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Get Your Geek On: 130,000 Head for San Diego Comic-Con

by Agence France-Presse

   LOS ANGELES --

   Desk jockeys in eye-wateringly tight spandex will blur the line between
   fantasy and reality this week as they invade San Diego for the world's
   largest celebration of pop culture fandom.

   The 49th Comic-Con International will revel in movies, TV and -- yes --
   comic books, as fans in pitch-perfect monster, alien and manga costumes
   swelter in the southern Californian heat over five surreal days.

   Where fandom abounds, controversy is never far behind. And the big bone
   of contention this year is Disney's decision not to bring its Marvel
   Cinematic Universe (MCU) to Comic-Con, despite a record-breaking year
   with Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War and Ant-Man and the Wasp.

   "It's going to be an interesting year this year," said SyFy Wire
   editor-in-chief Adam Swiderski in a video preview of the Wednesday to
   Sunday get-together at the city's harborfront convention center.

   "A lot of the big players like Marvel, Star Wars and Game of Thrones,
   who dominated past cons, aren't going to be there, which gives other
   properties an opportunity to step into the spotlight."

   Since its humble beginnings in 1970 as the Golden State Comic Book
   Convention, a gathering of a few dozen geeks who swapped superhero
   magazines, Comic-Con has exploded in popularity.

   Each July, it attracts around 130,000 cosplayers, movie executives,
   sci-fi fans and bloggers to a feast on all manner of panels, screenings
   and other attractions.

   'Scare Diego'

   Described by Rolling Stone as the "Super Bowl of people who don't like
   watching the Super Bowl," Comic-Con's beating heart is the 6,500-seat
   Hall H, where a cornucopia of stars hawk their latest work.

   Devotees have been known to wait for days to be among the first to get
   into the sprawling arena, taking turns with family members and other
   fans for toilet breaks and sleep.

   New Line Cinema and Warner Bros. kick off proceedings Wednesday with
   "Scare Diego," where fans will enjoy insights into It: Chapter Two and
   the frankly terrifying-looking The Nun.

   The convention has traditionally persuaded most of the big studios to
   turn up for detailed presentations of their highly anticipated slates
   of upcoming movies -- but not this year.

   Disney is presumably saving its biggest treats for its own biennial D23
   fan convention, and Universal's segment is dedicated to just two movies
   -- M. Night Shyamalan's Glass and David Gordon Green's Halloween.

   Elsewhere, Paramount brings its spinoff Transformers film Bumblebee and
   Fox has a Deadpool 2 celebration and preview for its Predator reboot.

   Sony presents Venom, and the animated Spider-Man: Into the
   Spider-Verse, neither of which are considered part of the MCU, although
   Marvel was part of the production team.

   That cedes the center stage to Warner Bros., which is expected to pull
   out all the stops in its two-hour Saturday spot.

   The schedule is kept tightly under wraps, but insiders say there will
   almost certainly be thrills and spills from Aquaman, Godzilla: King of
   the Monsters, the new Fantastic Beasts movie and Shazam!

   'Crazy busy'

   "This is a fun room. It's going to be crazy busy for Warner Bros., like
   it always is," said James Riley of the SDConCast podcast.

   "But without the pull of the evening Marvel panel to generate such a
   fervor for the line ... we have a feeling this is actually going to be
   an easy day to get into Hall H."

   The television side of the Comic-Con gets increasingly bigger as the
   stars follow the voluminous torrent of cash into TV productions funded
   on a scale never seen before.

   This year's Hall H is expected to be more notable than ever for its
   small-screen content, despite the absence of HBO's big-hitters.

   "Several other networks will be showing off new and returning series in
   a hope to cut through the cluttered landscape and maintain, or possibly
   grow, viewership," said Lesley Goldberg of The Hollywood Reporter.

   AMC has the pick of the convention with a debut appearance from Better
   Call Saul alongside a 10th anniversary reunion panel for Breaking Bad
   and a discussion on acclaimed graphic novel adaption Preacher.

   The Walking Dead, the most successful show in U.S. cable television
   history, is back ahead of season nine, expected to debut in October,
   and there is a panel for its sister show, Fear the Walking Dead.

   Other studios plying their TV wares include YouTube Originals and Fox,
   while SyFy stages what promises to be an emotional farewell to the
   Sharknado franchise.

   Marvel's movie people might be largely absent, but the studio boasts
   numerous panels and other event for its TV output, including Cloak &
   Dagger, Iron Fist and Marvel's Avengers: Black Panther's Quest.