<![CDATA[io9: comic+con 08]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: comic+con 08]]> http://io9.com/tag/comiccon08 http://io9.com/tag/comiccon08 <![CDATA[Robert Picardo Tells io9 About Replacing Trek's Data And Stargate's Tapping]]> We were lucky enough to catch up with Robert Picardo, who's joined the cast of Stargate Atlantis full-time as the obnoxious Richard Woolsey. He told us what it's like to take over command from Amanda Tapping's Samantha Carter. We also talked to Picardo about working with notorious comedian Andy Dick on Star Trek: Voyager, plus the differences between his holographic Trek character and Data the android.

Congratulations. You're finally in charge!

I'm finally in charge. I'm finally Captain Janeway. If you live long enough...

That's a better way to look at it. You're not replacing Amanda Tapping...

No-one can replace Amanda Tapping. The fans say, How do you feel about having to fill Amanda Tapping's shoes?" I said, look, "I would rather wake up in the morning, go into the bathroom and see Amanda Tapping than me." So I understand how the fans feel. She's a great actress and a beautiful person. I, on the other hand, am a very good actor and a very beautiful person.

I understand there's going to be a journey for Woolsey this season.

Yes, I'm changing. I'm growing. I'm becoming less of a dick. I appreciate the fact that he's Richard Woolsey and not Dick Woolsey, because that would be hard. To go to work every day and have people calling you "Dick" all the time.

And part of his epiphany comes from just not being able to work the technology.

I had two or three very humorous moments, where I don't know how to use the doors, I don't know how to find the cafeteria... I'm the new guy. And also, because he's not sort of a people person, people don't feel comfortable walking up and saying, "Mr. Woolsey, the cafeteria's this way." But I am warming up, and people are starting to feel sorry for the fact that I'm kind of a loner. I think by the end of the season, all the regular guys are going to, if not love me, respect me.

And you have a thing where you have nine pages of dialog where you argue in front of a tribunal?

I have the big dialog days. You play a hologram on Star Trek, and you have to spew line after line. I spoke in paragraphs on Star Trek. So I think they liked the fact that I handled dialog pretty well, so they give me stuff to say. But on the other hand, now that I'm playing a human and not a hologram, I'm allowed to say things like, "Well, uhh," or "You know..." which I could never do before. I had to be precise and I could never funfer. Now that I'm just a person I can funfer occasionally. Not funfer like soap opera actors funfer when they can't remember their lines, which is one of my favorite things to watch. "Hey, uh, you know man." That kind of thing. I don't do that.

What was it like working with Andy Dick on Voyager?

The first day on the set, he said to me, "Hey your name is Picardo. It's so close to Captain Picard. Do the fans make fun of you?" And I said, "Excuse me. Your name is Andy Dick, and you're going to make fun of mine?" And after that, we got along pretty well. He's wild. That was the week that the TV Guide article came out about him while we were shooting. What should I say? It was very, uh, revealing. I know that he likes to expose lots and lots about his life. Which I admire and respect, but actually, you know what? I don't think my life is quite as exciting as his.

I think your life is way more exciting than his at this point.

I like that you think that.

On Voyager, you were playing this artificial life form. Unlike Data, you looked human, but you weren't. You were like the opposite of Data.

He was more human than me. Especially early on. Wow, you've got it all. In fact, the next time I get interviewed, I'm going to call you. Because you understand my role on Star Trek even better than I did.

Did you try to convey that you looked human but weren't?

I did try to do this sort of funny, Johnny-on-the-spot kind of... But Data also moved in this exaggerated sort of way. I liked being a know-it-all. Of course, he was a know-it-all too. But I was sort of a stuffy, arrogant, curmugeonly know-it-all, where he was a childlike, sweet and Pinnochio-like know-it-all. We were both know-it-alls. Is it knows-it-all or know-it-alls?

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<![CDATA[Why Is Jewel Staite Always In Bondage? We Asked Her]]> Jewel Staite is best known for playing the mechanic Kaylee on grungy space-opera show Firefly. But if the writers of Stargate Atlantis have their way, she'll become better known for being bound and gagged in the woods. She mentioned on the Stargate panel at Comic-Con that her character, Dr. Keller, is in bondage in a few upcoming Stargate episodes, not to mention being pinned to a bed by an alien spore recently. We had to ask her about this, plus the differences between Firefly and Stargate. And what she thinks Kaylee is doing right now.

So what's it like going from a show like Firefly that's kind of gritty and down on their luck to a show like Atlantis where there's lots of fancy gadgets?

Everything's clean. Isn't it like super clean? I'm always afraid to put my hand on the glass. I'm just leaving fingerprints all over that set all the time. Everything's nice and gleaming. The best thing about it for me is that they're in their groove. They've been at it for so many years that they're very blase, and they shoot like 10 pages in 12 hours, which is unheard of. And we wrap every day at the 12th hour, which is also unheard of. So it's just like this well-oiled machine, they're all reading each others' minds or something. But I guess that comes after 10+ years of working together. I felt new for a bit, I don't feel that new any more.

Was it fun having the alien spore taking over your body? (Shakes her head.) No? Dude, alien spore!

No! It was the weirdest thing in the world. I was basically pinned to the bed literally, they had a prosthetic blanket that went over me, and they glued pieces of the blanket to my face. So once I was in, I was in. It took like half an hour to get out, and then another half hour to in, so if I really really had to go, they would let me out, but I knew it would be a big hassle, so I just laid off all the fluids and I went to the happy place, that's where I was. Yeah. That was so bizarre. I just laid there and David Hewlett (Rodney McKay) was feeding me at one point. It was a bonding experience. It wasn't that bad. I basically laid there and relaxed in a very comfortable bed. It could have been worse. An odd way of working, for sure.

So I understand that Dr. Keller gets tied up in the woods in like every other episode of Stargate. What's up with that?

Yeah, I don't know what that's about. In season four, I was kidnapped and bound and gagged. This year, it's happened to me twice so far. And I just read yet another script where I am again bound and gagged. I don't know what I did.

Is there a site somewhere where they're charging five dollars a minute? Is it a fetish thing?

Maybe that's what it is. I'm starting to wonder. It's a fetish thing. And it's the same writer every time that writes the episode where I'm being kidnapped. Maybe he likes seeing me dragged through the woods. I don't know what's going on. And you know what? I don't question it. I guess. At least he's writing for me.

So I understand Joss Whedon said you had to gain weight to play Kaylee. Was that annoying? Was it fun?

I was daunted at first by the prospect. He basically told me he wanted Kaylee to be voluptuous and rounded and womanly. So I stopped all exercise, cease and desist with the gym membership, went in the garbage, and I ate cheeseburgers for three weeks. It was bliss. And then I started to feel kind of full and I had no cravings, because I ate everything in sight. And then I was like, eh, this is boring. With Serenity he let me be myself and not gain the weight. So I was happy about that. I was sick of being full.

So in your mind, are Kaylee and Simon off somewhere spooning?

Making babies? God I hope so. I think that was the whole intention there.

You're like the only Joss Whedon character ever to have a happy ending.

That's true! Yet. I mean, who knows? He's doing these comic books now, Serenity comics, and and every time I read it I flip to the end to see if Kaylee is still alive.

We want you to be alive for Serenity II.

I know! You have to ask him. I get asked about Serenity II all the time. And I'm like I'm not the one who writes it. Talk to that guy. (Points at Joss.)

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<![CDATA[Doctor Who's Julie Gardner Tells io9 The Secret Of Keeping Captain Jack Happy]]> The unsung hero of time-travel show Doctor Who and its spin-offs isn't K-9 the tin dog, it's executive producer Julie Gardner. She's kept the flashing light from flying off the top of the Police Box time machine since the beginning. We were lucky enough to sit down with her at Comic-Con and ask her about Doctor Who's success, the evolution of Torchwood, and why Sarah Jane Smith is still . The interview includes spoilers for the Sarah Jane Adventures.

Does Doctor Who's popularity prove people love science fiction? Or is there something else going on?

I think it's both, actually. I think people do live scifi, and they love the bigness of it, and they love the big emotions. That's what I love about scifi, I love that things are writ large. I think that 's on a bigger canvas in a way. There's something extrarodinary in its [popularity]. I can't even pretend to know what it is. Children write to us, and they write stories and they draw pictures, and there's a real interaction and a real engagement, and they see the Doctor as their friend, and they go on adventures and they really are travineling with him and there's a great engagement of their imaginations, and I've never experienced that before. And obviously Russell T. Davies and Steven were enormous fans.

You weren't a fan before?

I dipped in and out, and expeirenced a little bit of it... I've become a huge fan now, through rediscovering the classic series. When I first worked on Doctor Who, [Russell T. Davies] sent me a viewing list. "This is what you need to know."

What was on it?

I knew you were going to ask me that. "Pyramids Of Mars," "City Of Death," which is my absolute favorite, "Talons Of Weng Chiang." "City Of Death" was the first time I really understood it, and started to understand that this show can do anything. You've got Tom Baker being amazing, you've got a shoot on a limited budget in Paris, exteriors only obviously. You've got the cheekiness of him going back in time to meet Leonardo Da Vinci, you've got the scale and the fun and the imagination that was gob-smacking. Personally the type of scifi I've never been able to engage in is things like Star Trek. I've never been a Star Trek fan. It's an amazing show. I can conaprpeciate it, but it doesn't connect with me, it's cold scifi. I love Smallville, I love Buffy. Stuff that deals with emotions and families, but has an extra element to it. It's a mx of the ordinary and the extraordinary. There are sesaons for scifi. There are times when i think psychologically nations want that feel-good factor, and the scale of it... the the confidence, the scale or the swagger of it.

So during times of war and crisis, people need scifi more?

Yes. You want your comedies, or your musicals, or your epic emotion, which is real emotion, but on an epic canvas.

When I talk about cold scifi... There's a huge cleverness to Star Trek which is tantalizing, but... I love Doctor Who and Torchwood and Sarah Jane Adventures... because ultimately they're all about how you live and the choices you make, and Doctor Who without question is at its best in the moments where the Doctor suffers and the Doctor has to make a choice, as opposed to the moments where you see this extraoridnary Time Lord genius traveling. If you're immortal, like Captain Jack, what does that do to your relationships? Sarah Jane, she's alone, but then she finds her family. She's fighting for her adopted son.

Torchwood has changed so much just in the past two years. And now it's being aired all over the place. I just saw that it's showing in Korea.

Torchwood does really well in Korea. It's really up there with CSI, they have some major imports from America, and [then there's] Torchwood.

Do you think Torchwood lost some of its identity in the second season when it became less racy?

I think it's the reverse. I think it started to find itself. Because I think season one, we made very fast. It's the fastest show I've ever gone through, from the development and the commission to actually being on air. It was a tight schedule. It dictates the tone sometimes, you're just really running for the finish. But as well as that we just really clearly wanted to earmark Torchwood as being different to Doctor Who. There was swearing in the first scene, and it was very clearly stated. [Then] we started to relax into it, and we started to find what Torchwood was to itself. Captain Jack is a larger than life character, and has a great sex life with Ianto. [People talk about] the sex, the sex, the sex, but actually there's very little sex in Torchwood. Where we got that reputation was episode two, where you did have the sexy gas alien monster. But beyond that, it was more about broken hearts and love. The Toshiko episode [with her lesbian lover] was not about lesbian sex, it was about she's finally found... something outside of work... [and then she loses it.]

Speaking of Toshiko, one of my favorite episodes in season two was the episode with Toshiko and the World War I soldier. It seems like Torchwood is often at its best when it deals with war.

I think it's a very romantic show. Tosh having that relationship from World War I is very romantic and emotional, and painful and the loss of someone that young and thinking about what those men went through — those boys went through — it's painful. Torchwood's tone is never risque for the sake of being that. When it's risque, it is always about the story and haivng a little twinkle in your eye.

My favorite Who spinoff is actually the Sarah Jane Adventures. I love how Sarah Jane has actually managed to become sort of a version of the Doctor.

She has her sonic lipstick. He's called the Doctor, he makes people better, that's a running theme across all the adventures in his life... She is like the Doctor, with her team... it's a sunny show. We always film it in the summer. Elisabeth Sladen is amazing. How can a woman look that good? She's got so much energy and vicacity. I think actually it's quite a moral show, and not in a preachy way. It's about what choices do you make, like Doctor Who and how do you live with them and how to stand up for the things you believe in. And there's a cost to things, and Sarah Jane suffers. And how this lonely woman suddenly finds a ready-made family and how brilliant that is

Speaking of which, I was sad to hear that Maria is leaving the show, but I hear a new family is moving in across the street from Sarah Jane?

We are two weeks away from wrapping the shoot. The new family is called the Chandras and their daughter Rani. They bedded down really well as characters. They come in in episodes three and four. It's an imporant story. It's also about what does it mean to Sarah Jane to lose Maria. That loss all plays out in important ways.

Top Julie Gardner image from Ewan and Donabel on Flickr.

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<![CDATA[Gaius Baltar Is The Teflon Scapegoat, James Callis Tells io9]]> We had two chances at Comic-Con to talk to James Callis about his cult following as Battlestar Galactica's Gaius Baltar. The first time, he told us about his amazingleadership secrets, and explained the difference between political and religious leadership. The second time, he talked to us more about the choices he makes in playing Baltar, and what it's like to be Battlestar's "teflon man." Transcript is below.

In the episode "The Hub," Baltar was suddenly much more comic, much more silly. Talking to the Cylon centurion, yelling at the hybrid. Was that a note you received, or something you decided to do?

Only in the sense of, I knew there would be this huge explosion. I'm very much of the school that what I will give with one hand, I will take with the other. So because he's going to look like he's going to die, and he's going to say these dreadful things that he thinks in his mind about, "Hey, I'm absolved and it's okay," that that's so serious, it would throw you if the beginning of this thing was not that way at all. So it was kind of, just trying not to endgame so much. But the material lent itself to being kind of silly.

Do you think Baltar is the guy we're constantly waiting to get hiscomeuppance? And yet he always lands on his feet?

That could be. It could be that way. It's really odd. I actually realize now that I'm so much more fond of him than other people. No, I really care about that man. I feel so sorry for him. But yeah, I suppose on some level, he does subvert your idea about where he's going to end up. And it does look like, the episode's always threatening, "We'll expose you! We'll find you!" Etc., and then somehow like teflon he's squeezed out of it, he's somewhere else.

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<![CDATA[Cosplay Superheroes Want Your Vote]]> When even party politics finds itself dressing up in outlandish outfits and pretending to be a superhero in order to convince grown adults to exercise their democratic right to vote, that's probably a pretty good sign that geeks really have taken over the world. How else to explain the presence of Campaign Boy and Campaign Girl at last week's Comic-Con?

The Democratic Duo - although that really should be with a lower-case "d," as I'm sure neither Campaign Boy nor Campaign Girl would openly endorse either party for fear of swaying your vote - spent last Saturday and Sunday at the convention reminding everyone to do their civic duty this November:

Straight from their headquarters at Campaign.com, the pair has the tools to help Americans exercise one of their greatest superpowers - voting. Campaign Boy and Campaign Girl are armed with information on voter registration, the candidates, and the issues to help voters determine the fate of the universe.

Fate of the universe? What do these two superheroes know about the Obama vs. McCain clash that the rest of us don't?

[Campaign.com]

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<![CDATA[Was This Year's Comic-Con The Big One?]]> It was the con that, it seemed, confounded a lot of people. Press shut out of panels, celebrities turned away from parties, comic publishers vowing never to return and 125,000 fans all in one building for four days without end. Every year, San Diego Comic-Con ends with people griping that it has gotten to be too big and that something has to change, but was this the year that lived up to the complaints?

It's easy to think that this year's SDCC was a poorly-ran, over-attended mess if you've been paying attention to some of the press complaints that have leaked out from the show:

Anyway, we are posting this after midnight because there is no filing room. We were directed to an outlet in the hallway for all our computing needs. We promise to never bitch about the burnt gratis coffee in normal press rooms again.

Wait, sorry; that was just press whining. I meant press complaints:

[A]t Comic-Con, the press pass is essentially a complimentary pass that grants access to nothing that isn't covered by a regular four-day badge. This policy worked fine as recently as four or five years ago, before the crowds hit six figures and there was far less press covering far fewer mainstream events. But when folks from Variety, the L.A. Times and countless other legitimate press outlets who have busy schedules of events and panels to cover are told to stand in line for an hour or two with everyone else just to get in to a panel, it interferes with those outlets ability to cover the event and — by interfering with their ability to do their job — makes them testy, angry and overall unhappy with the show.

It wasn't just those waiting in line who found themselves unhappy with the show, however; con guests weren't so happy, either:

"It's really hard getting into the parties,” explained Colin Ferguson, who plays U.S. Marshal Jack Carter in the Sci Fi series “Eureka.”
Sedan-sized balloons promoting “Fringe” carried this come-on: “Imagine The Impossibilities.” OK, here's one: crossing the Gaslamp, by limo or cattle car, without becoming mired in gridlock. And once you reached party central, you had to run the name-checking, ID-inspecting gauntlet. The list keepers took no chances even, it turned out, if you were a guest of honor.
“With all the restrictions,” said Ferguson, who was due at the EW/SF shindig, “it takes 15, 20 minutes to get to the parties you are supposed to go to.”

While the Washington Post wasn't impressed with the sea of hype ("Comic-Con is all about the buzz. The kind of buzz you get when living in a vacuum," they wrote, despairingly), The Hollywood Reporter was just one of many places to openly wonder whether Comic-Con Jumped The, uh, Fridge?:

There is talk that despite the high numbers of conventiongoers, or maybe in spite of them, Comic-Con as a measure of geek cool may have reached a tipping point.

Critics are pointing to the scheduled appearances by tabloid mainstays Paris Hilton, who will join Thursday night's panel for Lionsgate's "Repo! The Genetic Opera" as well as host a party, and fellow party girl Kim Kardashian, who is supposed to hit DC Comics' party Friday night before appearing at a "Disaster Movie" panel Saturday. When Comic-Con becomes fodder for the Us Weekly crowd, has the event nuked the fridge? Folks wonder.

Sure enough, when Jaime King feels as if there's too much Hollywood hype, then something's definitely out of whack:

Slowly but surely the entertainment community is taking over to promote their projects here even though they have absolutely nothing to do with comics. What's next? A panel for 'Deal or No Deal'?

Comic book retailer Chuck Rozanski foresees disaster:

San Diego is about to lose its crown as the top comics show in America. With fewer than 100 real comics booths left in the entire show, this convention is now a primarily media event... The people on the San Diego committee have been so busy sucking up to Hollywood that they let their core group of comics dealer support wither and die. Is it any wonder that they took the comics characters off of the banners they traditionally place on the lampposts around Sand Diego, and instead have a new motto of “Celebrating the Popular Arts?”

That feeling was compounded by the news that IDW Publishing announcing midway through this year's convention that they won't be at next year's. Publisher Ted Adams explained:

The show has never been a profit center for us. It's a marketing cost. I think it's reasonable to expect that a comics publisher has to have a marketing cost associated with attending Comic-Con. I don't expect it's reasonable to expect that the show is going to be a break-even or a profit center.

(It's worth reading other comic pros' reactions to that news to see a much less downbeat assessment of comic publishers importance at the con.)

Comic-Con International's Director of Marketing David Glanzer tried to respond to some of the criticism in a recent interview:

You know companies sometimes think of our event as a marketing opportunity. And while that’s certainly understandable, we don’t look at our event as a marketing opportunity, we look at our event as much more than that. So if it's just somebody who wants to spend money and take X amount of booths, that isn’t something that we would entertain. We want to make sure we have a diversity of content on the floor and also in programming. This year we have even more programming than we have in the past, and we try to make sure it’s diverse... The decision to stay in San Diego was made knowing that we were going to have to forgo growth. A major part of that reason was because there has been talk of expansion of the convention center... We haven’t seen any movement on an expansion, and that has us very concerned. If nothing happens, as in a groundbreaking or some other solid movement, by 2010, we’re going to have to explore options.

That means we're in for potentially two more years of sold-out passes and Hollywood taking over the con, right? Well, maybe not; movie industry eyes are undoubtedly going to trained on Paramount's big three geek-friendly 2009 releases (Star Trek, GI Joe and the second Transformers movie) to see whether the studio's lack of presence at this year's con affected both buzz and box office. After all, there wasn't a Watchmen-esque Dark Knight presence at last year's con, and that seemed to turn out alright... As comic artist Aaron Alexovich notes, there are other - potentially cheaper - ways to tell (more) people about your project:

The engine behind all this insane expansion is the big Hollywood machine that rattled and churned and got itself twisted around in the direction of “geek culture” a few years ago. Which is great; more attention for the comic world is a good thing. But I can’t help but wonder when the great Hollywood behemoth is going to realize you don’t need to hurl a million dollars into Hall H to sell Watchmen to nerds. Nerds, as it turns out, can occasionally be found on the internet.

Additionally, with so many media-noses out of joint after this year's con (Personally, I thought it was fun to post stories while sitting on the floor of the hallway, but then, I also secretly wanted a fedora with a card in it that said "press," so you can pretty much ignore my opinion), it's not impossible that next year may also see a smaller press turnout, as well. Will 2009 be the year that San Diego Comic-Con begins to move back towards some semblance of comprehensibility for everyone attending?

Ask us again this time next year.

Flickr images by Andy Castro (Signage) and ColorBlindPicasso (crowd).

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<![CDATA[Marvel Brings Con, Good Taste, To Standstill With Fashion Show]]> Yes, I know that we showed you some of the best Comic-Con fan costumes yesterday, but that wasn't the only fashion parade during last week's nerdfest. Marvel Comics - never one to play down a marketing opportunity - held their own fashion show during the con, and we've got the pics to prove it under the jump.

According to Marvel's Director of Merchandising, Damon Nee, the show brought the show to a standstill:

Traffic stopped all around the booth as fans craned their necks to take in the costumes... Well, the models in the costumes.

Maybe people were so stunned by the tackiness that they lost the ability to use their legs? It's definitely a possibility with outfits like these:

That's right. It's the cast of the long awaited What If Marvel's Superheroes Were Played By E!'s The Girls Next Door.

Marvel say that these costumes will be available in time for Hallowe'en this year, with their official letter of apology to signficant others of superhero fetishists who were forced to wear said costumes by their partners being available the next day.

Marvel Fashion Show Recap [Marvel.com]

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<![CDATA[io9 Talks To Ben Browder And Amanda Tapping About Stargate's Legacy]]> We caught up with Stargate stars Ben Browder and Amanda Tapping at the Sci Fi/EW party at Comic-Con, and got a chance to ask them some fun questions. We talked to Browder about what it's like to embody the heroic archetype, and whether he'd ever want to play a supervillain. And Tapping told us the difference between Stargate and her new show, Sanctuary.

We asked Browder if he'd ever appear on Stargate Atlantis, and he hauled producer Brad Wright over to help answer the question. Wright wouldn't make any promises, but did say he hoped to feature Browder in another direct-to-DVD Stargate movie soon.

When we asked Browder how he feels embodying heroic archetypes like Farscape's Crichton and Stargate's Mitchell. He was super modest: "I let someone like Brad write it, and I just say the words. My job, in a lot of ways is the easy job... my job is just the fun part. I get to go out and do the boy stuff and do the fun stuff, I don't think I think about the heroic archetype. That's something the writers take care of, and the directors and the editors."

Browder had some practice being villainous when he was being mind-controlled by Scorpius in Farscape. Would he like to play an out-and-out villain sometime? Yes, he said. "I think it'd be a lot of fun. Now, wearing prosthetics on a full-time basis — that's not fun."

We asked Tapping about the difference between the gadget heavy Stargate and the more low-tech setting on Sanctuary, and she said Sanctuary is much more "steampunk." Actually, the making of Sanctuary is much more high-tech, because it's entirely shot in greenscreen. But there's less technobabble and fewer gadgets, because her character is 157 years old, and she borrows from all different eras. She said it's a bit weird to be shooting in greenscreen all the time, and she gets a "green chromakey headache." But the good news is that the show's art department shows the actors a really good representation of what the scenes will look like when they're done, so they know what they're reacting to.

In Sanctuary, Tapping plays Dr. Helen Magnus, who protects the "abnormals" (the mutants that society has deemed deviations, but who may actually be the next step in human evolution.) So she's sort of like Professor X from the X-Men, except not bald, "and hopefully prettier," she said.

And she confirmed that she'll be in at least a couple more episodes of Stargate Atlantis this season, plus a third direct-to-DVD Stargate movie.

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<![CDATA[Witness The Costumed Awesome Of Comic-Con]]> We tried our best to bring you the highs, lows and news from last week's Comic-Con, but there was one essential part of the experience that we've kept from you... until now. Under the jump, some of the best costumes from the show, courtesy of Maximum PC's "Ultimate Geek Gallery."

It's... a Burger King Joker, I guess? Or perhaps an Emperor Joker? But what with a conference center full of Heath Ledger-alikes, it was nice to see a different take on ol' smiley.
And here's the Joker's Dark Knight nemesis, looking just as impressive as he did with millions of dollars' worth of CGI behind him.
You can just imagine the conversation here, can't you? "Okay, I'm gonna be Arnold Terminator. I'll look bad-ass and have blood all over me. You can be the other guy from T2. Here. Stick this on your hand and dress like a cop."
Dear DC Comics:
This is why a Question movie would look awesome.
Am I the only person who finds this Plastic (Wo)Man strangely sexy? If so, forget I said anything.
He may play a faceless hard-ass in the Halo videogames, but in real life? The Master Chief is a nerd just like you and me.
Hulk Smash! Or, if his plush muscles are anything to go by, maybe he'll just cuddle you to death.
The stars of Star Wars: Episode 2.5: When Those Clones Were Kids.
Sadly, when you tried to open up his chest in real life, it was already full of blood and guts and shit.
While I didn't see any Doctor Mrs. The Monarchs - and shame on all of you for that, collective Comic-Con attendees - this awesome Dr. Henry Killinger (complete with Monarch Henchman) almost made up for it.
No, your eyes really aren't deceiving you; that really is Teela and Evil-Lyn cosying up to the terrifying mascot of Mattel, "Matty". I'm telling you, Matty freaked me out last weekend.
Now that he's lost his main squeeze to a freakily-headed corporate mascot, poor Skeletor has nothing better to do than just hang around the con, heartbroken.
There are two children who are going to grow up to resent their parents. Do you think that when the little girl hits puberty and starts rebelling against her mom and dad, they'll make her wear the Dark Phoenix outfit instead?
You know what makes this Starscream so great? The incredibly happy, smiling face. He may be a murderous killing machine out to enslave humanity, but look at him - He's so cute!
Possibly the best outfits of the entire con - Human Tie Fighters. The only thing that would've made this better would be if someone had thought to decorate the entire con like the surface of the Death Star, so that at the end of Sunday, they could've run around it, while a gang of kids dressed as the Millennium Falcon pretended to shoot at them before shouting "You're all clear, kid! Now let's blow this thing so we can all go home!"

Four Days, Four Hundred Cosplay Photos. Welcome to the Ultimate Geek Gallery [Maximum PC]

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<![CDATA[We Will See Tahmoh Penikett's Dark Side In Dollhouse]]> Tahmoh Penikett plays the only character on Battlestar Galactica who always does the right thing, no matter what. (And he was very happy when we told him that, because apparently people are still mad at Helo for stopping the Cylon plague in season three.) But in Joss Whedon's new show Dollhouse, we're going to get to see a different side to Penikett — a dark side. We caught up with him at Comic-Con and learned the terrible truth about FBI agent Paul Ballard.

So once we hashed out the whole "Helo always does the right thing" meme, which I totally believe, we asked Tahmoh if we were going to see him go darker in Dollhouse. In Dollhouse, Penikett plays Paul Ballard, an FBI agent who is investigating the mysterious "Dollhouse," where you can hire a mindwiped puppet who can be programmed to be anyone you need him/her to be.

Penikett says that unlike Helo, who is a "family man" who's all about his wife and kid, Ballard is a lone wolf, with nobody in his life. Ballard used to be a rising star within the FBI, but his belief in the shadowy mind-erasing Dollhouse has ruined his credibility. He's "hanging on to his job by a shoestring," and the Bureau is disappointed with him.

And Ballard is curious about the Dollhouse and its technology. Could he be curious about it because he'd like to hire an "Active" for himself? Or does Ballard secretly want his own mind erased? Penikett hinted that it may be the latter. Ballard has some things that he wants to forget, and the Dollhouse's technology could help him leave his past behind.

Penikett also says the majority of his scenes in the original Dollhouse pilot are with Eliza Dushku. He's excited about the new pilot, because it's "like getting a second chance... You do a project, you have a timeline, you do a great job, and then suddenly you see another opportunity to basically do a test sequence." This lets creator Joss Whedon do an episode before the pilot and introduce the premise a new way.

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<![CDATA[Eureka's Sheriff Carter Is Codependent Alex Keaton, Star Tells io9]]> Mad-science-ville show Eureka is back on Sci Fi tonight, and we had a chance to talk to star Colin Ferguson and producer Jaime Paglia the other night. Ferguson shared some insights about why straight-and-narrow sheriff Carter might have so many bohemian relatives. Click through to find out what's going to be new and different in Eureka season three.

The first half of my talk with Colin Ferguson got cut off, but it went something like this. I asked him about the fact that Jack Carter's rebellious sister, Lexxie, is coming to town. How is it that the strait-laced Jack has a rebellious daughter and a rebellious sister? Ferguson responded that Jack is actually the rebel — the only conservative one in a family of bohemians. Like Michael J. Fox's character in Family Ties?, I asked. That's exactly how he sees the character: like Alex Keaton, Ferguson said.

I followed up by asking: So is Sheriff Carter sort of a co-dependent figure? He spends a lot of time cleaning up after the messes that everyone else in town makes. Ferguson laughed and said, pretty much. And that's where the video started working, apparently.

Ferguson: Pretty much.

io9: And you're keeping it together for them.

Ferguson: Yeah, I think so. If you look at how he likes to work in town, he's a law guy, but he sort of thinks outside the box, and and I think that's the way it works best, anyway.

io9: And I know it's going to be more funny on Eureka this year? It was darker last year.

Ferguson: Yeah, we're going lighter this year. I think they went really dark last year, and not that it was right or wrong, and now they're like, we're going to go lighter.

io9: One last question. Do you think the show is going to get away from doing homages to things, the way it does now?

Ferguson: I don't know. I think we use that as one of our templates. You sort of have your five or six templates that you go to, and one of them is the serialized aspect of the show, and another one is sort of, people look at their favorite type of movies and they go like, "What's our version of that? What can we do with that?" And that's really fun to act. You can play out all sorts of fantasies.

And then we got to talk to producer Jaime Paglia:

io9: So I understand season three of the show is going to be less dark?

Paglia: Yeah, I think so. Season two, I definitely wanted to do justice to the storyline with Henry, and it was sort of a dark place that he was going to, and we had to sort of push boundaries with that storyline. And we had to, I think, push boundaries in that direction. There are times that we may have gone a little darker than our tone would normally be. To me, if there's a theme for season three, it's renewal. We're renewing old friendships and relationships, and putting to bed some of the past darkness for some of our characters as those demons are kind of dealt with, so getting back to the light side of Eureka was kind of a goal, and it's going to be kind of fun.

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<![CDATA[BSG's Tricia Helfer Answers Our Dorky Sex Robot Questions]]> We were lucky enough to talk with Tricia Helfer, who plays the gorgeous Cylon infiltrator Six on Battlestar Galactica. And we wanted to ask her a question inspired by Charles Stross' new novel Saturn's Children: if the Cylons succeeded in wiping out the human race, would Six feel sad that there was nobody left to appreciate her beauty? Was Six designed to be the most beautiful of the Cylons? This actually turned into an interesting discussion about how Six uses her beauty to attain her objectives on the show, but really wants to be appreciated for her brains.

It's a little hard to hear our question at the start of the clip, but basically we asked Helfer if Six would be sad if she succeeded in wiping out the humans, because then who'd appreciate her beauty? Helfer responded that maybe the other Cylons would still appreciate Six's beauty, but also that Six doesn't gain validation from being admired for her looks. She gets validation from doing her job, and her gorgeous looks are just a means to that end, preserving the Cylon race.

We followed up by asking if maybe whoever created the human-looking Cylons designed Six to be the most beautiful? And she responded that she doesn't think Six is any more beautiful than any of the other Cylons. (Yes, even Dean Stockwell.) But maybe, she conceded, Six is the most glamorous — but that was only because her most important mission was to get on Gaius Baltar's "good side" to get the defense codes. For Six, it was all about the mission.

And Helfer's been very happy to play other versions of Six, such as the rebel Natalie, who are less glamorous and more obviously brainy and badass. She's glad people are finally seeing the strong, competent woman she always thought Six was, instead of being distracted by the big blonde hair and the slinky dress.

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<![CDATA[Sarah Connor Producer Tells io9 The Terminators' Deepest Secrets]]> Josh Friedman is the creator of Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles, one of last season's most interesting scifi shows, complete with time traveling, kickass Terminator fights, and Heathers riffs. Plus, next season, the cast will be joined by Shirley "Garbage" Manson and Busy "Freaks And Geeks" Phillips. We had a chance to sit down with Friedman for a one-on-one talk at Comic-Con, to talk about where the show is going. And he told us the one word you'll never hear on his show.

io9: You've said that season two will feature John Connor stepping up and becoming more of the hero we know he's going to be. How do we build up John Connor without tearing down Sarah Connor?

Friedman: I don't know that you don't. I think, dramatically, when you're looking for conflict, to keep characters always with the same problems and the same attitudes gets boring. Everyone knows what Sarah Connor is, and that the thing that's most important to her is her son. And it's not about making her a good hero or tough or alpha, it's really about how you can be the toughest person around, and [it's still a problem] if your primary relationship, in her case with John, is suffering in some way. She still kicks ass, we have a lot of that, but how important is that if you have a problem in your primary relationship? So it's less about john becoming a hero, and more about John moving away from home and becoming an adult. It's just more problematic when he does that.

io9: We've been wondering. What is this thing with Terminators having names? Like Cromartie? He uses that name in the first episode when he's masquerading as a school teacher, and it becomes his name for the rest of the series.

Friedman: It becomes his name for the rest of the series, for those who need to call him something. Obviously, they don't have real names — it just helps us identify them.

I have something which I've never told anybody, which I will tell you: I am determined to never use the word "Terminator" in the show. I don't like it in the dialogue — it sounds weird to me. I think it was when I was watching The Sopranos, and I realized after five years, that I had never heard the word "Mafia." And finally it was said once, and the guy who says it gets killed. And it was really interesting that they'd never said that word. After our first episode [of Sarah Connor] I realized I never used it in that episode, and I said I'm going to see if I can go without it.

io9: So we know nobody named Connor will die on this show, and they'll never avert Judgment Day. Is the show's suspense mostly around the other characters? Does Brian Austin Green have a target painted on his forehead? Or is more about the relationships?

Friedman: [Laughs] I think partially, it's the relationships. I think when someone says the apocalypse is not going to be averted, well, yes. They're going to try as hard as they can to avert it. [But that's not what the show is really about.] In the first movie... the Terminator's not coming back to stop John Connor because John Connor is going to stop the Apoclaypse. [Connor] is going to save mankind. Skynet is, in a way, a rapid dog chase around the dog park. [The real issue is] will this boy in our show become what he needs to be to save the future? Skynet is probably inevitable.

By sending back a Terminator [Summer Glau] to be with John Connor, you're changing his character inherently, and what does that change him into? And what dos that mean? Is he becoming a different leader in the future? And i think this year we will see more ramifications from his relationship with [Glau's] Cameron. He has sent her back to help and protect, but the intensity of that relationship can't but affect him in the future, and I think that is something that is problematic.

io9: So how does that affect him? Does it make him more emotionless, because he's spending his formative years hanging out with a robot? More cautious, because he's living with a bodyguard?

Friedman: I don't know that those are the only two choices. It may make him more dependent on machines, than the original iteration of John Connor. John and Sarah have completely different attitudes towards Terminators: Sarah hates them, she's like a racist. They come back and try to kill her. [But for John] the function of Terminators in the movies was always as a father figure. Terminator 3 sort of abandoned that family dynamic, and who is this Terminator to John. So I think John has always had a more open idea about what they can do, he's repogrammed some and sent them back because he thinks of them as a little more mutable, which I think is potentially problematic or complicating his attitude to them in the future.

io9: So the show really isn't about stopping Skynet?

Friedman: [It's more about the fact that] we're going to die, what are we going to do from now until then? How are we going to live our lives? that's what the show's about: what are you going to do with your day knowing you're going to die? They think they can stop [Skynet], but we as fans think they're not going to stop it. But hopefully we're interested in watching them try to stop it. And are they going to be in any shape to deal with what happens next?

io9: So one of the most exciting things for me about the early SCC episodes was the Heathers riff, with the hazing and the girl who kills herself. And then it vanished. What happened to it?

Friedman: I was diasppointed. It was mostly cut for length. I was on strike from episode 2 to episode 9 in terms of editing. There were a couple of rough cuts of episodes 2, 3 and 4 when I left. We had shot most of the season, and I did not edit most of them. We had [high school] storylines that extended through most of those episodes. It always ended up being the things that got cut when it went long. I made all the writers watch Brick before we started. I was such a fan of it. High school is dangerous. It's dangerous on that Heathers level, interpersonally, and also it's a scary place. There was no safe place for John. You couldn't say, send him to high school, and have him say: "Mom's off saving the world, and I'm off with my wacky robot sister." The suicide and the blackmailing — I wanted it to be life and death, and I had a plan for it.

io9: So is that stuff gone in season two?

Friedman: This year, it's pretty much gone. For a while anyway. [It's a tough question] Do you cut away from Sarah being chased by a cyborg, to John in English class? We tried to make them kiss each other. We had a Heroes writer on our staff. I said to her, "We're taking the cheerleader, we're putting her on the roof, and we're having her jump. And she's dying." I wanted people to realize it's not going to be a fun place.

io9: Some people ask why is John in high school in the first place? Why isn't he hiding in a bunker?

Friedman: That would be a show where they're not going to learn anything. John Connor is a leader of people, he's not just a guy in a tank. He has to convince people to do stuff. How does that boy learn how to lead? And yet not be so above the radar where it's a problem? He's not a hothouse flower. How does that guy know how to lead people if he's just under his mother's wing all the time? That was how I rationalized it. [At first, I didn't want to have John in school at all.] I just wrestled with it. And then I had a really good plan.

io9: So there's a new love interest for John, and Cameron gets jealous?

Friedman: I'm always going to look at John and who's on one shoulder, and who's on the other shoulder, and what are they whispering to him? There are various triangles. This is a kid that everyone wants a piece of in some way, and everyone wants to influence in some way, and [there's kind of a battle for his ear. And who's going to influence him?

io9: One thing i liked in season one was the focus on the female characters in episodes like the Heathers episode and the "I married a Terminator episode." Is that going to continue?

Friedman: I think it is a feminist show, in a very matter of fact way. Sarah is who she is. Cameron is not technically female, but she's a representation of a female. Shirley Manson is in the show now. She's in a lot of episodes. [At this point, he gestured at Manson, doing another interview, and I realized that I'd been sitting two feet away from her for half an hour without noticing.]

We actually have another character, played by Busy Phillips [from Freaks And Geeks], a character who lives next Sarah who is 8 months pregnant. The actor actually is 8 months pregnant, she is only in 3 or 4 episodes before she gives birth. We really show her body and show her pregnancy, which for me is a really interesting thing. I've taken a lot of flack from people who think she's too pregnant on the show. We have an episode where she's wearing a skirt and a bikini top. And you realize, you never see that on television. You never see pregnant women on television. You see fake pregnant women on television. It's throwing some people off. You see some of the dailies, and people are like, "She's huge." In these scenes with Sarah and John Connor, who are these little dark lean pieces of beef jerky. It's important for people to see that, if you're going to put on the sexy robots, you need to put on other representations of women and the female form. Not for political reasons — I do it because it works on the show, and there's a reason thematically. She's like the alternate version of Sarah Connor, if Sarah wasn't Sarah Connor. She's a single mother, pregnant with a son. She's Sarah, if everything was okay. That's kind of what I wanted to do, and really show how full she is of life and how the other characters are death-oriented. I think this show does work for women, I think it should work more than it does, and I'm pretty sure it will.

io9: Will Busy Phillips be in more episodes after she gives birth?

Friedman: I hope so.

Photo of Josh Friedman by Josie SF.

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<![CDATA[Comic-Con 2008 Wrapup: Get the Big Fat Summary of All the Shinest Things We Saw]]> Comic-Con was psychotic, exhausting and wonderful. We're sorry if you got turned away from our packed io9 panel on "science fiction that can change your life," but we've summarized it to mollify you. More importantly, we've broken down our coverage from Comic-Con into bite-sized, easily-navigated chunks below. Find out what we discovered about everything from the upcoming Watchmen and Terminator movies, to Marvel's most obscure new comic book and what's next for Dr. Horrible.

Want to know about all the exclusive clips we saw of upcoming movies scheduled for next year, plus pore over interviews we did with their directors and stars? Learn more about what to expect from The Day the Earth Stood Still, Terminator 4: Salvation, Watchmen, Tr2n, and Wolverine.

One of our coolest discoveries at Comic-Con was that there was a Bryan Singer-helmed Battlestar Galactica reboot in the works back in 2001, which got derailed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks in the United States. After we posted about that, we got an email from Tom Desanto, exec producer of that suppressed show, who sent us images of the cylons they had created for the 2001 show, which look pretty awesome. We also got a sneak peek at the next 10 episodes of the show, which apparently include a lot of firepower. We also got some face-time with show creator David Eick, and asked James "Baltar" Callas about his leadership secrets.

We got a little hopped up on the reboot of GI Joe, whose dark, near-future TV series Resolute will re-introduce audiences to the super-soldier character of yore. Apparently the budget for the GI Joe flick is bigger than the one for the first Transformers movie.

We got some amazing exclusive interviews, including with the new showrunner for Doctor Who, Steven Moffat. And there were also some sneak looks at the upcoming Who X-mas special from Russel T. Davies.

And we adored hanging out with Matthew Fox, (Jack from Lost), as well as the recruiters at the Dharma Initiative booth.

Plus, we spilled the beans on what's next for Heroes.

In the world of comics, there are new retro developments in the Superman comic, and a really big announcement about a new writer on Batman (yes, it's Neil Gaiman — we are not kidding, mega-fans). You can expect a massive Spider-Man revamp from Marvel, as well as a book based on a Philip K. Dick short story. You can see our full coverage of every single comic book revelation at Comic-Con here.

Probably the coolest upcoming TV show making its way around Comic-Con was Dollhouse, from the brain of Joss Whedon, who also had a special announcement about his web series Dr. Horrible's Singalong Blog. I know it's kind of mean, but we made fun of Knight Rider after hearing way too much about KITT.

Meeting the cast of Fringe, along with show creator JJ Abrams, charmed our socks off and made us a lot less skeptical about this mytho-scifi show about a fearless intelligence agent and her mad scientist sidekicks. We were also pretty excited about everything Stargate, and everything Clone Wars.

And of course, there were a lot of frakkin toys, and we've got the pictures to prove it.

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<![CDATA[Astro Boy Haircuts Give Goku A Run For His Money]]> The Astro Boy booth at Comic Con reshaped the minds of manga fans by remaking their hairstyles into Astro-dos. But besides making over the droves of fans, the booth also showed off a life-size Astro Boy suspended in mid-air, and a few new Astro pictures. Click through to check out the gallery, including a powered-down robot.

The feature film based on the scifi cartoon is supposed to come out in 2009. A lonely scientist, Doctor Tenma, builds Astro Boy to replace his son that died in a tragic accident. Astro grows and begins to fight crime around the world, but his biggest challenge is overcoming robot haters.

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<![CDATA[Exclusive: Matthew Fox Tells io9 How He Played Two Jacks At Once]]> Matthew Fox played two guys in Lost season four: the confident, take-charge Jack on the island, and the haunted, addicted Jack in the future. We got a chance to talk to Fox one-on-one about how he went back and forth between those two Jacks. And also how he's going to play a more "spiritual" Jack in season five. We also talked about the complex relationship between Jack and Locke. Click through for part two of our interview video.

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<![CDATA[New Stargate Worlds Alien Gives Gaters The Come-Hither Look]]> This cast of a sexy new alien from Stargate Words was on display at the Stargate booth at Comic-Con. Stargate Worlds is a new MMO game that connects gamers through an inspired SG-1 universe. If this is the direction of the new video game, sign me up. I can't get enough sexy alien warriors. Click through for the head-to-toe look at our new alien friends, or enemies depending on what side of the Gate you're on.

In Stargate Worlds, you'll be able to form a squad of online friends, or venture out into the Gate-verse on your own. You can also decide whether or not you want to be a good guy or a baddie (myself I'd rather be a soldier over a System Lord). The game will be released December 30, 2008.

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<![CDATA[Who's Responsible For No Star Trek At Comic-Con, Really?]]> Much to everyone's surprise, yesterday's Fringe panel - featuring Star Trek director JJ Abrams and Star Trek writers Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman - didn't include a special sneak preview of next summer's reboot of Space and The Final Frontier. It's not that any such preview had been announced (just the opposite, in fact), but that's not stopping some insiders from calling conspiracy anyway.

Seriously, people: Abrams had even complained about the fact that Paramount wouldn't let him show anything two weeks ago. Did you really think he was joking? Still, Entertainment Weekly suggests that the lack of the hoped-for-despite-everything footage ) might have had something to do with the people behind Fringe:

For days, there had been lots of buzz that executive producers J.J. Abrams (pictured), Roberto Orci, and Alex Kurtzman were going to use the panel to debut a few minutes from Trek (which was directed by Abrams and written by Orci and Kurtzman, and is set for release next May). Zachary Quinto, who plays a young Spock in the new movie was even in attendance. But almost 40 minutes into the session, it seemed certain that Abrams had no intention of unveiling the much-anticipated footage, despite comments from insiders around him who said he actually had three minutes from Trek ready to debut... So what happened? One key source says Fox, the network that will air Fringe, may have nixed Abrams' plan at the very last minute (a Fox spokesman could not be reached late Saturday).

Now, I've got no problem with people blaming Fox for things that are, you know, actually their fault, but this is kind of ridiculous. We'd been told, more than once, that Paramount was going to have no presence here at Comic-Con and not show any footage from their upcoming movies. We've had JJ himself complain about that decision. It's not like we've been given any inclination that Paramount was joking around, and that they were ready to let something slip, and that it's a completely other studio that ruined everything... Sometimes a phaser is just a phaser, media people.

Did Fox nix a 'Star Trek' preview at the 'Fringe' panel? [Entertainment Weekly]

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<![CDATA[Smallville Crammed With Capes In Season Eight]]> Smallville season eight will be even more comic-booky than we suspected, judging from today's panel at Comic-Con. Action Comics writer Geoff Johns will write an episode that introduces some of Superman's most colorful friends from the comics. And it looks like Clark's biggest battle yet could cause a lot of collateral damage. Click through for details and spoilers.

The Smallville producers showed a new season eight trailer, which included footage from previous seasons, but also new footage of Green Arrow, Aquaman, Black Canary and new characters Davis Bloome/Doomsday and Tess Mercer. New clips included Clark getting the stuffing beat out of him in Russia, Chloe saying that she's nothing special, while trying to get away from an attacker, and Chloe and Jimmy together. And Metropolis in ruins. Green Arrow shoots Clark, and then we see an S-pendant in Clark's hand. And Doomsday saying: "There's something out there, and whatever it is, it can kill you."

The big announcement at the Smallville panel was that Geoff Johns will write an episode of the show, introducing the Legion Of Superheroes, Clark's buddies from the 30th and 31st centuries. It's a kind of goofier, more futuristic version of the Justice League, where everybody has "flight rings" that allow them to fly, and most characters have one super-power that's spelled out in his/her name, like Matter-Eater Lad or Lightning Lass.

Also, the producers repeated their previous statements that they would keep the "no tights" rule for Clark, but relax the show's old "no flights" rule. They said they wouldn't rule out a cross-over with fellow CW show Supernatural. Tess Mercer won't just be replacing Lex as head of LuthorCorp, she'll also be Clark's boss at the Daily Planet. Chloe will be developing new powers, and other new attributes, this season. Also, it was hinted that the footage of Metropolis strewn with rubble was the result of Doomsday putting the big crazy smackdown on Clark's ass. Picture of Smallville Comic-Con bag from Seat 42F. [Thanks To Smallville Podcast and Wizard Universe]

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<![CDATA[JJ Abrams Tells io9 How to Make a Monster Awesome]]> After JJ Abrams had finished answering all the official questions about his new series Fringe, and his upcoming Star Trek prequel, I had just one crucial burning question left. About monsters. Abrams is known for being a monster-lover — after all, he helped conceive of Clovie from Cloverfield — and I needed to know just one thing. Here's his answer, in the video above.

What was the blueprint for Fringe? Abrams told reporters earlier that it came from a student film he'd done that was a comedy version of Altered States.

Fringe sounds great and all, but if Abrams really wants to give us something cool, he'll redo that slapstick version of Altered States one day — maybe with a little music? Who doesn't want to see a guy singing about regressing to homo erectus?

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