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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Comic Con. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Comic Con. Tampilkan semua postingan

Will we see The Avengers Teaser Trailer at Comic Con?


The streets are running wild with this news. According to AICN, there is a teaser trailer for The Avengers!

Here's the news from the Harry Knowles


I got word that MARVEL has shot a specific teaser trailer for THE AVENGERS - and that LOKI is featured in that teaser trailer.   Makes total sense.   I imagine that will either be on THOR or CAP...  or Both if they're smart...   But then...  our buddies over at LATINO REVIEW - Kellvin says that he's learned that Joss Whedon is going to be having Loki bring in The Skrulls.   

So - Let's see if I have this straight.   In like a year's time...   The man that gave us SERENITY - is going to bring a cosmic SKRULLian smackdown to Earth being fought off by the AVENGERS?   Jesus, we live in blessed times.   I mean, MARVEL is getting science fiction and fantasy...   This just delights me to no end.   I mean, this is amazing.   We're going to have things we never thought we'd see.   And I'll be walking into theater to see it!   Fucking Cool!
Okay, so with that bit of news, I have to think we will see this teaser trailer during Comic Con. Why? Because Captain America premieres during the weekend of Comic Con, the actors will already be there and Joss will be there. Why not!

I could be wrong about this, but feel that we may be graced with a tease of The Avengers.

Marvel Studios will NOT have a panel at Comic-Con


Comic Con received some interesting news or maybe a set back. Marvel Studios will NOT bring anything to Hall H (the big ballroom), making it the fourth movie studio to sit out of Hall H this year.

Hero Complex reports:
“Go big or stay home,” is how one Marvel insider put it, and that logic is seemingly embraced by rival Warner Bros. with “Man of Steel,”  the 2012 feature-film revival of Superman that is conspicuously absent (at least at this point) from the Hall H program. “The Dark Knight Rises,” Warner’s follow-up to its billion-dollar Batman film in 2009, is also M.I.A., but Gotham City filmmaker Christopher Nolan has never set foot in Hall H so this latest absence may add to his mystique, but it won’t shock anyone. 

The sci-fi epic “John Carter” is also a notable absentee in Hall H, but Disney is holding it back for a very specific reason — it will be a centerpiece (along with “The Lone Ranger“) at August’s D23 Expo, the Anaheim event that is being constructed as a Disney-dedicated rival convention.
This is not a total loss; they will be present at Comic Con, but the details are unknown.

Are Movie Studios Running Away from Comic-Con?


The power of the geeks can be a tricky thing; either it works for Hollywood or it doesn't.  So far, it's not fairing so well.  In fact, it may changed the overall power of Greek Prom a.k.a Comic-Con.

This year, several studios will not showcase anything for the event.
Warner’s main studio operation is bringing nothing. Ditto Disney and DreamWorks. The Weinstein Company, a perennial presence, will also sit this one out. Even Marvel Entertainment, whose panel for “The Avengers” was a highlight of Comic-Con 2010, is on the fence about whether it will mount a major presentation. 

Comic-Con, as a growing number of movie marketers are realizing, has turned into a treacherous place. Studios come seeking buzz, but the Comic-Con effect can be more negative than positive. The swarm of dedicated fans — many of whom arrive at the convention in Japanese anime drag or draped in Ewok fur — can instantly sour on a film if it doesn’t like what it sees, leaving publicity teams with months of damaging Web chatter to clean up. 

“It’s a red-letter opportunity, but you shouldn’t go simply because it sits there on the calendar,” said Michael Moses, co-president of marketing for Universal Pictures. “You have to be absolutely certain you have goods ready that can really make a difference for your film.” 
But there is an opposite effect too, 'We love it and everyone hates it'.

Last year, folks loved the 'Sucker Punch' preview, but once that mess hit the screens, it was torn apart.  This also happened to 'Scott Pilgrim' and 'Tron 2'. So in some ways, our viewpoint may not be all that powerful.

However, this could be a blessing in disguise. With studios backing down and fans demanding better stuff... Will this force Comic-Con to return to it's roots? Less studios, more independent projects and comics? This could be a start of something good.

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