Skip navigation

Comic and film fans flock to Comic-Con

‘Watchmen,’ ‘Terminator Salvation’ among buzzed-about movies

Image: 2006 Comic-Con Convention in San Diego
Dave Gatley / Reuters file
Storm Troopers on the escalator? It must be Comic-Con (in this case, the 2006 gathering).
Slide show
Image: Comic-Con
  Comic-Con 2008
Superheroes, sci-fi geeks, film stars and more flock to the 39th annual Comic-Con Convention in San Diego.

more photos

updated 12:23 p.m. ET July 25, 2008

SAN DIEGO - The most passionate Spider-Men, Storm Troopers, Harry Potters and other pop-culture fanatics are headed south for their annual pilgrimage. Comic-Con, the country’s biggest comic-book convention, begins Thursday at the San Diego Convention Center.

More than 125,000 people — many in the costumes of their favorite characters — will fill the sprawling seaside space during the four-day convention. They’ll try out the latest video games, seek out collectible books and toys, restock their T-shirt and costume collections and get a preview of anticipated films and TV shows.

The annual convention, now in its 38th year, draws the most avid fans around — the kind who will blog about what’s cool and generate online attention that money can’t buy. (Just ask the people who cashed in on “Iron Man,” which started as a metallic buzz at last year’s convention that built all year before eclipsing the $300 million mark at the domestic box office this summer.)

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

As superheroes go, so goes Comic-Con. And oh, what superheroes have become: Five of the top 20 summer movies are based on comic book characters, including “The Dark Knight,” the record-shattering Batman juggernaut that took $158.4 million in its first weekend (beating the previous record set by 2006 Comic-Con darling “Spider-Man 3”).

“This summer there’s been an embarrassment of riches,” said Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige. “Comic-Con is dipping your toe in that water to see how rabid your fan base is.”

Big-screen previews contending for early buzz this year include “300” director Zack Snyder’s adaptation of the graphic novel “Watchmen”; and “Terminator Salvation,” the long-awaited new installment in the franchise. The much-anticipated “Star Trek,” on the other hand, has promised no previews or panel discussions, but is still bound to generate ample fanboy chatter.

Slideshow
Image: Premiere of HBO's "Entourage" Season 6 - Arrivals
  Celebrity sightings
Ferrell and Reilly shake ‘n bake again, Miley sings in the city and more.

more photos

“Comic-Con attracts a really vocal and discriminating entertainment fan, so it’s a great venue to showcase exciting products,” said Sarah Greenberg, co-president of theatrical marketing for Lionsgate. “With blogging and the Internet ... people are communicating directly from peer to peer about matters of taste and really quickly you can get a beat on what they’re talking about.”

“It’s an amazing place to find all those word-of-mouth generators in one location,” said Rob Friedman, co-chairman and chief executive of Summit Entertainment, which is making its first trek to Comic-Con. The studio is presenting three movies, including its banner Christmas title, “Twilight,” a teen-vampire love tale.

“This is completely unique to any audience that you’d be seeing at the normal film-festival circuit,” he said. “They’re much more fan-oriented. They’re much more enthusiastic and not as critical. They come with an eye to enjoy and observe.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  MORE FROM MEDIA  
  
Bronzed ‘Bruno’ bares all on cover of GQ
 
Add Media headlines to your news reader:
 

Sponsored links

Resource guide