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Comic-Con salutes James Gunn and gets first looks at Coyote vs. Acme, and new Star Trek forays

Comic-Con salutes James Gunn and gets first looks at Coyote vs. Acme, and new Star Trek forays

Indian Express4 days ago
Director James Gunn got an ovation from thousands for Superman in the most fitting place of all — Comic-Con.
Among the highlights of day three of the San Diego pop culture spectacular was a sincere tribute to the director who's now helming Warner Bros.' DC Comics screen universe, even if John Cena played it for laughs.
It came at a panel on the forthcoming Season 2 of DC's HBO series The Peacemaker, and Cena appeared in the title character's full comic costume and grand helmet, leading the legions in the kind of exaggerated drama he was perfect at provoking in his wrestling days.
It was James Gunn's first time in front of a crowd in the weeks since Superman was released and has earned more than $200 million in North America.
'Today has been the most fun day I've had in a year,' Gunn told the crowd at the end of the session.
Superman was his first film as captain of the DC ship, but his first foray was in 2021's The Suicide Squad, which spawned the Peacemaker TV series.
The crowd saw scenes from Season 2, which arrives in August and sees John Cena entering another dimension where he gets to be a cool version of the hero instead of the often pained and pathetic version that's typical of the character. Some characters from Superman will make appearances.
That panel followed another rousing showcase in Hall H, where star Ryan Gosling and directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller showed scenes from their forthcoming science-comedy space adventure Project Hail Mary.
The scenes from the film set for release in March included a look at Rocky, a faceless, stone-shaped alien who becomes Gosling's unlikely partner in an attempt to save the universe from ecological disaster.
Wile E. Coyote is getting his day in court — and theaters.
The stars of Coyote vs. Acme delivered a rousing presentation Saturday morning of a movie that at one point wasn't going to be released but is now bound for theaters in August 2026. The underdog story – both of the movie and Coyote — was a running theme of the panel. But rather than direct ire at Warner Bros., the real-world studio that shelved the project, the panel focused on the fictional Acme Corp.
'This is purely an Acme decision … and I am saying this for legal purposes,' moderator Paul Scheer said at the start of the panel.
The movie is a hybrid of animation and live action and is based on a 1990 New Yorker article that satirized a legal complaint filed by Coyote against Acme, the maker of the TNT, detonators, rocket shoes, catapults and other products that consistently backfire during the Coyote's fruitless attempts to catch the Roadrunner.
Laughter filled Hall H as some 6,000 watched a montage of Coyote being blown up, flattened and falling into chasms in a scene set to Johnny Cash's cover of 'Hurt.' Coyote is replaying the moments in his lair when an ad for a personal injury lawyer appears on TV.
They also played six minutes of the movie, including a scene of opening statements in the case in which Coyote's lawyer, Will Forte, accidentally unleashes a rocket skate into the courtroom, setting Coyote and the judge's robes on fire. Cena plays a slick Acme lawyer who wins over the jury, which includes a cartoon character, quickly.
Forte said he didn't think the movie would ever get to audiences.
'I'm pretty speechless. You think back to the journey that this movie has taken. I had kind of given up hope at a certain point,' Forte said. At one point, his comments were interrupted by a man playing an Acme lawyer who stormed into Hall H with cease-and-desist letters.
Director Dave Green said the movie conforms to famed animator Chuck Jones' rules for the struggle between the Coyote and Roadrunner, which include the bird always staying on the road and the Coyote being ultimately more humiliated than hurt when he falls, is crushed or gets blown up by TNT.
The movie, which features cameos from numerous Looney Tunes characters like Foghorn Leghorn, Tweety and Bugs Bunny, will be released on Aug. 28, 2026. Ketchup Entertainment teamed up with Warner Bros. on the film and in the release of The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie.
Also on Saturday morning, the cast of Bad Guys 2 teasing new footage from the movie and describing how they recorded their characters.
Marc Maron, who plays Snake, joked he asked to be tied up as he performed his lines on the floor. 'The depth of the character should read a little more this time,' he said.
The film, based on the graphic novel series by Aaron Blabey, introduces a new crew of animal criminals, the Bad Girls played by Danielle Brooks, Natasha Lyonne and Maria Bakalova.
Paramount showed off its first footage from a new series, Starfleet Academy, which stars Holly Hunter and Paul Giamatti. The show follows cadets as they go through training, with Hunter serving as chancellor of the academy. It will arrive in 2026, the 60th anniversary year of the original Star Trek series.
Paramount+'s other Star Trek series, Strange New Worlds, also shared updates. The crew of the USS Enterprise are being turned into puppets for an upcoming Strange New Worlds episode, Paramount announced Saturday. The puppets will be created by Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Season 3, which follows the adventures of the Enterprise under the command of Capt. Christopher Pike, is being released on Paramount+.
An estimated 135,000 people — many in costumes — are expected to attend Comic-Con 2025, which runs through Sunday in downtown San Diego.
So far, fans have gotten previews of Five Nights at Freddy's 2, the upcoming FX series Alien: Earth and Predator: Badlands, which will be in theaters in November.
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When we questioned him it turned out that it was not propriety that was his concern. Quite the opposite, in fact. His problem was that the dress seemed 'ethnic' and they only allowed people in western dress. There was nothing ethnic about my wife's top or the jeans she was wearing so he was wrong. But his objections raised a more serious issue: Was he saying that in Dubai they would refuse entry to anyone who wore anything that looked Arab to him? It turned out that he was saying exactly that. Would he have objected quite so much if a white person had worn the same top because then the effect would not have been 'ethnic?'( I wish I had kept a picture of that top; it looked roughly as 'ethnic' as Victoria Beckham.) Was he only objecting because, as Indians, we looked as though we could have been Middle Eastern? The answer to that question is clearly: Yes. He was reprimanded later, and Atlantis no longer has those kinds of policies. But my point is that he couldn't have been making it all up himself. Clearly someone had given him some instructions about not allowing Arab dress (in an Arab country!) and he had screwed up the implementation. Indians will not find this story hard to believe. For decades, dating back to the times when India's so-called elite clubs were founded by the British, our clubs have looked down on Indian clothes. Back in the 1990s, when I was editor of Sunday, a magazine published out of Kolkata, I would periodically hear stories about well known (and not so well known) figures being refused entry into Kolkata's 'elite' clubs because they were wearing kurta pyjamas. Indian dress was not allowed but fat guys in terylene singlets that strained to contain their paunches and were worn above low hung baggy trousers were welcome. Even at formal events you could wear a suit cut by Ashok Tailor where the jacket would not button up and the trouser legs stopped a few inches above the socks. 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Of course, nobody in hotel management knows any of this because they are too busy to read newspapers or magazines. (Or even things on the internet.) As far as they are concerned there is no distinction between hawai chappals and high fashion sandals. A relative of mine was recently refused entry into Vineet Bhatia's Ziya at the Gurgaon Oberoi on the grounds that he was not wearing closed shoes. He was with a friend, a top Dubai chef and restaurateur who was horrified. 'Can't you see they are Hermes?' he asked plaintively. Last Sunday I got thrown out at tea time of the ground floor bar/ lounge at the Delhi Oberoi because I was wearing sandals. All I wanted was a coffee so I just moved to Threesixty next door where no one minded. A few months ago they tried to move me out of the restaurant at the Chambers at the Taj in Delhi for wearing the same sandals. I explained to the manager that I was not wearing chappals or flip flops but proper sandals that were fastened from behind. 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