Comic Con: First Impressions
So I just got back into town after my three-day trip to San Diego for the Comic Con convention. It was my first time there and thus I was new to the overwhelming crowds, the elaborate costumes, the excessive nerditude, and the long lines. On Friday morning, I participated in round table discussions with Samuel Jackson, Snakes on a Plane director David Ellis, and snake handler Jules Sylvester. At some point in the near future, I will post video of those discussions. In the meantime, here are some things I found out:
- The snake on the teaser poster is a western diamondback rattlesnake, according to the snake handler.
- David Ellis: Quentin Tarantino is a huge fan of Snakes on a Plane.
- Samuel Jackson asked to be in the movie as soon as he heard about a movie called Snakes on a Plane and verified that it was about snakes on a plane. When I asked him if he still would’ve taken the role if the title was metaphorical (my example was something like “if it was about, say, convicts in Kansas”), he responded in the negative.
As you can see, I threw some hardballs out there.
I also went to the panel in a huge room later that evening, filled with 5,000 or so Comic Con attendees. The panel was quite entertaining, especially because of how Samuel Jackson handled the questions from the nerdy crowd. They also brought in some live snakes and showed a 10-minute clip from the film. (Unrelated: they also screened 5 minutes or so of the new Tenacious D rock opera movie, which looked great.) Watch the panel, and/or read Brian’s coverage.
A few more things I saw:
- Frank Miller and some people from the film 300 , based on a Miller graphic novel about the Battle of Thermopylae. Looked very violent.
- Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez talking about Grind House , which features two full-length features, one from each director, as well as some fictional trailers thrown in. You can read AICN’s coverage here, but it looked incredibly fun.
- Caught a clip of Southland Tales , Richard Kelly’s follow-up to Donnie Darko. The clip they showed came off as a bad music video, featuring a bloody Justin Timberlake singing The Killers while playing with a beer can, supported by dancers in nurse uniforms. His description of the plot sounded intriguing, so I’m hoping the uncomfortable clip is justified by the film somehow.
- Looked at a lot of comic book art, but didn’t buy anything since I don’t really read comic books.
Anyway, more to come when I get the video clips from New Line.
