As New York Comic Con gets bigger and bigger, it becomes impossible to take it all in, and no matter how well we plan for it, inevitably things don’t work out. Here is our breakdown of one of the fastest going conventions in the United States.
Thursday goals included attending the 88MPH: A Celebration of Back to the Future, a panel about DC Comics imprint Vertigo’s new #1s, attempting to get into the Viz Media/Musashi Kishimoto panel, and finishing out the day at MootCon4 to talk to people about the Game of Theories webseries. While not an entirely adventurous schedule, the sheer amount of people made it impossible to navigate the exhibit hall (or the smaller, craft/creator filled area called The Block) in a timely manner. New York Comic Con was wall to wall cosplayers in different Doc & Marty costumes (and a TON of Rick & Morty costumes as well), some so well done, several double takes were needed to make sure we didn’t accidentally walk by Christopher Lloyd himself. We had to slowly step our way to the Image booth where we met up with comic creator Ivan Brandon for a scheduled interview, before attempting to make headway toward the Funko booth, hoping to get our eyeballs on some of those exclusives! There were many promotional life-size POP! figures to promote the upcoming Smuggler’s Bounty, and it was difficult to tear ourselves away and re-evaluate our plan as the hour grew late. It was here our paths split, with Tushar checking out the Games and Education panel, Kaitlyn calling it a day, and Leia preparing for a long evening of line waiting to spend an hour in the same room as Naruto creator Masashi Kishimoto, before preparing for day two.
As the weekend progressed, we saw the floors even MORE packed than before and our weary correspondents loaded up their schedule with panels. First, however, Kaitlyn and Leia wandered over to the Audible booth to try out the immersive Locke & Key experience via Oculus Rift, before an interview with Sean Lewis and Benjamin Mackey, newbies in the comic industry. Artist Alley was a sight to behold this year, with greedy fingers reaching for art prints on our way to interview Justin Jordan, and get some stuff signed.
Now despite the name “New York Comic Con,” non-comic media, like television, was there in force too. The folks at Adult Swim were up to their old tricks again with roundtables for Venture Bros, Robot Chicken, and the new miniseries airing soon, Neon Joe, Werewolf Hunter. (You can check out our preview at Adult Swim at NYCC – Neon Joe, Werewolf Hunter). Getting to meet TV personalities like Jon Glaser, Stephanie March, Breckin Meyer and the crazy duo of Doc Hammer and Jackson Publick went exactly as we thought it would go. Antics upon hijinks upon gut busting laughter. It was tough to get through the whole thing without addressing Stephanie March as anything other than “Assistant District Attorney Alexandra Cabot,” but ultimately composure was kept and we found that she, along with the rest of the Adult Swim actor corps, were super cool and friendly people.
TV wasn’t the only non-comic media to make a splash this year. Video games made their presence felt too. If you had (like we did) a bit of trouble getting through the main entrance to the con floor because of a pure sea of concentrated humanity, you were probably going by the Capcom booth. Lining the booth was an army of Street Fighter enthusiasts, and it WAS possible (but not probable) to slither your way in to get a crack at seeing some gameplay from Street Fighter V. The game played faster than its predecessor Street Fighter IV, and you could see some of the classic cast like Karin making their return from the Alpha/Zero series of Street Fighter games. There was a tournament going on as well, so there was always the chance that if you went in to get schooled, it would be public on a lot of large screens.
Square-Enix decided to take the quieter route and had a media suite set up a Shop Studios, just a couple blocks away from the Javits Center. It was nice to get away from the bustle of the con floor for guided demos of their games to small groups of people, and the fact that they fed us definitely did not hurt the experience. Making the rounds through Shop Studios we saw the upcoming Deus Ex: Mankind Divided (check out our preview here), Hitman, Just Cause 3, and the finale to Life Is Strange with Episode 5. The biggest and friendliest surprise though was that Lara Croft: GO wasn’t the only appearance our girl Lara Croft made that day. The full playable demo of Rise of the Tomb Raider looked and played absolutely great.
The Star Wars franchise decided to take an in between approach, setting up their Star Wars Battle Pods outside of the con floor but still inside the Javits Center, making it easy to get to and a beacon of the force as people entered the building. The battle pods let you take command of a few different vehicles from the Star Wars universe, from going on a Death Star bombing run in an X-Wing to trying to hang on for dear life on a speedbike on Endor. Either way, the ride was complete with vibration and pod shakes that one would presumably feel taking your X-wing out of the hangar.
Our last day was spent tying up loose ends, such as taking photos of the creepiest cosplay we could find, picking up more stuff to give away to you guys, and making our last stop at the phenomenal Women of Marvel panel, before shambling off home.
Be sure to check out our other convention coverage and we hope to see you guys in the future! We can’t wait for next year, and leave you with this awesome cosplay video from our friends, SneakyZebra.
In case you haven’t already, don’t forget that we are giving away a bunch of stuff for those of you who didn’t get to attend! Enter below.
Time travel seems to always be tragic.
As I sat in the dollar movie theater watching Looper, I felt torn apart by all the emotions swirling around inside, like a mini typhoon of sobs begging to be let loose. This led me to fifteen minutes of deep thinking and I realized that 80% of all the time travel based movies and books I’ve read have very tragic endings. I came to the conclusion that it will always be so, even in the event that time travel is eventually invented in the future.
How did I come to that conclusion? Well, let’s take a look at some of the more popular time travel movies, books, and even a brief glimpse at humans as a whole. Please note that this is not to say that every single time EVER will there be tragedy; it’s just an exploratory look at tragedy in popular culture regarding time travel.
The Butterfly Effect and Looper seem to be cut from the same cloth, albeit with very different executions. Both show, in sad detail, what could transpire as you try to change your own timeline in the hopes of bypassing a harsh future. Instead, the more and more you change things, the worse things end up being. It’s only when you remove yourself from the equation, or accept that some things are meant to be, do things right themselves. Is this self sacrifice? Not quite sure. I feel that these two pictures detail most accurately how people would react to time travel, were it introduced in society. Even if most of us were to adhere to guidelines, particularly those aimed at us not erasing ourselves, someone would go back in order to fix their lot in life, save that special someone, etc. We are only human.
I picked up several books in my attempt to research this further, among them The Time Machine and A Wrinkle In Time. We’re all familiar with the plot of The Time Machine, yes? If not, it revolves around a scientist who travels to the future where he falls in love with a member of the Eloi, a dainty strain of human, before losing her to a fire before liberating his time machine from the predators of the lands and traveling again even further into the future, watching the universe come to an end before returning to his own time. His exploration is tinged with sadness at the inevitable demise of everything and sets about packing for another time traveling trip. Because this is where the book ends and it’s up to you to fill in the rest, I always felt like he couldn’t go back to being a regular scientist in his time; he’d seen too much. How hard it must be to return to mediocrity and well, normalness, after experiencing the things he did.
A Wrinkle In Time, while not quite so introspective, dealt with children of a scientist who created the tesseract (basically a wormhole) that can be used to travel through space and time, albeit with many dangers. The discovery of the tesseract has taken the patriarch of the Murry family and an absent father spurs his children to do something worthwhile alongside alien friends. It’s a very real sense of loss as you get to know the Murrys and realize that their father has been absent for quite some time and the effect on everyone is nothing to dismiss easily.
Sobered by my reading, I turned my sights toward movies. Surely the Arnold Schwarzenegger turned cyborg assassin T-800 would bring smiles to my face as I mouthed along “I’ll be back.” Nope. My childlike brain remembered a very different movie apparently. Sure, the plot was the same: The Terminator goes back in time to kill Sarah Connor, future mother of John Conner, leader of the resistance against Skynet. All fine and dandy. What I failed to grasp as a kid was the super sad loop of time happening in Sarah Connor’s life. If only Kyle Reese hadn’t tried to save her (but he had to try, in order for the time stream to continue as it was supposed to). If only a T-1000 wasn’t sent back in time to correct the mistakes of T-800 (but it had to be done so things unfolded as they should have). If only Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines had never been made.
I was going to write about Doctor Who, because no time travel theorizing cannot be complete without including the last Time Lord, but I couldn’t stop the tears from coming, so I chose Back to the Future instead! This time (no pun intended), we have an incredibly intelligent scientist who knows what will happen if the time stream is messed with. He goes to extreme lengths to pass on detailed instructions to the main protagonist Marty. To be fair, Marty accidentally changes time, but the good Dr. Brown still insists on not messing with the time stream, even when it means saving his own life…but we see how that ended up!
What was my point here? Well, I spoke with several of my friends, peers, fellow science fiction readers to see if they felt as I did: could a story based on time travel end in happiness? I’ve come to the conclusion that sure, it might work out well for the main character, but what about the other people? Does selfishness win out instead of maintaining a world balance? Something to think on, dear readers.
What would you do if given the chance to time travel?
Leia Calderon
Editor
@ladyvader99