Like what? Not showing any footage whatsoever till the day the movie releases?Maybe Paramount will choose a different venue, something... unexpected(?) to promote ST XI?
Like what? Not showing any footage whatsoever till the day the movie releases?Maybe Paramount will choose a different venue, something... unexpected(?) to promote ST XI?
And HE'S not from Germany!"Arrogancy???"
Yes it does. Don't be so arrogant.The hype from SDCC transcends just the people who attend the con.
It doesn't.
Like what? Not showing any footage whatsoever till the day the movie releases?Maybe Paramount will choose a different venue, something... unexpected(?) to promote ST XI?
ArrogancyAnd HE'S not from Germany!"Arrogancy???"![]()
ArrogancyAnd HE'S not from Germany!"Arrogancy???"![]()
Yes, it's a real word, and I'm not sure what being from Germany had to do with anything, in the first place, so why not let's talk in some sort of rational fashion about movie promotion (or perceived lack thereof.)
A guy from GERMANY out of all places makes a completely uninformed statement and that amuses you?I too think it is bad that they missed to present 'Star Trek' at the Comic Con.
They completely ignored 'Star Treks' comic-roots...
Oh...
Wait...
![]()
But those who do win the reverence of the Comic-Con faithful are usually bound for greater things. Jon Favreau, for instance, became the hit of last year's convention with footage of Iron Man, and it has become the gold standard of Comic-Con presentations. The movie has taken in $314.5 million so far, the most of any movie this year.
"Any success I've got, you really have to give to the fans here, and they don't give it lightly" Snyder says. "When I was first doing 300, we were thinking about what kind of magazine covers we could get. I said, 'How about Vanity Fair?' And the studio said, 'You'll be lucky to get Cat Fancy.' But once you get acceptance here, then you can think of going out to larger audiences. They're the gatekeepers of popular culture. You don't pass through those gates without their permission."
The Television Critics Assn. plans to push back the start date of its July press tour by about three weeks. That means TCA will now be after Comic-Con International -- the mega San Diego fan event increasingly viewed as competing with the critics' tour for the attention of the entertainment industry.
Biggest Omission: Star Trek. Director J.J. Abrams and writers Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman all made the journey to San Diego for their new FOX show Fringe, and Abrams said he has footage of Star Trek ready to show, so how come the only thing fans got was a poster? Paramount, the studio releasing Star Trek next May, was a no-show in the panels. A studio staffer told me months ago he thought Comic-Con had "jumped the shark." How 'bout a little Vulcan logic, Paramount? It's hard to imagine a crowd better suited for starting the buzz wave on Abrams' rebooted Trek than Comic-Con's 125,000 faithful.
My thought exactly. Well, maybe not exact but pretty darn close.Comic-Con is basically a reach-around for the already-sold members of the geek culture.
A guy from GERMANY out of all places makes a completely uninformed statementI too think it is bad that they missed to present 'Star Trek' at the Comic Con.
They completely ignored 'Star Treks' comic-roots...
Oh...
Wait...
![]()
Here in America we call 'em "movie theaters." Boy, you sounded so GERMAN there.![]()
To me that article makes it sound like Comic Con was solely responsible for TDK's success. I'm going to lay out on the table here, and I mean this with the UPMOST RESPECT for the deceased and Heath Ledger, but I honestly believe that the hype around this movie came about due to Heath Ledger's death. It's practically a given. Almost a morbid curiosity thing to it. This is not to detract from the actors or the movie itself, I Imagine it would have been big, but Heath Ledger's death IMHO is no doubt what made curious movie goes come out for this, at least it's first weekend.But those who do win the reverence of the Comic-Con faithful are usually bound for greater things. Jon Favreau, for instance, became the hit of last year's convention with footage of Iron Man, and it has become the gold standard of Comic-Con presentations. The movie has taken in $314.5 million so far, the most of any movie this year.
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