
The cosplay of San Diego Comic-Con 2025
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Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Go behind the scenes with the ‘Alien: Earth' cast at Comic-Con 2025
SAN DIEGO — Sydney Chandler has wanted to attend San Diego Comic-Con as a fan for years. So it's 'surreal' that the actor's first experience with the annual pop culture expo is to promote her upcoming FX series 'Alien: Earth.' Chandler stars in the 'Alien' prequel as Wendy, a young girl whose consciousness has been transferred to an android. 'To be able to do it in this capacity is just mind-blowing,' she tells The Times in advance of the show's Hall H premiere on Friday. 'It's emotional because we worked on this for so long and I learned so much. … I'm kind of at a loss of words.' She does have words of appreciation, though, including for what she's learned from her character. 'Her journey of finding out how to hold her own and stand on her own two feet taught me so much,' says Chandler. 'I'm an overthinker. I'm an anxious person. I would have run so fast. I would not be as brave as her, but she taught me … that it's OK to just stand on your own two feet, and that's enough. That's powerful.' Even before the show's Hall H panel, fans have gathered on the sidewalk outside of the Hard Rock Hotel San Diego to catch a glimpse of Chandler and her 'Alien: Earth' cast mates Timothy Olyphant, Alex Lawther, Samuel Blenkin and Babou Ceesay, along with creator Noah Hawley and executive producer David Zucker, on their short trek to the bus that would transport them to the convention center for the show's world premiere. On the ride over, Hawley betrays no nerves about people seeing the first episode. 'I really think, in a strange way, it plays for all ages because it is about growing up on some level,' says the showrunner. 'But it's also 'Alien,' and it is a meditation on power and corporate power. ' Huddled together on the bus with Lawther and Blenkin, Ceesay is surprised to learn that this is the first time attending San Diego Comic-Con for all three. There's plenty of good-natured ribbing as they talk about the early interviews they've completed at the event. 'I just sort of want to make jokes with you all the time,' says Lawther as he looks towards his cast mates. 'I find it quite giddy in the experience, and I had to remind myself that I'm a professional.' 'Sometimes the British sarcasm instinct just kicks in,' Blenkin adds. Their playful dynamic continues as they joke about crashing Ceesay's other panel, and also backstage at Hall H as they try to sneak up on each other in the dark. After the panel, the cast is whisked away for video interviews and signing posters at a fan meet-and-greet at a booth on the exhibit floor. ('Timothy, you're the man!' shouts a fan passing by.) Later, Hawley, Chandler and Ceesay will hit the immersive 'Alien: Earth' activation where they will explore the wreckage of a crashed ship. 'It's such a safe space for people who just enjoy cinema and enjoy film,' Chandler says of Comic-Con. 'And that's me. I'm a complete nerd for all this stuff, so just to be around that group — it reminds me of why I love film so much in the first place.'

Engadget
2 hours ago
- Engadget
The video game adaptation of cult classic Toxic Crusaders cartoon finally gets a release date
The streets of Tromaville, New Jersey are calling once again as the video game adaptation of the off-the-wall cartoon series Toxic Crusaders gets a release date. Seen in an official trailer from Retroware that was shown off during San Diego Comic-Con and shared online by IGN, the Toxic Crusaders game is releasing on December 4 on PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch and Steam. To view this content, you'll need to update your privacy settings. Please click here and view the "Content and social-media partners" setting to do so. As a true callback to the quirky cartoon from the '90s, the video game is designed as a side-scrolling beat 'em up, all packaged in a fitting pixel art style. In Toxic Crusaders , you can select up to seven characters from the series, each with their own unique movesets and abilities, and join together for up to four players in local co-op. For Toxic Crusaders fans wanting more after the original series ended without a second season, this adaptation picks up where things left off. You'll still run into some familiar faces, like the story's main villain, Dr. Killemoff and his two bumbling henchmen. For followers of the franchise, it's been a discouraging journey since Retroware first announced the adaptation for release in 2023. It's been delayed a couple of times, but the latest trailer finally offers a definitive date. If you can't wait until December, you can catch The Toxic Avenger film — which is a reboot of the original movie from 1984 that the Toxic Crusaders cartoon was adapted from — in theaters on August 29.


Los Angeles Times
3 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Marvel's absence might have clouded Comic-Con. But fans found a silver lining
SAN DIEGO — Over the years, Hall H at San Diego Comic-Con has built a reputation — and an expectation — as the room where Hollywood juggernauts in attendance at the annual pop culture extravaganza unveil exclusive footage, break news and share behind-the-scenes stories with devoted fans, who often spend hours in line just for a chance to make it through the doors. It's not surprising, then,that headlines going into this year's Comic-Con, which concludes Sunday, carried an air of disappointment about the absence of Marvel and other major film studios from Hall H's programming schedule — even if 2025 is not the first time Marvel and others have sat out Comic-Con for one reason or another. But for many fans in attendance, the news merited little more than a shrug. Hector Guzman, who along with his friend Joaquin Horas made the trip from Los Angeles, acknowledged that the Hall H slate 'felt a little bit different this year' with no Marvel Studios panel. But 'there's still a wide presence of Marvel,' he added. 'The 'Fantastic Four' movie that just came out — we've been seeing a heavy push on that this year.' Guzman and Horas had spent a little over an hour in the Hall H line Friday afternoon trying to make it to the 'Tron: Ares' panel before bailing, but they said that in their three years of attending the event, Hall H usually isn't on their itinerary. 'If it's interesting to us, we'll give it a shot, and if it's not, then there's always plenty of other events and stuff going around [the convention],' said Horas. He and Guzman explained that they are generally more interested in exclusive merchandise, custom works by artists and getting together with their friends in cosplay. Other attendees like Jennifer Moore and Sam Moore of British Columbia, Canada, took advantage of the absence of popular Hall H mainstays to get into Friday presentations they were excited about, including for 'Alien: Earth' and 'The Long Walk.' 'Last year was my first time [in Hall H],' said Jennifer Moore, who said they'd been attending the event for 10 years. 'Now [that] there's no Marvel thing or DC thing, it's pretty easy to get in,' said Sam Moore. 'We've just been doing walk-ins [for Hall H] this year.' That's not to say Hall H was entirely without spectacle: Highlights included an ensemble of bagpipers performing 'Scotland the Brave,' a dazzling laser light show, the world premiere of the 'Alien' franchise's first ever television series and an appearance by 'Star Wars' filmmaker George Lucas to promote the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. And although the Comic-Con experience has grown beyond the walls of the San Diego Convention Center, with immersive experiences and pop-ups spilling into the city's Gaslamp Quarter and the Embarcadero, Hall H remains a venerated programming space for panelists and attendees alike. 'I want to give people the experience that they bought their tickets for to come here,' said Noah Hawley, the creator of 'Alien: Earth' before the upcoming FX series' Hall H presentation on Friday. 'I was surprised the first time I came to Comic-Con, how emotional it is for the people who attend. There's a lot of people for whom [361] days a year, they have to pretend to be somebody else. These [four] days of the year, they get to be who they really feel like they are on the inside.' The Moores were among those who were able to make it into Hall H without much of a wait on Friday morning. But by Friday afternoon, the line had grown much longer in anticipation for later panels, which included capacity crowds. Other big draws included anime franchise entry 'Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle' and DC Studios co-chief James Gunn, who received an ovation for the success of his recent 'Superman' reboot while presenting the second season of the John Cena series 'Peacemaker.' Even those who were attending Comic-Con to promote their own projects couldn't hold in their excitement for anime juggernaut 'Demon Slayer.' Besides the Hall H, panel ads promoting the upcoming movie — which has already broken attendance records in Japan — adorned a nearby hotel and the trains of the Trolley. 'There is a part of me that just wants to be out with the fans in my Tanjiro outfit with the earrings with my daughter,' said actor Babou Ceesay of 'Alien: Earth,' referencing the young warrior with a gentle heart at the center of 'Demon Slayer.' The growth of anime and animation programming at Comic-Con and inside Hall H is a reminder that the convention is best understood as a reflection of ongoing shifts in nerd culture and fandom. Having evolved from a gathering primarily for comic book collectors to a broader celebration of pop culture where blockbuster movies once had a stranglehold, Comic-Con may now be witnessing the loosening of comic book superhero films' grip on the zeitgeist as a whole. Indeed, television has steadily increased its Comic-Con footprint for years. Studios and streamers have also been organizing their own promotional events, such as Disney's D23 and Netflix's Tudum, to build up buzz on their terms, too. Plus, as fan Robbie Weber of Los Angeles reiterated, Comic-Con is more than just what happens in Hall H. When he first attended the event 11 years ago he was among those that camped out overnight in order to get into the hall, but this time around he skipped it, opting to explore activations and other panels instead. 'We saw [comic book writer] Jonathan Hickman [on Thursday],' said Weber. 'We saw a friend on the 'Primitive War' panel [on Friday], which was really cool. It was the first time I've been able to see a friend do something like that.' For many, Comic-Con's main draw remains how fans can freely celebrate their passions. 'Alien: Earth' actor Alex Lawther said it was nice to hear the excitement of the people around him on his San Diego-bound train as they reminisced about their past experiences and shared photos of their cosplay. 'I really get that intense enjoyment of something to the point where you want to walk down the street wearing the costumes,' he said.