circus arrives tomorrow, 10 years into an explosively evolving decade on this hallowed stage. Itâs here where âTwilightâ ushered in a new era of femme-fueled mainstream fandom, the Marvel-DC franchise âwarâ continues to play out year after year, and television has risen to challenge the movies for the Comic-Con crown, filling its 6,500 capacity coliseum with screaming fans of shows like âGame of Thrones.â
It was in 2007, after all, when an unassuming Jon Favreau popped up on Paramountâs 10-film panel to blast fanboys and girls out of their seats with surprise footage from âIron Man.â The buzz flew through the roof and sparked Marvel movie mania as we know it. Now here we are, 16 MCU superhero flicks and $12 billion box office dollars later, preparing for the landmark âBlack Pantherâ to reign over Hall H.
Inside, aromatic top notes of hot dogs and cooling nachos waft through the air, mingling with the distinct bouquet of 6,500 amped-up human bodies. Many have forgone showers and sleep to camp out overnight in the humid summer heat for the chance to be here, to cram themselves, elbow to elbow, into one of the seemingly endless rows of unforgiving folding chairs.
Head here for the full inside look at the history of Hall H, smells and vivid details and all, and follow your intrepid L.A. Times team on the ground this week as we report from the epicenter of nerd culture.
Check out an exclusive sneak peek at the new âGhostbustersâ comic
IDW Publishing has announced âGhostbusters: Answer the Call,â a five-issue series expanding the world of the new teamâs Abby Yates (Melissa McCarthy), Erin Gilbert (Kristen Wiig), Jillian Holtzmann (Kate McKinnon) and Patty Tolan (Leslie Jones). Writer Kelly Thompson (âHawkeyeâ) and artist Corin Howell (âMighty Morphin Power Rangersâ) are the creative forces behind the series.
And weâve got a preview of the first issue here.
Both Thompson and Howellâs past credits include comics set in the âGhostbustersâ world. And while âAnswer the Callâ may not be the first time Abby, Erin, Holtzmann and Patty have wielded their proton packs in comics, it is the first series focusing strictly on the adventures of this new team from the 2016 movie.
And if you want even more âGhostbustersâ at the convention, co-creator Ivan Reitman will be joining the IDW âGhostbustersâ team of Erik Burnham, Dan Schoening and Tom Waltz for a panel. They will discuss future plans for the supernatural pest control team.
Fingers crossed this opportunity allows Reitman to speak openly about plans for this franchise. Will there ever be a co-joining of busters? The panel is 10:15 to 11:15 a.m. Thursday in room 6DE.
The only 2017 Comic-Con panel âto doâ list you need
Itâs that time again. The 2017 edition of Comic-Con is here. For those making the pop-culture pilgrimage to San Diego, expect the streets to be packed with cosplayers, comic book fans, collectible hunters and all stripes of genre entertainment enthusiasts.
This year, Netflix joins the Hollywood heavyweights on a quest to wow the denizens of Hall H. Fox has also returned after a year away from SDCC, joining Marvel Studios and Warner Bros. in hopes of attracting audiences to tentpole movies.
Nostalgia is the name of the game this year, with revivals of classics including âRockoâs Modern Life,â âInvader Zimâ and âDuckTalesâ as well as reunions including âBattlestar Galacticaâ and âStargateâ peppering the programming.
Hereâs a small sampling of our curated panel list, which we agonized over trying to select âjust the rightâ balance.
WEDNESDAY
Special Sneak Peek Screenings (Ballroom 20, 6 p.m. - 10 p.m.)
This chance to get the earliest looks at Warner Bros. TV pilots during Comic-Con is a preview night staple. This yearâs lineup includes the premieres of âKrypton,â âBlack Lightining,â âUnikitty!â, a new hourlong episode of âTeen Titans Go!â and more.
THURSDAY
Spotlight on Erica Henderson (Room 32AB, 5 p.m. - 6 p.m.)
Fans of âThe Unbeatable Squirrel Girlâ and âJugheadâ will want to make sure to attend this Erica Henderson spotlight. The Eisner Award-nominated artist will join Eisner-nominated writer John Allison (âGiant Days,â âBad Machineryâ) for a conversation about comics, fashion and more.
FRIDAY
âRick and Mortyâ (Indigo Ballroom, Hilton San Diego Bayfront, 1:15 p.m. - 2 p.m.)
Itâs been months since the âRick and Mortyâ April Foolsâ prank, so hopefully this panel will tide fans over until the next new episode of the showâs third season airs.
âGame of Thronesâ panel and Q&A session (Hall H, 1:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.)
The seventh season of âGame of Thronesâ is finally underway, and fans are bursting at the seams with questions and theories about what will happen. The cast may now be seasoned pros at teasing the show without really giving any secrets away, but why miss the chance to see a new clip or behind-the-scenes reel?
âMarvelâs The Defendersâ (Hall H, 5:15 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.)
Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and ⌠what was his name again? Oh, yeah, Iron Fist. Marvel fans wonât want to miss the chance to get a first look at MCUâs street-level superheroes finally teaming up in their joint series.
SATURDAY
âRiverdaleâ special video presentation and Q&A (Ballroom 20, 11 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.)
Who shot Fred Andrews? Though the âRiverdaleâ cast and producers are unlikely to just give fans all the answers, this panel should provide an idea about what to forward to in Season 2. âRiverdaleâ diehards should also consider hitting up the Archie Comics panel from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. in Room 4.
Warner Bros. Pictures Presentation (Hall H, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.)
âReady Player One.â âBlade Runner 2019.â âJustice League.â âAquaman.â Be there.
âStar Trek: Discoveryâ (Ballroom 20, 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m.)
The panel Trekkies cannot afford to miss, with the cast and crew of the upcoming show. At SDCC 2016, Bryan Fuller debuted the first look at Discovery, the spaceship at the center of âStar Trek: Discovery.â One year later, the cast has been revealed, the premiere (finally) approaches and Fuller is no longer the showrunner attached to the project.
âBlack Lightningâ special video presentation and Q&A (Ballroom 20, 4:50 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.)
Fans can catch the âBlack Lightningâ presentation during the block of the CWâs superhero programming panels.
Marvel Studios (Hall H, 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m.)
Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige is back to showcase more of the MCU. Among the things to look out for are new trailers, never-before-seen clips and casting announcements. Just give us more âBlack Pantherâ footage.
âBroad Cityâ (Indigo Ballroom, Hilton San Diego Bayfront, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m.)
âBroad Cityâsâ Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer at SDCC? Yas queen!
SUNDAY
âDoctor Whoâ (Hall H, 2 p.m. - 3 p.m.)
Season 10 of âDoctor Whoâ marked the last hurrah for showrunner Steven Moffatt and 12th Doctor Peter Capaldi. Joining the departing pair are cast members Pearl Mackie (Bill), Matt Lucas (Nardole), Michelle Gomez (Missy) and writer and actor Mark Gatiss. Could the 13th Doctor, Jodie Whittaker, or the new showrunner, Chris Chibnall, make a surprise appearance?
Super Asian America (Room 29AB, 3 p.m. - 4 p.m.)
Panelists discuss the state of Asians in pop culture, from Hollywoodâs habit of adapting (and whitewashing) Asian stories to the success of shows such as âMaster of Noneâ and âInto the Badlands.â
âWalking Deadâ cancels all Comic-Con press events except panel and autograph sessions
Always a fan favorite at San Diego Comic-Con, AMCâs durably nihilistic zombie hit âThe Walking Deadâ offered a few teasers in advance of its panel and autograph session Friday afternoon.
The network revealed that Oct. 22 will be the showâs eighth season premiere date -- which will also mark the 100th episode of the series -- and released new key art, which features Rick squaring off against Negan as Daryl, Michonne and Shiva the tiger look on.
Though the series will also offer a large interactive space at San Diegoâs MLK Park for fans of both âThe Walking Deadâ and its sibling series, âFear the Walking Dead,â it is keeping a comparatively lower profile this year, presumably in the wake of the death of stuntman John Bernecker last Wednesday during the shooting of the new season.
Production on the show reportedly resumed on Monday. However, the show has canceled any further press events during Comic-Con weekend. Requests for comment from AMC about the decision have yet to be answered.
Get an up-close look at the âJustice Leagueâ Batmobile
The âJustice Leagueâ Batmobile is making its first public appearance at the 2017 San Diego Comic-Con.
âJustice Leagueâ wonât hit theaters until Nov. 17, but fans can get an early, up-close look at the filmâs version of Batmanâs iconic vehicle on the show floor.
And clearly, the DC extended universe isnât playing around with Batmobile. The hybrid prototype military and civilian vehicle clocks in at over 20 feet long, weighs more than 8,500 pounds and boasts speeds up to 205 mph. In addition to its cache of covert military-grade weaponry (including twin .50-caliber retractable machine guns and missile launchers), this Batmobile has been integrated with stealth and active protective systems.
Donât worry, you donât have to be a Bruce Wayne-caliber billionaire to own your own Batmobile, as long as youâre OK with a miniature version. Mattel will be releasing an RC Batmobile replica, which you can see in the photo above and below.
Times sure have changed, remember when it looked like this?
Does this new, fancy Batmobile even have a red phone? Or what about a bat fire extinguisher? Feels unsafe, just sayinâ.
You can check out the life-size Batmobile at the Mattel booth (No. 3029) at 6:15 p.m.