Comic-Con 2015 Roundup: Best Costumes, Favorite Discoveries

Comic-Con 2015 Roundup: Best Costumes, Favorite Discoveries

Posted on July 14, 2015 at 2:48 pm

Copyright Nell Minow 2015
Copyright Nell Minow 2015

One thing I look for every year at San Diego Comic-Con is new technology. One looked like silly fun — you can insert your smartphone into a re-designed Mattel Viewmaster that will turn your photos into 3D. Also fun, from Gene Roddenberry’s production company, is a new short film called “White Room O2B3,” filmed with a nine-camera contraption that allows the viewer to select the angle and point of view. The movie can be played dozens, maybe hundreds of times without repeating the experience. It comes with a “straight” version, too. Breckin Meyer stars with six other actors in a locked room mystery as each one of them has to figure out why they are there.

Copyright 2015 Nell Minow
Copyright 2015 Nell Minow

And I was really impressed with the new DJI Phantom drone which will be directed by the operator’s head movements, via goggles. These drones will be used for a variety of important jobs including aid for first responders, construction, and agriculture. But they will also enable new, cheaper, safer opportunities in cinematic storytelling.

As always, I went to as many of the panels featuring the “below the line” filmmakers I could.  These are the extraordinarily talented people responsible for the score, the design, and the special effects.  The storyboard artists were very impressive, showing skill and flexibility — sometimes they have to map out the movie before the script is completed.  The panel of special effects masters from ILM included the great John Goodson, who designed just about every cool spacecraft you’ve ever seen in a movie, and it was fascinating to hear the panelists talk about the advances in technology in the forty years since ILM was created by George Lucas.

Biggest thrill of Comic-Con this year was getting a glimpse of real-life superhero John Lewis, who was there to receive an award for the graphic memoir of his work with the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, March. Lewis dressed as he did when he crossed the bridge in Selma with Dr. King.

The panel on Toy Soldiers War Chest explained that the computer game works like a real-life toy chest. Just as kids don’t segregate their toys in real life, this game allows GI Joe to battle He-Man and — just announced — Assassin’s Creed. “You can bring all the toys you used to play with together and have them fight each other. We just went through the boxes of toys we had as kids and tried to find the coolest looking stuff.” (No She-Ra, though. Expect a Twitter hashtag: #whereisshera.) They are so committed to re-creating the experience of playing with the toys that the figures are accurate to the toys themselves, not to the humans who inspired them. “They even have realistically broken thumbs.” But to meet the requirements of the game, they have more “points of articulation.”

Copyright 2015 Nell Minow
Copyright 2015 Nell Minow

My favorite costume at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con was Disgust from “Inside Out.” I love how she played the part with that great disgusted look. I also loved the way whole families got into the act with coordinated costumes, like the Batman villains and the characters from “Frozen.” You can see 200 of my Comic-Con costume pictures here.

I was very excited to attend the ILM (Industrial Light and Magic) panel. The group was founded by George Lucas 40 years ago, and the “Raiders, Rebels, and Raptors” panel told us how they thought of themselves as “your mind giving the finger to what’s known and letting your imagination fist-bump the unknown. This is what happens when you question everything.” When they began, “we didn’t know the word CGI.” Everything was built out of real materials. But that changed very quickly. They compared the original “Jurassic Park” with just a few minutes of computer graphics (“the first lung-breathing animal created by computer”) to “Jurassic World,” with the dinosaurs almost entirely computer-generated. And they showed us how Mark Ruffalo was able to give a full performance as The Hulk with side-by-side comparisons of the footage of his face, covered with dots for the computer, and the final version of the film. “Captain America and Thor have these great costumes, and all Mark Ruffalo got was dots.” The biggest surprise was the footage of Bill Nighy as Davy Jones. I expected his squid face to be all CGI, but the original footage showed that all of the costumes were added by computer, too. “Everything is based on math and physics,” they told us. We don’t know how dinosaurs moved, so they study other creatures, like ostriches and elephants. On the other hand, “We throw all the science out the window for Transformers. All that matters is that it is exciting.” They always keep in mind, though, that “the human eye is good at picking up what isn’t there.” It doesn’t have to be true, but it does have to be believable.

sdcc batman villains

Comic-Con is not just superheroes and fantasy. TV Land is trying to find a new audience and is replacing its all-rerun schedule with edgy new comedies. The people behind “The Jim Gaffigan Show,” “Teachers,” and “ImPastor” were there. I especially enjoyed the cast of “Teachers,” who all come from a Chicago improv and sketch comedy troupe called “The Katydids,” because they are all named Katie. The show began as a web series and one of the challenges in moving production to LA was finding a school building that looked Midwestern. “They all have breezeways, and we have to shoot around the palm trees.”

Another highlight was the Mad about MAD panel, with the staff of the legendary humor magazine.  While many of the other panels began with a disclaimer or admonition not to record any of the exclusive footage, MAD editor John Ficarra began by soberly telling us his lawyers (who were in the room) required that we all raise our hands and agree to certain provisos.  We all stood up obediently and then found ourselves agreeing not to declare our candidacy for the Republican nomination for the Presidency and several other very funny commitments.  Art director Sam Viviano sang a song about a deli to the tune of “Hello Dolly.”  And we heard about the discussions that led to a cover illustration of Hillary Clinton as Furiosa in “Mad Max: Fury Road.” They don’t do “victim humor’ and admitted that their favorite targets are the Westboro church and Donald Trump.

Copyright 2015 Nell Minow
Copyright 2015 Nell Minow

I’m a huge “Big Bang Theory” fan so was excited to see the panel featuring their writers and producers. And then I was overjoyed when two surprise guests appeared, Kunal Nayyar (Raj) and Mayim Bialik (Amy). The behind the scenes details were fascinating and often very funny. The episode where the characters can’t get a drone to work came from the real-life experience of show creator Chuck Lorre. And their scientific advisor told us about having to come up with an idea for the important paper Sheldon and Leonard were working on. “It’s hard enough to have a significant discovery, but I knew Stephen Hawking was coming on the show and he would be reviewing it.” Nayyar and Bialek both said that they could not wait for the scripts to be delivered on Tuesday nights because they are just as excited to see what is going to happen as the audience is.

The Canadian company Arcana made its first-ever appearance at Comic-Con, and it was charmingly low-key.  Their first animated film, Pixies, was released this week. It features the voices of Christopher Plummer, Bill Paxton, and Alexa PenaVega. While thousands of people were cheering on the cast of “Star Wars” in Hall H, I was happy to be part of a group of under 100 hearing about this new film from a new source.

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Comic-Con 2105: Opening Night

Posted on July 9, 2015 at 1:16 am

The cutest items I saw on the Exhibition Hall this evening were these “Body Knockers” from famous movies. How many can you identify?

One of the highlights of Preview Night is an exclusive sneak peek at some of the upcoming television shows produced by Warner Brothers. They led off with a very sweet love note to Comic-Con from WB stars, each describing Comic-Con in three words.

The show I was most looking forward to was “Supergirl,” and it was everything I hoped. I loved Melissa Benoist as an everygirl who just happens to have superpowers, and it was a lot of fun to see her adoptive parents played by former Superman Dean Cain and former Supergirl Helen Slater. And Calista Flockhart as a boss right out of “Devil Wears Prada” was a hoot. I also really enjoyed “Lucifer,” inspired by Neil Gaiman’s Sandman comic and the spin-off by Mike Carey. Tom Ellis is deliciously nasty as the Prince of Darkness, who decided to take some time off and run a nightclub while thoroughly enjoying every one of the seven deadly sins, with special emphasis on one or two.

I have a full day of panels tomorrow, so stay tuned!

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Boxtrolls: Interviews at Comic-Con

Posted on September 24, 2014 at 8:00 am

boxtrolls bug lunch
Copyright Nell Minow 2014

In honor of the release of “The Boxtrolls” this week, I’m sharing some of the photos I took in July at Comic-Con, where I interviewed the cast and filmmakers and attended an “Eat Like a Boxtroll” lunch made up of insects. Star Isaac Hempstead Wright (of “Game of Thrones”) was clearly not excited about eating bugs, no matter how delectably prepared, but he was a very good sport.

Copyright 2014 Nell Minow
Copyright 2014 Nell Minow

I admit, I tried some grubs, but drew the line at anything crunchy or with legs.

copyright Nell Minow 2014
copyright Nell Minow 2014

Later, I sat with Sir Ben Kingsley, who plays the villain, to talk about performing all by himself, in a studio near his home in England. He described his character as “a social climber. He spends a lot of his energy trying to get into that club that doesn’t really want him to join. It’s a small, exclusive clique of guys who run the community. They’re quite reluctant to let him in. So he invents an enemy — politicians often do this — and says, ‘I’ll rid you of that enemy.'” He wants to power himself by destroying these very sweet, harmless creatures.” He was especially happy to work with LAIKA studios, producers of “Coraline” and “Paranorman,” because they are “quite fearless in family movies, putting light and shade together, bitter and sweet.”He modeled the voice and accent of his character on a man he knows who is anything but villainous, and said that to play a bad guy “I find the flaw, the one part in me that can’t be healed. I look for the crack and feel empathy for it. And love it….Storytelling is profoundly healing. And he told me the secret of his performance: he did all of the recording lying down. “Not a tense bone in my body, completely relaxed. If there’s tension in your neck and shoulders, it will show.”

Isaac Hempsted Wright and Elle Fanning play the film’s two main characters, Eggs, a boy raised by boxtrolls, and Winnie, the daughter of the town’s most important citizen, a wealthy and powerful man who is far more interested in tasting exotic cheeses than in noticing his daughter.boxtrollscastFanning, whose sister played the title role in LAIKA’s first film, “Coraline,” said that the script arrived with a box of drawings to give her a sense of what the setting and characters would look like, but she learned more every time she would record. She described Winnie as “spoiled, looking for someone to listen to her, but brave, and having to learn to grow up fast.” Hempsted Wright said Eggs is “plucky, feral, raised away from people and society, surrounded by class struggles and ‘cheese struggles.’ He has the best of both, the kindness of the boxtrolls and the bravery of humans.”

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Comic-Con 2014: Costumes!

Posted on July 31, 2014 at 8:40 am

About 10-15 percent of Comic-Con attendees come in costume and they are always willing to post for photos.  I love the way there is total fluidity of age, race, gender, and body type.  Even species — see Superdog below (no, that’s not Krypto — look at the super-suit and arms!).  Everyone feels free to come as whatever they want to be, whether an iconic character or something they just made up.  Here are some of my favorites.

 

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Comic-Con 2014: Days 3 and 4

Posted on July 30, 2014 at 11:02 pm

Want to know what it looks like inside the legendary Hall H, the biggest venue at Comic-Con, the one where people camp out for days in advance to see the biggest stars and the coolest advance previews? When LAIKA CEO and animator Travis Knight asked the audience to send get-well love to “The Boxtrolls” co-star Tracy Morgan boxtroll fashion (they show approval by softly smacking their chests), here is what happened.

Some other highlights:

The writers of “The Big Bang Theory” described the episode where the characters are devastated at not getting Comic-Con tickets (yes, they know you don’t hit “refresh” anymore but it isn’t exciting television to just have them staring at their screens). Incredibly, it was the first time guest stars James Earl Jones and Carrie Fisher had ever met. And of course, her first word to him: “Daddy!” Extra excitement — a surprise appearance by Wil Wheaton! And a trailer for “Serial Apeist 2!”

The masquerade competition had several “Game of Thrones” tributes, the best a mash-up with “West Side Story” titled (of course) “Westeros Side Story.”

Copyright 2014 Maisie WilliamsSeveral celebrities donned costumes to roam the Exhibition Hall, including Guillermo del Toro (Mexican wrestler mask), Peter Jackson (clown), and actors Daniel Radcliffe and Maisie Williams, who both wore Spider-Man masks. Williams won the heart of the Con by revealing her disguise on Instagram and, when she was not disguised, wearing a dress made from comic books!(Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

I didn’t see a single Klingon this year. Odd. (Coming soon, my favorite costumes worn by attendees. You’ve got to see them to believe them.)

Sir Ben Kingsley spoke to me about playing the villain in “The Boxtrolls,” and said for some unknown reason he had just made three movies in a row set in ancient Egypt: “Exodus,” a TV miniseries called “Tut,” and “Night at the Museum 3.”

I was on the escalator going down as I saw getting on the escalator coming up members of the cast of “The Hobbit,” Cate Blanchett, Lee Pace, and Andy Serkis.  All I could say was, “I’m a fan!”  I got to see them all in a small press event, too, along with director Peter Jackson and a bunch of the other actors.copyright Nell Minow 2014

I also went to a wonderful panel discussion of villains “from Snidely Whiplash to Voldemort.”   My favorite comment was from an author who quoted his wife: “A dragon destroys a village, and when the people yell, ‘Monster!’ he looks behind him to see who they are talking about.”

Two different events I attended had interesting discussions of fandom.  The Pop Culture Happy Hour Podcast did a live show from Comic-Con.  It was a special treat to see Maggie Thompson, mother of PCHH regular Stephen Thompson.  Maggie is revered by nerds, geeks, and fanboys everywhere as co-founder of the Comics Buyers Guide.  As always, the conversation was fast, funny, and incisive.  They talked about the difference between early fans of music or other popular culture and their mixed feelings when what they love becomes broadly successful.

And I attended the Comic Arts Conference, the annual gathering of scholars who study comics from many different perspectives, that always goes on parallel to Comic-Con.  The panel I attended this year had ten students presenting the results of surveys and studies they did throughout the Con.  They talked about cosplayers (the people who wear costumes) and families who bring young children.

I tried a demo of the new Oculus Rift virtual reality technology at the Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment booth and got to accompany Professor X (voice of Patrick Stewart) into the Cerebro to track Mystique.  It was very cool.

And one of my favorite moments was unexpected and very sweet.  It happened in the middle of the seemingly endless and always packed Exhibition Hall, where everything around me seemingly twinkled, spun, beeped, and glowed, each both more inviting than the next like Ali Baba’s cave, all of a sudden the original “Star Wars” started playing on an overhead screen.  It was the scene right before they go into the garbage compactor.  I love that scene.  I’ve seen it a million times.  I probably know it by heart.  But I stopped to watch.  And all around me were thousands of fans who know it even better than I do, and they all stopped, too.

 

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