Thursday, June 26, 2008

Transformers to Skip San Diego Comic-Con?

Slashfilm is reporting that Paramount has decided to not make an appearance at the San Diego Comic-con when its held from July 23-27th. Normally the comic convention is the annual coming out party for Hollywood for the next batch of action and comic book related action movies. For the first movie, this was used in 2006 to discuss some of the news for the first movie. Seems only natural to do the same this year and perhaps release a teaser trailer.
First (potentially) the actors, and now it looks like Paramount has decided to sit out of this year’s San Diego Comic Con International. A Paramount spokesman told Anne Thompson that “The timing was off this year.” Most of Paramount’s upcoming geek slate isn’t scheduled to hit theaters until 2009. Paramount might still participate with some viral marketing, and with a presence on the show floor, but most of their big titles will be M.I.A.

This is a shocking move considering that Paramount/DreamWorks’ huge presence at last year’s con. The Iron Man panel was considered by all to be the highest point of the convention. Even Favreau credits the panel as jumpstarting the hype for the superhero film. The company also showed 20-minutes of Beowulf in 3-D, revealed Karen Allen’s return in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and the now infamous headless statue of liberty poster for the then untitled Cloverfield.
I am hoping that this gets reversed for Transformers. Just because Paramount doesn't want to spend money on the event doesn't mean that Dreamworks may not be willing. Even if the strike prevents the actors from showing up, the nice thing about comic conventions is often the Directors, Writers and FX crew, etc can be given as big a welcome as the stars themselves. An appearance by Bay or members of the special effects team along with a Q&A session would probably be one of the most attended. All are normally welcome. If the traffic on my blog is any indication, interest in this movie is very high and they should make every effort to help fan the flames.

Thanks to Russell for the links. The Hasbro picture above is from Artwork by KD site.

2 comments:

  1. This is happening all thanks to the Unions like SAG and their pointless strikes that can only cause troubles to everyone and give nothing more to those that they claim to protect the interests of.
    The Unions always protect only their own interests not those of their members. The Unions should just be banned. Professionals should stop joining the Unions.
    The real shame is that in Hollywod and the show biz you they can't hire anyone that is not signed to the Unions, which is deadly insane and it's a shame that that's happening in the USA then, where such things should just not be allowed, instead they are.
    Unions preventing people from getting a job in any business and deciding who can work with who and at which conditions.. that's just like mafia and it's amazing that the US Congress has allowed this shame to continue for many many years without doing anything.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My feelings are mixed on this issue. While you have many valid points that I agree on i.e. Hollywood not allowed to hire non-union workers, Unions can help out individuals get what he or she deserve in terms of fair pay, benefits, hours worked, overtime, etc.

    However, to me, a Union is kind of like how our "democracy" works. If 51% outvote the 49% then they win in any certain issue. That's not really a "majority" but on paper it is I suppose. I'm not sure how actor Unions work, but if it's the same way, it sucks for the %49 who don't care and want work.

    That probably didn't make sense but I'm tired and felt like rambling.

    ReplyDelete

 
          Creative Commons License