Albuquerque Journal

Aficionado­s of pop culture flock to Comic-Con

Regular heavyweigh­ts Marvel, HBO, Star Wars are skipping this year’s event

- BY LINDSEY BAHR ASSOCIATED PRESS

Over 130,000 pop culture devotees descended on San Diego’s Gaslamp District on Wednesday for the annual four-day comic book convention Comic-Con, the big, bright and very heavily branded confab of costumed superfans and the corporate sponsors vying for their attention — and dollars.

Interested in dining at a working replica of the “Demolition Man” Taco Bell for the movie’s 25th anniversar­y? Or witness a mock court-martial of Star Wars’ Poe Dameron for leading a mutiny in “Star Wars: The Last Jedi”? If you like pop culture, it’s highly likely there is something tailor-made for you at Comic-Con 2018.

What started as a 300-person event in 1970 has evolved into a massive operation with events yearround. But San Diego Comic-Con is the marquee occasion. Tickets for four-day access plus preview night can set attendees back $276, before hotel, travel costs, food and any souvenirs. And attendees have come to expect exclusive merchandis­e on the convention center floor, newsy announceme­nts from some of Hollywood’s biggest studios, and screenings of anticipate­d films and television shows.

This year Warner Bros. is coming armed with stars and footage from “Aquaman,” ”Shazam!,” ”Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d” and “The LEGO Movie 2”; Sony is hyping its Spider-Man spinoff “Venom”; and Universal Pictures will be teasing “Halloween” and M. Night Shyamalan’s “Glass.” On the television side, fans will get a glimpse of new “Doctor Who” star Jodie Whittaker and have a chance to check out “Star Trek: Discovery” and “Riverdale.”

But a few of the major players are conspicuou­sly absent from Hall H, the 6,500-seat room in the San Diego Convention Center that boasts the highestpro­file presentati­ons. Those skipping this year include Marvel Studios, HBO and Star Wars.

“It’s a huge deal when major properties like Marvel, Star Wars or HBO don’t show up,” said Germain Lussier, an entertainm­ent reporter for io9/Gizmodo who has been attending the convention for 15 years. “For the past decade, Marvel Studios panels have consistent­ly been the No. 1 most anticipate­d thing for movie fans at Comic-Con.”

Production schedules are more to blame than anything else, however. Lussier noted that each of the absent brands has a big (and intensely secretive) installmen­t coming in 2019, including “Avengers 4,” ”Star Wars: Episode IX” and the final season of “Game of Thrones.”

 ?? AL POWERS/INVISION ?? Visitors arrive for the first day of Comic-Con Internatio­nal in San Diego in July 2017. More than 130,000 pop culture devotees came to the first day of the convention on Wednesday.
AL POWERS/INVISION Visitors arrive for the first day of Comic-Con Internatio­nal in San Diego in July 2017. More than 130,000 pop culture devotees came to the first day of the convention on Wednesday.

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