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Wizard World Chicago 2016 Photos, Part 2: DC Comics Cosplay!

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Suicide Squad!

Who’s killing members of the Suicide Squad? Find out after the break!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time of year again! Anne and I spent this weekend at Wizard World Chicago in scenic Rosemont, IL, where we generally had a blast surrounded by fellow fans of comics and genre TV/movies even though parts of it resemble hard work and our feet feel battle-damaged after three days of endless walking, standing, lining up, shuffling forward in cattle-call formation, and scurrying toward exciting people and things.

In the first of our mandatory cosplay galleries, from the heart of the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center we focus on the ubiquitous citizens of the DC Comics Universe — most, but not all, from the adjunct DC Cinematic Universe, including a special spotlight on a fun, silent skit we saw go down Sunday afternoon in the main lobby, in which Our Heroes from that recent #1 film meet an unstoppable force from another comic-book universe.

In a convention where roughly one out of every five attendees was dressed as Harley Quinn, we were worried about the state of this year’s cosplay, but were happy to run into some inspired choices. First up: the less common but no less celebrated DC heroes and villains:

Wonder Woman!

Wonder Woman! Soon to star in a presumably better DC film.

Dr. Fate!

Dr. Fate has been wielding magic and visiting phantasmagorical dimensions since 1940 and thinks it’s totally unfair that Dr. Strange gets a movie first.

Red Hood!

The Jason Todd version of the Red Hood got top billing in an animated Batman film, so the two of him are pretty satisfied.

Power Girl!

Power Girl takes flight, thanks to skillful use of concealed stilts.

Bombshell Zatanna!

Variant version of Zatanna from DC’s Bombshells relaxes over by the conference rooms.

Penguin!

Gotham‘s Penguin, who needs way more screen time in all future seasons.

Captain Cold!

The classic Captain Cold of my childhood, probably not a favorite with any Wentworth Miller fan clubs.

Raven & Apocalypse!

Raven from the Teen Titans hanging out with Apocalypse, maybe requesting sanctuary at DC after the performance of his own summer film.

DC Villains!

DC Villains united! Luthor, Bane, Reverse Flash, and the Riddler representing for the not-Harley side of evil.

Pause for itty-bitty sampling from the wide, wide, wide world of Harley Quinns. I’m sure 99% of the Harley cosplayers are good people, but we’ve been doing so many cons over the past several years that, unless we’re seeing a multitude of creative variants (cf. Deadpool), we’re having trouble convincing ourselves to take pics of the same two or three costumes over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again.

That said, some Harleys anyway:

Harley & Enchantress!

Harley & Enchantress ruling the dance floor.

Harley & Black Cat!

Villainesses united: movie Harley with Marvel’s Black Cat, still waiting for her turn in some future Spider-Man flick.

Joker & TMI Harley!

Joker and the kind of Harley for which it’s tough to write a caption. Lurking in the background is Uka Uka from the old Crash Bandicoot games.

And then there was that Sunday afternoon showdown, in which the cast of Suicide Squad faced their least nonsensical opponent yet: Negan from The Walking Dead.

Negan v. Suicide Squad!

Um, mild spoilers for the final scene of the Walking Dead season 6 finale, I guess.

Negan v. Suicide Squad!

Deadshot is not impressed; Amanda Waller is already counting how many people she’ll kill on her way out the door; and Joker is unreasonably excited.

Killer Croc & El Diablo!

Our best shot of the underrated Killer Croc and El Diablo. If they had powers for real, Negan would last about fifteen seconds flat.

Waller & Joker!

Before someone got her into this mess, Amanda Waller had been walking around, pushing buttons on a phone, and trying to make people explode. That’s Joker’s kind of woman.

Suicide Squad!

Rick Flag and Slipknot seem awfully smug, like they know something Negan doesn’t.

Suicide Squad!

BAM! Slipknot goes down. Boomerang’s stuffed unicorn lay there like a slug. It was her only defense.

Harley Quinn!

When bodies start hitting the floor, the Harley of another DC Earth watches, grateful they don’t have crossovers like this back home.

Negan V. Harley!

Negan v. Harley: Bats of Injustice: the Final Showdown!

To be continued! Other chapters in this MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Our Jazz Hands Gallery
Part 3: Marvel Comics Cosplay!
Part 4: Star Wars and Sci-Fi Cosplay!
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay!
Part 6: Objects of Affection
Part 7: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]



Wizard World Chicago 2016 Photos, Part 3: Marvel Comics Cosplay!

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Gamora + Nebula!

Gamora and Nebula, like the Thelma and Louise of a new generation.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time of year again! Anne and I spent this weekend at Wizard World Chicago in scenic Rosemont, IL, where we generally had a blast surrounded by fellow fans of comics and genre TV/movies even though parts of it resemble hard work and our feet feel battle-damaged after three days of endless walking, standing, lining up, shuffling forward in cattle-call formation, and scurrying toward exciting people and things.

In Part One, we gave you great moments in comic-con jazz hands. In Part Two, DC Comics cosplay, including a special performance by the Suicide Squad. In this chapter: it’s Marvel’s turn to represent.

Okay, first order of business: a few token Deadpools. We saw far fewer Deadpool variants at WWC than we did at all our previous 2016 conventions, even those with a fraction of the attendance figures. Either we’ve passed Peak Deadpool Costumes, or he’s begrudgingly abdicated his cosplay throne to Harley Quinn.

Senor Deadpoolito!

Senor Deadpoolito, pushing the Merc with a Mouth’s chimichanga worship to its extreme logical conclusion.

Toxin + Carnagepool!

Carnagepool lurking the show floor with Toxin, offspring of normal Carnage.

Deadpool Dancing!

Our escalator view of a Deadpool reigning on the dance floor.

Spider-Men!

An almost subliminal Deadpool undercover with a trio of Spider-Men.

Marvel Bunnies!

Another Deadpool was one of six Marvel Bunnies, who I trust are no relation to DC’s own Hoppy the Marvel Bunny.

…and the rest:

Wolverine and Friend!

We geezers here at MCC always run across one or more costumes representing characters that are better known to the kids these days but strangers to us. If you recognize Wolverine’s new friend, who’s really not Storm, please feel free to educate us in the comment section. We have a long-standing policy of appreciating lessons about new universes.

Gambit + Mary Katherine Gallagher!

Another X-Man changing up partners: Gambit with SNL’s super-awkward Mary Katherine Gallagher.

Tony Stark!

Tony Stark with his favorite partner: booze. (He also had a light-up arc reactor under his shirt, which of course blinked at the wrong moment.)

Iron Man + Steve Rogers!

A more heroic duo: first-appearance Iron Man and WWII reject Steve Rogers.

Loki Cap + Thor!

Old friends Cap and Thor teaming up with Loki.

Doc Ock + Punisher!

Doctor Octopus and the Punisher: a good-looking match made in nowhere ever.

Elektra!

Elektra needs no partner and will stab you for asking. Unless you’re Matt Murdock in doting pushover mode.

Cable!

Cable would like you to meet his favorite partners: THESE GUNS. (Seriously, though, this is the best Cable cosplay I’ve ever seen.)

To be continued! To be continued! Other chapters in this MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Our Jazz Hands Gallery
Part 3: Marvel Comics Cosplay!
Part 4: Star Wars and SF Cosplay!
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay!
Part 6: Objects of Affection
Part 7: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]


Wizard World Chicago 2016 Photos, Part 4: Star Wars and Sci-Fi Cosplay!

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Palpatine for Emperor!

“Vote for me and I vow there shall be a grand inquisition regarding the contents of Mon Mothma’s email inbox!”

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time of year again! Anne and I spent this weekend at Wizard World Chicago in scenic Rosemont, IL, where we generally had a blast surrounded by fellow fans of comics and genre TV/movies even though parts of it resemble hard work and our feet feel battle-damaged after three days of endless walking, standing, lining up, shuffling forward in cattle-call formation, and scurrying toward exciting people and things.

In this episode: Star Wars cosplay! Always a popular choice, especially now that The Force Awakens gave fans several dozen more characters to choose from, though they’re really only basing costumes on three or four of them at best. Also, we welcome envoys from other science fiction universes who insist there’s more to life than lightsabers and cutesy, merchandisable aliens.


Rey v Maultrooper!

Rey and Artoo recoil at the sight of Palpatine and his entourage, including a Maultrooper and plain white Stormtrooper.

Wicket + Mandalorians!

This Ewok, Tusken Raider, and two Mandalorians will be among the first exiles when Palpatine is elected and has an infinite wall built around the entire galaxy.

Jedi vs. Sith!

Friday gave us the largest cosplay battle of the weekend: Jedi vs. Sith and bounty hunters.

X-Jedi!

A Jedi with double-bladed lightsaber and a Sith with dual evil lightsabers remind Wolverine and Phoenix of the days when they used to traipse around outer space and meet interstellar teams like the Starjammers and the Imperial Guard. So the X-Men are basically sci-fi heroes.

Maz Kanata Family!

The Star Wars family that cosplays together: Chewbacca, old Han Solo, li’l Rey, and a nearly actual-size Maz Kanata.

BB-8 + Rey!

An even tinier Rey resents attending the con with the world’s smallest sentient BB-8.

…and that was just the Star Wars side of things. Sci-fi lives on in other universes, but to lesser degrees on the Wizard World Chicago show floor.

Bird of Enterprise!

The only Star Trek person, place, or thing we caught on camera was this section of the Next Generation bridge. Seated at the helm is…a Bird of Prey? (If you recognize it, Viewers at Home, mind giving us a hint?)

Doc Brown & Marty McFly!

With three legendary actors from Back to the Future on the guest list, it goes without saying we saw a 10,000% increase in Doc Brown and Marty McFly costumes over last year. For our money, this father/son duo won the category.

Mulder & Scully!

Mulder and Scully represent on behalf of thousands of fans who turned out for the very special X-Files cast reunion.

Deckard + Pris!

Deckard and Pris from Blade Runner, wishing like the rest of us that Harrison Ford would come within 1000 yards of one of these shows someday before the end of the world.

TARDIS!

Doctor, Shmoctor — the TARDIS is the show’s one true star!

We end this section with a trilogy of sci-fi comedy hand signals, two of them circling back around to the Star Wars universe:

Pizza + Dink!

Pizza the Hutt and a Dink from Mel Brooks’ Spaceballs.

"Matt the Radar Technician"

“Matt the Radar Technician”, whose true identity was blown in one of the better SNL skits from last season.

Bill & Ted!

Most excellent time travelers Bill S. Preston, Esq., and Ted “Theodore” Logan are totally WYLD STALLYNZ!

To be continued! Other chapters in this MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Our Jazz Hands Gallery
Part 2: DC Comics Cosplay!
Part 3: Marvel Comics Cosplay!
Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay!
Part 6: Objects of Affection
Part 7: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]


Wizard World Chicago 2016 Photos, Part 5: Last Call for Cosplay!

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Aku Aku and Uka Uka!

Your greeters for today: Uka Uka and Aku Aku, the sentient floating voodoo power masks from ye olde Crash Bandicoot series.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time of year again! Anne and I spent this weekend at Wizard World Chicago in scenic Rosemont, IL, where we generally had a blast surrounded by fellow fans of comics and genre TV/movies even though parts of it resemble hard work and our feet feel battle-damaged after three days of endless walking, standing, lining up, shuffling forward in cattle-call formation, and scurrying toward exciting people and things.

In this episode: all the cosplay that’s fit to post. One last round of WWC 2016 costumes before we move on to other aspects of the con and site traffic resumes its normal levels once I stop mentioning cosplay. And now, we rejoin cosplay, already in progress — from the worlds of animation, video games, movies, TV, and Cool-Looking Characters We Don’t Recognize.


Leslie Knope!

Leslie Knope from Parks & Rec. Several people who didn’t recognize her (or the handiwork of JJ’s Diner) kept asking where she found waffles. In that convention center, attendees get desperate for any sign of real food.

Sadness!

Sadness from Inside Out, whom we were paradoxically happy to meet.

Inside Out!

Four of the five main cast from Inside Out. Presumably Fear is off hiding in an empty conference room.

Serpentor!

Serpentor in summer wear! He was the only cosplayer who gave us a business card. His official page features more faithful, old-school Serpentor togs.

Pikachu!

Pikachu begs you to put down the phone and make with the hugs.

Kings Mascot!

The mascot from Kings Bowling, one of several businesses over in MB Financial Park, along with a movie theater, a candy shop, and a handful of restaurants. Fun special secret: any of those places will validate your convention center parking with a purchase, even a small one. So now you know for next year!

Dr. Evil!

Dr. Evil, Mini-Me, and Mr. Bigglesworth organized their own Axis of Evil ride-along.

Kirito!

Kirito, hero guy from Sword Art Online.

Five Nights at Freddy's!

Two of several creepy critters on hand from Five Nights at Freddy’s.

Creepshow!

Major points for originality: E.G. Marshall’s crotchety cockroach victim from the final segment of Stephen King’s Creepshow.

Negan + Hunter!

Negan from The Walking Dead, and the big-game hunter that I thought was a historical figure my wife might recognize may actually be Van Pelt from Jumanji. (Special thanks to Ray in the comments and Amanda on the WWC Facebook group for having better memories than mine.)

Sheriff Rick!

Anne and I thought this was Abbie Mills from Sleepy Hollow, but she’s actually cosplaying Walking Dead‘s Rick Grimes.

Queen of the Con!

I have this lovely dress labeled in my notes as “Queen of the Con”, but it’s actually Princess Luna from My Little Pony. (Special thanks to Johanna over at the WWC Facebook group for remedying my ignorance on this one.)

Lorne + Illyria!

Lorne and first-appearance Illyria from TV’s Angel. They were fellow fans waiting in line to see Christian Kane, and were thankfully patient with me when I wouldn’t stop gushing over her makeup. I like to think Andy Hallett would’ve approved.

Strongbad + Jessica Rabbit!

While I was waiting in line for a photo op, famous thespian Christopher Lloyd wandered out into the open to make a phone call. Strongbad and Jessica Rabbit couldn’t believe their eyes, either.

Holy Grail!

Their name: the cast of Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Their quest: WWC cosplay. The air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow: personally, I don’t see what that has to do wi*THUNK*

Cobra Kai Johnny!

William Zabka IS Johnny Lawrence IN The Karate Kid! Because COBRA KAI NEVER DIES!

Dr Henry Jones Sr!

Dr. Henry Jones, Senior, very happy that when he nearly died in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, at least his son didn’t stab him with a lightsaber.

Audrey II!

If you’re missing any friends who attended Wizard World Chicago, you might want to check inside Audrey II from Little Shop of Horrors.

Chippendale Chris Farley!

Points for originality and boldness: Chris Farley’s one-time Chippendale dancer from Saturday Night Live.

Shinoa + Eroshima

Grand finale: anime for the youngsters out there! Shinoa Hīragi from Seraph of the End; and Enoshima Junko and li’l Monokuma from Dangan Ronpa.

(Special thanks to my son for naming assistance with a few of these. Um, obviously.)

To be continued! Next time: something besides costumes. Other chapters in this MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Our Jazz Hands Gallery
Part 2: DC Comics Cosplay!
Part 3: Marvel Comics Cosplay!
Part 4: Star Wars and SF Cosplay!
Part 6: Objects of Affection
Part 7: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]


Our HorrorHound Indy 2016 Photo Parade

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Chris Sarandon!

Prince Humperdinck helps us workshop our Princess Bride dream musical.

Saturday marked our third trip to HorrorHound Indy, an annual Indianapolis convention in honor of the scary, bloody, icky, haunting, stabbing, disturbing, black-garbed aspects of pop culture. The folks at HorrorHound Magazine orchestrate the festivities free of Stormtroopers and Harley Quinns so loyal horror fans can enjoy a themed geek space of their own. Much of the celebrated works are Not Our Thing, but so many talented performers with broad resumes have dabbled in those nightmare worlds that we’ve been surprised how often we run across intersections with our own favorite universes.

For example, pictured above: Chris Sarandon! Horror fans know him as the head vampire from Fright Night and a cop from the first Child’s Play, but upstanding fans of The Princess Bride know him as evil Prince Humperdinck, and my son knew him as the speaking voice of Jack Skellington from The Nightmare Before Christmas and the Halloweentown sequences in the various Kingdom Hearts games. He was also in an episode of Deep Space Nine, our favorite Trek series, but that’s been a while and I can’t remember if I should mention it or not.

(Pausing here for ax extremely rare MCC CONTENT WARNING: at least two of the following images might be considered NSFW at more sensitive companies, even though they’d earn a PG rating by practical MPAA standards, but they’re each too memorable to skip, and longtime MCC readers might appreciate the, uh, imaginative detour one of them takes. Viewer patience is advised and appreciated.)

One of this year’s top performers in our books: Academy Award Nominee Brad Dourif, whom you may remember from such roles as Billy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Grima Wormtongue in The Lord of the Rings, the scientist who tampered in God’s domain in Alien Resurrection, a serial-killer Betazoid in Star Trek: Voyager (a true highlight of season 1), psychic killer Luther Lee Boggs in the X-Files episode “Beyond the Sea” (the one where Scully’s dad died), and about a zillion other abnormal guys here and there and everywhere. Some of those memorable parts fit into HorrorHound’s jurisdiction, but as the voice of Chucky the world’s stabbiest doll, he was the anchor of a very special Child’s Play reunion that brought several cast members (e.g. Sarandon) from virtually every installment of the series to date.

Brad Dourif!

Awww, it’s so cute! Chucky’s trying to do jazz hands!

HorrorHound always does an impressive job of creating cast reunions with their guest lists. One of this year’s oddest choices was 1986’s alien-bug-possessed-zombie B-movie Night of the Creeps, whose title I recall seeing listed pretty often in TV Guide‘s premium-cable section back in the day. One of those cast members holds a very special place in my wife’s heart: Allan Kayser, best known to ’80s kids as Bubba from TV’s Mama’s Family — possibly a more fondly considered show here in the Midwest, but I’ll confess I watched more than my share of episodes. I’d be really surprised if Anne hasn’t seen every last one of ’em.

Allan Kayser!

Call it a guilty pleasure if you must, you ELITIST, but he was absolutely a pleasure to meet.

I can count the number of famous musicians I’ve met on one hand, but one such gent met HorrorHound’s invitational criteria. Before he was in Repo! The Genetic Opera, Nivek Ogre was the frontman for Skinny Puppy, one of the industrial rock bands in regular rotation on my cassette decks during my college years. Discordant electronics over martial drumbeats, oblique lyrical shards rendered through eerily distorted vocals, condemning pro-war groupthink and advocating for animal-rights activism, Skinny Puppy were one of the most challenging rock acts you never found on local radio or in heavy rotation on MTV. There’s an outside chance you might’ve heard about that time they sued the American government for using Skinny Puppy bootlegs to torture Guantanamo inmates.

Nivek Ogre!

Today? Super nice guy, who taught me life after age 50 ain’t all bad.

On a whim we tossed in one more photo guest: Michael Rooker! The guy who draws massive crowds thanks to both The Walking Dead and Guardians of the Galaxy was already memorable to me from such films as Cliffhanger and Mallrats, so we figured why not. When we asked him if we could do jazz hands and then took our positions, he responded, “Yeah! Here’s my jazz hands!” and…yep, saw that one coming.

Michael Rooker!

Remember, On Golden Pond got a PG rating with elderly Katharine Hepburn flipping someone the bird, so we’re not exactly in mature-readers territory here.

Fifteen or twenty other guests of varying levels of fame had folks crowding into the narrow hallways of that one Marriott on Indianapolis’ east side that hosts most of our city’s smaller geek cons. We didn’t have the budget or time or breadth of slasher-flick fandom to delve any deeper in, but those we did meet were each awesome in their own ways. And sometimes when you meet too many awesome people in a row, your system can’t handle it and you have to shut down for a while. We tried to stop just short of crossing that line and giving ourselves awesomeness breakdowns.

Dead Fan!

Xander Berkeley fan is down! REPEAT, XANDER BERKELEY FAN IS DOWN!

As you’d expect, the show floor was covered in fascinating objects, merchandise, handicrafts, and used goods. Much of it was bleeding, oozing, menacing, and disgusting, but a few keepers caught our eyes and wouldn’t let go.

Raiders of the Lost Ark masks!

Creature Revenge Studios makes the best kind of Nazi masks, from that PG-rated family classic Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Salacious Crumb!

Anne tries on a life-size Salacious Crumb puppet nearly as tall as she is.

Elm Street House!

The Nightmare on Elm Street series was a staple of my occasionally warped childhood, as captured in this Freddy Krueger clipfest dollhouse.

Pumpkin Thing!

Mike and Mr. Clarke from Stranger Things would appreciate this pumpkin starring John Carpenter’s The Thing, the intricate handiwork of Ian’s Pumpkin Carvings.

Deadworld Chips!

Once upon a time, Deadworld was a late-’80s black-and-white zombie comic published by plucky indie Caliber Press. Now it’s a line of potato chips and zombie sodas. I have no idea how that happens.

And now, the most important part of every convention write-up: costumes! HorrorHound attendees aren’t as heavily into the cosplay scene as our usual large-scale cons, but a few inspired designers and models slip into the mix and represent for their favorites with panache.

Evil Priest!

With creepy contacts disguising his life signs, Mola Ram’s second cousin would stop near other statues, hold still for a few minutes, and wait for passing fans to look stumped as to whether or not he was alive. And it worked!

Leatherface!

Leatherface, natch.

House of 1000 Corpses!

Captain Spaulding and Otis from Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses.

Trick 'r Treat Sam!

Sam from 2007’s Trick ‘r Treat.

Knight!

This valiant knight has traveled a long way from the fabled homeland of Gen Con.

Scooby Gang!

Team cosplay done smart: if your group is short a key player, do like the Scooby Gang and come up with an in-story reason why.

Holtzmann!

Finally, we met a HOLTZMANN! The whole thing was worth it, even if all the actors had called in sick.

…and that’s the HorrorHound 2016 that was, at least for this old-fashioned couple. Here’s hoping next year’s show is even better, preferably in a larger venue with ample elbow room and parking. Maybe it’s a paradox to dream of happier times for a place where nightmares come to thrive, but here we are. We are large, we contain multitudes, and sometimes those multitudes are inclusive to squares like us and to gentlemen named Bubba.


Cincinnati Comic Expo 2016 Photos #1: Cosplay!

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Dick Tracy and Breathless Mahoney!

Gracing our presence on Saturday were Dick Tracy and Breathless Mahoney, from that one Warren Beatty film. (No, not Bulworth.)

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s convention time yet again! This weekend my wife Anne and I have driven two hours southeast of Indianapolis to attend a show we’ve never done before, the seventh annual Cincinnati Comic Expo. In the past she and I have talked about trying cons in other Midwest cities, but the Expo is our first time venturing out to Ohio for one. In addition to proximity and complete lack of schedule conflict with anything else we had going on, CCE’s guest list includes a pair of actors we missed at previous cons who represented glaring holes in one of her themed autograph collections. With her birthday coming up in a few weeks, which usually means a one-day road trip somewhere, we agreed this would count as her early celebration.

But first and foremost as usual: cosplay! Presenting a showcase of all the costumes we photographed during our hours walking through and around the exhibit hall on Friday and early Saturday. So many of these were wonderful character choices that it was impossible for me to point to any one, two, or ten of them and say, “I loved this one most!” Regardless: enjoy the gallery!

SECTION ONE: MARVEL AND DC PRESENT!

Squirrel Girl!

There’s exactly one Marvel super-hero comic that my wife reads each month and that comic is Ryan North and Erica Henderson’s amazing colossal Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, and so Squirrel Girl and Tippy get to go first.

Sam Wilson, Captain America!

If you haven’t kept up with comics events from the last few years, you may be confused at the sight of Sam Wilson, Captain America. If Chris Evans ever retires, I would pay double ticket prices if Anthony Mackie would follow this fan’s lead.

Miss America!

Miss America, from Gillen and McKelvie’s Young Avengers, still waiting her turn for a solo series someday.

Mysterio!

Mysterio, one of the classic Spidey villains who hasn’t jumped to the big screen yet. I’m not sure how well his eyehole worked for him, but he made a clever move of attaching a tiny electric fan inside his helmet.

Typhoid Mary!

At every con there’s always at least one cosplayer whose character eludes the databases inside my aging brain. I know Typhoid Mary, a Daredevil villain dating back to the ’80s, but if anyone recognizes her companion, please cure my ignorance and school me in the comments below. Much obliged!

Frost Lord Rocket!

The family that cosplays together: Star-Lord and Rocket Raccoon from Guardians of the Galaxy with Killer Frost from TV’s The Flash.

Deadman!

Deadman welcomes you to the world of the really living!

Katana!

Katana from Suicide Squad, waiting patiently in Karen Fukuhara’s autograph line.

Raven!

Raven from the Teen Titans!

* * * * *

SECTION TWO: MANDATORY DEADPOOL VARIANTS!

Gwenpool and Static Shock!

Gwenpool and Static Shock invited me in on this one. Pretend I’m a grateful Dakota civilian they just saved.

Piratepool and Lady Piratepool!

Maybe you celebrate only on September 19th, but for Piratepool and Lady Piratepool, every day is National Talk Like a Pirate Day.

StanLeePool!

In honor of Cincy Comic Expo’s biggest guest of honor, StanLeePool hopes you’re interested in his new line of Excelsior Chimichangas.

* * * * *

SECTION THREE: STAR WARS!

To its credit, Cincy had a bigger turnout of Star Wars fans than any other con we’ve attended in 2016.

Leia and Kylo Ren!

General Leia Organa and Kylo Ren, lovingly reunited mother and son in a lighter timeline.

Skiff Guards!

Skiff Guard and Klaatu, if I recall my old action figures correctly. One of them said hi and recognized us from the Ian McDiarmid/Ray Park photo-op line at this year’s Indiana Comic Con.

Chewbacca and Mandalorians!

Chewbacca and a pair of Mandalorians hang out at one of the con’s extra-large Star Wars dioramas.

Sandtroopers!

Sandtroopers think it’s adorable when normal Stormtroopers try to fit in, only to be the first to complain about dying of thirst in the desert.

Biker Scouts!

Biker Scouts escorting a pair of distracted Wookiees who can’t believe Stan Lee is here.

Jawa!

UTINNI!

* * * * *

SECTION FOUR: GAMING! TV! MOVIES!

Bioshock Infinite!

I’m currently two-thirds of the way (I think?) through Bioshock Infinite, up to the part where I’m wandering the large marketplace on the way to Comstock’s mansion and a blue ghost is leading me to revealing flashbacks and those disturbing Lutece twins. Booker DeWitt and Elizabeth showed up here for me at exactly the right time, and were careful not to blow any spoilers.

Abby Ghostbuster!

Abby from the Ghostbusters would like to remind a Holtzmann-obsessed internet that the new movie had other worthy characters in it too, you know.

Sephiroth!

I always brake for Final Fantasy characters like Sephiroth, this time wielding a lightsaber instead of his usual Masamune. Now I want to hear Michael Giacchino compose an homage to “One Winged Angel”.

Green Power Ranger!

Yamato Tribe Knight Burai, DragonRanger from Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger. Or to you average Americans, the Green Power Ranger.

Dalek!

Most convention Daleks are either stationary statues or remote control rigs. This Dalek, on the other hand, was fully sentient and prepared to AM-BU-LATE.

Luna Lovegood!

Luna Lovegood, ready for her seven-book spinoff series or Broadway debut, whichever is easier.

(Special thanks to my son for naming assistance with the most obvious one.)

Click here for the exciting conclusion! With more photos, stories, comics creators, and the tale of how I nearly killed a living legend!


The Dashing Designs of “Downton Abbey”

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Lord and Lady Grantham!

One of Lady Grantham’s many splendid dresses accompanies the military suit Lord Grantham wore that time he thought he was about to go sail off and win World War I single-handedly.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s convention time yet again! This weekend my wife Anne and I have driven two hours southeast of Indianapolis to attend a show we’ve never done before, the seventh annual Cincinnati Comic Expo. With her birthday coming up in a few weeks, which usually means a one-day road trip somewhere, we agreed this would count as her early celebration.

Full disclosure: the Cincinnati Comic Expo was only one of our two primary objectives that weekend. The con didn’t open till 3 p.m. Friday afternoon, leaving us time to start the weekend with our other, eagerly anticipated stop: the Taft Museum of Art, temporary home of a traveling exhibit for fans of that fascinating, frustrating, elegant hit TV series Downton Abbey.


Taft Museum of Art!

The Taft Museum is on the east side of downtown Cincinnati, several blocks past the Duke Energy Convention Center. Just convenient enough for us, really.

The museum was once a mansion, built in 1820 and changing hands only twice before its final residents — the half-brother and sister-in-law of President William Howard Taft — had it reconfigured into a museum, open to the public since 1932, with its most recent major renovation completed in 2004. Special features include an underground parking garage (free but limited space), a restaurant so exclusive that reservations are required at least three days in advance, and a selection of permanent exhibits from assorted points in world history. On a Friday afternoon, the restaurant was full and the rest of the place was packed with a fervent crowd, at least 98% of whom were older and better dressed than we were.

Antique Mirror!

HEY, MAW! CHECK OUT THIS HERE ANCIENT MIRROR WHAT ROYALTY USED FER CHECKIN’ THEIR BEJEWELERY!

Seriously, a bevy of Red Hat Society ladies alone put us to shame, but I’m fairly certain we were the only middle-class folks in the house, apart from one security guard who recognized my shirt as comics-related, didn’t know Atomic Robo, but knew what IDW is. Sometimes we meet fellow geeks in the most unexpected places.

Samples of the permanent exhibits:

Double Reliquary!

This 14th-century double reliquary is one of many intricate Catholic artifacts in their collection.

Qing Pieces!

Several rooms contain Qing dynasty pieces, an oddly specific yet impressive specialization.

Qing Pottery!

In my opinion this pottery was the best of that collection. The Qing king, as it were.

Europa and the Bull!

Their art galleries include an original Whistler, a few by Gainesborough, and William Turner’s unfinished “Europa and the Bull”.

Belmont Murals!

Before the Tafts moved in, in 1851 the previous owner commissioned a series of landscape murals by painter Robert S. Duncanson.

One other temporary exhibit was on hand, a 17-by-13-foot map of 18th-century London scheduled through November 6th. Several travelers who’ve been to Europe marveled at the details, comparing notes with each other and noting which areas they recall versus which ones were rather different 300 years ago.

London Map!

Meanwhile, we comparatively Amerocentric homebodies tried to see how many pop-culture hot spots we recognized. (Buckingham! The Tower of London! The Thames! Whitechapel!)

“Dressing Downton: Changing Fashion for Changing Times” was previously on display at Chicago’s Driehaus Museum, but we failed to fit it in our schedule during their time frame. Neither Anne nor I are dedicated followers of fashion, but those beguiling, beleaguered Granthams and their beloved castle combined history and must-see TV in a way that was just enough to entice us to come peruse the collection in Cincinnati, which is 60-90 minutes closer to us than Chicago. If you watched all six seasons of Downton Abbey you might recognize certain outfits from specific episodes or arcs. If not, wall plaques provide context both in history and in series.

Samples from those two dozen outfits that made TV history come alive:

Dowager Countess!

The Dowager Countess welcomes you. Emmy Award Winner Dame Maggie Smith’s character is naturally first and foremost.

Lady Mary!

A few dresses come from the refined Lady Mary collection.

Edith Crawley!

Meanwhile, someone put Edith in the corner. Kind of a shame, yet apropos.

Footmen!

One of the footman uniforms as worn by William, Jimmy, Albert, and of course Thomas, the most complicated footman in TV history.

Sir Richard Carlisle!

Remember that time when Mary’s erstwhile suitor Sir Richard Carlisle wore a tweed suit to go fox hunting and nearly drowned in his own sweat? Good times.

Lady Rose and Jack Ross!

Lady Rose and Jack Ross, the daring duo who shocked the family with the most dangerous modern concept of all: live jazz!

Shirley MacLaine!

Many guest stars graced Downton’s halls over the years (Paul Giamatti! Charlie Cox! the guy from the Divergent movies!), but none owned the scenery quite like Academy Award Winner Shirley MacLaine as Cora’s mom.

For anyone who loved the exhibit, the Taft’s cramped gift shop offered a line of souvenirs such as history books, coffee table tomes, scarves, hats, and so forth.

Lady Anne!

A spot of early morning cosplay for Lady Anne, then.

We were aware that this was the final weekend for “Dressing Downton” at the Taft. What we didn’t know till after we purchased our advance tickets is that the exhibit will return to the public on October 15th for a three-month run at the History Museum of South Bend, in our own home state of Indiana. It’s just as well, though — due to differences in road design, Cincinnati is actually closer to us than South Bend is, as the car speeds. Regardless, we also appreciated the chance to visit the Taft and would recommend it to anyone sightseeing in Cincinnati. (Maybe for next year’s con weekends they can show off some nice Doctor Who period costumes. Just a thought, if they don’t mind having more people like us around.)

* * * * *

The preceding entry was Part Three of a six-part MCC miniseries covering our two-day visit to Cincinnati, September 24-25, 2016. Other chapters in the series are/will be linked below for reference. Thanks for reading!

Part 1: Cincinnati Comic Expo 2016 Photos #1: Cosplay!
Part 2: Cincinnati Comic Expo 2016 Photos, Part 2 of 2: Who We Met and What We Did
Part 4: [coming soon]
Part 5: [coming soon]
Part 6: [coming soon]


Hoosier Homecoming Photos #3: Bicentennial Cosplay!

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Abraham Lincoln!

True history: li’l Abraham Lincoln grew up from age 7 to age 21 in southern Indiana, and our fair state will never let anyone forget it.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

On October 15th, downtown Indianapolis hosted a very special convention of sorts. The “Hoosier Homecoming” was a celebration held at the Indiana State House in honor of Indiana’s 200th birthday, with a host of well-known local faces in attendance, an opportunity for self-guided tours of the State House, and the closing ceremonies to the Indiana Torch Relay, a 37-day event in which a specially lit torch — not unlike the Olympics’ own, but inspired by the torch on our state flag — traveled through all 92 Indiana counties by various transportation methods until its final stop in Marion County at the Homecoming.

I mentioned in a previous chapter our mutual impression that the Homecoming was basically like our other conventions — one large building, famous guests, vendors selling wares, a main stage with events, musical performances by singers you don’t know, and so on. And it wouldn’t be a true convention without creative costumes. The State House grounds weren’t overflowing with them, nor were attendees actively encouraged to dress up in the brochures, but a handful of volunteers and Indiana history superfans added to the ambience and in a couple of cases went with super-obscure characters that stumped us until they educated us. Usually that’s the job of anime fans.

(Longtime MCC readers may be shocked and relieved to know we saw exactly zero Deadpool variants hanging around. That’s clearly where the convention similarities end.)


Madam CJ Walker!

At right is business owner and philanthropist Madam CJ Walker, reputedly the first self-made female millionaire in America. In 1910 she moved her company to Indy and lived here herself for six years. Her legacy and impact live on in a number of fashions, including an eponymous theater. At left is…a friend?

Civil War reenactors!

Civil War reenactors: never hold a history fair without them. The vintage rifles were a bonus.

Civil War, Volunteer Indiana Regiment!

We questioned the wisdom of wearing Confederate togs until the scholarly gentleman explained to us that in the Civil War there was indeed a Volunteer Indiana Regiment whose men wore grey uniforms. I can only imagine the battlefield confusion.

History cosplay!

We regret missing this speaker’s identity, though my first guess is Solomon Kane. As we passed by, he talked to his audience about printer’s ink back in the day.

[UPDATED 10/18/2016: The above costume is Elihu Stout, noted as publisher of the first newspaper in Indiana. Extra-special thanks to Bill McCleery for the assist.]

Governor William Hendricks!

Here’s a deep, deep dive into Indiana history: Governor and Mrs. William Hendricks. His gubernatorial term from 1822 to 1825 would be the last served in our original state capital of Corydon near the Kentucky border, before our government was relocated on his watch to the central city of Indianapolis.

tiny cosplayers!

Tiny cosplayers from a stage performance we missed, making history extra adorable.

suffragette!

Suffragette in the House! Suddenly more relevant than ever.

To be continued! Other chapters in this six-part MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Adventures in Local Government
Part 2: The Indiana Bicentennial Torch Relay Finale
Part 4: Notes from the Office of the Governor of Indiana
Part 5: The Art of the Indiana State House
Part 6: The Indiana Bicentennial Bonus Bric-a-Brac Bonanza



Halloween Stats 2016: Rattling Sabers at Absent Neighbors

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David S. Pumpkins!

Oddly, I never took a single Halloween-related photo this year, so instead please enjoy this nearly irrelevant salute to David S. Pumpkins before he changes into his Thanksgiving gear.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: each year since 2008 I’ve kept statistics on the number of trick-or-treaters brave enough to approach our doorstep during the Halloween celebration of neighborhood unity and beneficent snack donation. I began tracking our numbers partly for future candy inventory purposes and partly out of curiosity, so now it’s a tradition for me. Like many bloggers there’s a stats junkie in me that fiends for taking head counts, no matter how disheartening the results.

Previous years’ Halloween candy-receiver totals were as follows:

2008: 51
2009: 105
2010: 112
2011: 74
2012: 58
2013: 36
2014: 25
2015: 39

This year in Indianapolis, our weather gave us the best possible conditions: temps in the low 60s, no rain like we had in 2015, no snow like we had in 2014, and no severe weather delays or one-day postponements like we had in 2013. Monday may be a school night, but the environment was on humanity’s side for once. I’ll admit I didn’t turn our porch lights on till 5:30 because of mundane tasks, and I turned them off earlier than usual at 8:10 because Supergirl, but considering how The MAN thinks trick-or-treaters ’round these parts should only be outside from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. lest the shadows devour their souls, we nonetheless did our part to welcome any and all visitors as much as we could, short of sticking flyers in everyone’s doorknockers.

This year’s results, regardless of effort and sublime conditions:

First TOTer arrival time: 6:28 p.m.
Final TOTer departure time: 7:52 p.m.
Total number of trick-or-treaters for 2016: 23
Gain/loss from Halloween 2015: -58.97%

Possible causes for the worsening Halloween decline symptomatic of a country two minutes away from collapsing into an anti-celebratory black hole:

1. No one wanted to miss the Star Wars trilogy reruns on TBS
2. Bullies made everyone stay home but neglected to include us in their threatening
3. There’s a way-cool pretend-trick-or-treating app more thrilling than the real thing
4. Rampant sugar allergies in kids born after 2000
5. All our neighbors are secretly dead
6. Some nearby church’s trick-or-trunk program was handing out free pounds of bacon
7. Everyone’s afraid the boogeyman Trump’ll get ’em
8. Our lawn smells like dead cattle
9. Citywide traffic jam that just cleared up at 8:15
10. Department stores’ multitasking holiday displays making it impossible to keep schedules and calendars straight
11. Parents all stuck in early-voting lines
12. David S. Pumpkins made Halloween too frightening and confusing

…or something. I’m not upset about the money spent for the occasion. I know a college student who’ll be more than happy to take all these unwanted snacks off our hands. Sometimes traditions die, but watching it happen in slow motion is a discouraging bummer.

MCC extends an extra-special salute to those winning families and wandering orphans who understood the true meaning of Halloween and weren’t afraid of fresh air. The cosplayers whose raiment I could discern registered as follows:

hobo
witch
ballerina
banana
Anna from Frozen
Queen of Hearts
Captain America
Daenerys Targaryen
2 clowns
3 ninja
4 skeletons

Best of show: a young lady whose character I didn’t immediately recognize, but she had two thin robot arms mounted on her back and reaching over either shoulder, one of them armed with a laser cannon, and it looks so, so, SO familiar like I should know it, and it’s killing me that I can’t remember and failed simply to ask her. She looked great, but I was afraid asking her would crush her spirits, as observer ignorance sometimes does for cosplayers. Also, any chitchat at the door is complicated by the incessant barking from our dog Lucky from several feet behind me each and every time a new stranger shows up on his turf.

I’m proud to note nearly every duo or group had at least one leader versed enough in the process to actually say their line, “TRICK OR TREAT!” instead of engaging me in a silent staring contest in spoiled expectation of goodies. One enthusiastic young boy forgot procedure and said, “BRING OUT THE CANDY!” which is not the same thing, but by that time I was despondent from all the no-shows and gave him a pass. Another smaller boy remembered the line and, after I apportioned his take into his bag, tried to walk into the house past me and, I guess, go hug our doggie or maybe see what was on TV.

And for what it’s worth, one mom and one teen girl each complimented my new Doctor Who shirt. So that was rewarding, pretty much the highlight of my Halloween 2016, all things considered. I’ll keep answering the door every Halloween for as long as any local kids keep observing the tradition, but here’s hoping next year’s neighbors remember there’s a whole universe of people beyond their own front doors waiting to meet and greet them.

happy holidays!

The holiday scene at our nearest Lowe’s on OCTOBER SEVENTH. MIXED SIGNALS REALLY NOT HELPING.


2016 NYC Trip Photos #21: Motion Picture Makings

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The Mask!

Kids, be sure to ask your parents about that time Jim Carrey tried to make “ssssSMOKIN’!” a thing.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

Every year from 1999 to 2015 my wife Anne and I took a road trip to a different part of the United States and visited attractions, wonders, and events we didn’t have back home in Indianapolis. With my son’s senior year in college imminent and next summer likely to be one of major upheaval for him (Lord willing), the summer of 2016 seemed like a good time to get the old trio back together again for one last family vacation before he heads off into adulthood and forgets we’re still here. In honor of one of our all-time favorite vacations to date, we scheduled our long-awaited return to New York City…

Our trip to The Museum of the Moving Image, from Times Square out to Astoria, was the longest subway ride we’d ever taken up to that point. I think we were in agreement it was worth the experience, particularly as we walked through their collection of movie memorabilia — actual masks, costumes, models, pre-production art, and writings from some of your favorite Hollywood spectacles. We were grateful not to see the word “replica” on any of their labels.


Orson Welles telegram!

Among the older specimens was a telegram from Orson Welles confirming his attention detail extended to schnozzes.

Oz miniature!

Concept miniature from Sam Raimi’s The Great and Powerful Oz, which became easier to forget after the events of our next chapter…

2001 screenplay!

This file copy of an early draft of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey script is part of a temporary exhibit dedicated to that film’s groundbreaking visual effects.

Taxi Driver script!

Easier to read at a glance is this working copy of Paul Schrader’s Taxi Driver script.

Taxi Driver hair!

If you prefer film paraphernalia more colorful, they also carry Travis Bickle’s hair pieces in both “before” and “after” styles.

Silence of the Lambs!

Silence of the Lambs concept sketches helped the set designers exactly how Hannibal Lecter might mount a victim for in his cell for maximum feng shui.

Casa Gumb!

Blueprints for Jame Gumb’s lair so you can tell where the front door and kitchen are in relation to the big creepy well.

Blade Runner elevators!

One of my favorite pieces: miniature Tyrell Corporation elevators from Blade Runner.

Sophie's Choice!

Not all props come from crowd-pleasers, including this oncentration camp concept model for Sophie’s Choice.

G'Kar!

G’Kar’s face from Babylon 5, which wasn’t a movie, but whatever.

Miami Vice suits!

Also not from movies: Crockett and Tubbs fashions from the original Miami Vice. I used to have an industrial arts teacher who dressed like Crockett. I hated that class.

Krueger kraft!

The various Nightmare on Elm Street sequels lend themselves to props great and small, including this sweater that was several feet tall.

"Mrs. Doubtfire" busts!

Busts and casts of the late, great Robin Williams from Mrs. Doubtfire.

Mork suit!

One more for old times’ sake: a younger Robin Williams’ space suit from Mork & Mindy.

To be continued!

* * * * *

[Link enclosed here to handy checklist for previous and future chapters, and for our complete road trip history to date. Follow us on Facebook or via email signup for new-entry alerts, or over on Twitter if you want to track my TV live-tweeting and other signs of life between entries. Thanks for reading!]


Our Hall of Heroes Comic Con 2017 Photo Gallery

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MST3K Mads!

Say hi to the roadshow cast from Manos: The Jazz Hands of Fate.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: last May my wife and I traveled three hours north to the town of Elkhart to visit the Hall of Heroes Museum, an impressive collection of toys, comics, merchandise, and movie memorabilia. We also walked along their Main Street downtown, enjoyed ourselves despite the unseasonably bitter temperatures, and expressed hopes of returning one day.

Today was that day. This weekend museum owner Allen Stewart oversaw the first annual Hall of Heroes Comic Con, a natural extension of his longtime hobbies and all our favorite comic cons where we’ve encountered his company’s booth on multiple occasions. Thanks to the event explosion we’ve been enjoying in or near Indianapolis over the past four years, we’ve had chances to attend more shows and meet more creators and actors than in all our previous forty Hoosier years combined. We can’t attend every show ever, but we’ll make the time and the drive if something or someone nails our interests.

For me, Stewart and his team did exactly that. Pictured above at left is Frank Conniff, a.k.a. TV’s Frank from Mystery Science Theater 3000, one of my all-time favorite TV series. At right is Trace Beaulieu, better known as TV’s Frank’s nefarious boss Dr. Clayton Forrester, and the original voice of Crow T. Robot. We previously met him at C2E2 2015, but this is a far better photo, and not just because it has TV’s Frank in it. Beyond meeting Joel Hodgson at Indy Pop Con 2014 and Mike, Kevin, Bill, and Mary Jo in St. Louis in 2000, the esteemed Mr. Conniff was the only major cast member I hadn’t met yet.

For that alone, for giving me the unexpected opportunity to complete the autograph set on my copy of The MST3K Amazing Colossal Episode Guide, I deem this a fantastic weekend, 12/10 hope to visit yet again someday.

Beyond our moment with “the Mads”…well, every first-year con has its learning curve and its kinks to work out.

We learned that the hard way from the first annual Indiana Comic Con back in 2014, which turned out a bit of a nightmare for a few thousand would-be attendees barred from entering. Or the first annual Wizard World Indianapolis, or the first annual Awesome Con Indy, neither of which drew enough traffic or revenue to warrant a sequel. Based on our experiences and the freezing temperatures outside, we had no idea whether to expect twenty thousand furious shutouts or ten hardy fans having the time of their lives running up and down empty halls.

The reality was somewhere in between. Our three-hour drive got us to the Lerner Theatre in downtown Elkhart a few minutes after HHCC opened at 10 a.m. (Praise be to the city planners who designed hundreds of free parking spaces all over the place.) Several hundred fans were ahead of us in line, stretching around the block to the rear of the building. We had no idea if this was just the line to buy tickets onsite, the line for folks who already had tickets (like us), or The One Line to be sorted at the door. We joined for a few minutes, but after Anne chatted with a few randomly sampled folks ahead of us, got a sort of consensus that “Will Call” buyers could go ahead to the front door.

We hurried around the corner and up the side of the building, where some parts of the line were bunched up and crowding the sidewalk. I tried walking near the sidewalk edge to leave them their personal space, misjudged a step, tripped and fell off the curb and into the street. Thankfully this narrow, small-town street was calm enough that the oncoming car easily braked ten or fifteen feet before it would’ve reached my head.

When I stood up, I could feel an irritating scrape on my right knee. My left knee was worse — I could put weight on it with no problem, but couldn’t bend it. Twenty minutes later I thought to check my left hand and found bleeding scrapes all over the back of it. But my head and glasses were intact. I deemed myself fit for conventioning and we pressed on to the front door for answers.

A nice lady told us there was a separate entrance for folks who hadn’t bought tickets yet. Everyone else, whether Will Call or Just Bought and Ready to Go In Now, had to join the long, long line. So our scurrying to the front and by extension my battle damage had been in vain. There’s a weak argument that could be made that my injuries wouldn’t have happened if there’d been no epic-length wait to get inside, but my walking is my own responsibility. Regardless: ow ow ow ow ow ow ow ow ow ow OW.

We resigned ourselves to returning to the rear of the Lerner, but were happy to find everyone moving forward at a somewhat steady pace. Then again, when it’s 25°F outside, no pace is steady enough for you. We enjoyed chatting with a couple in front of us who’d attended the first two Indiana Comic Cons and who had a baby in a stroller swaddled up better than any of the rest of us, poking just one cute eye out from beneath their fuzzy fortress.

Eventually we got to the check-in tent, picked up our Will Call tickets, traded them for Saturday bracelets, and got inside and warm again shortly before 11. Mission priority one was locating TV’s Frank. All other activities were optional. One problem: the floor maps in the program gave no sense of space or how each section related to the others. Signage was minimal and far between. Assuming that the celebs were farthest away from the action, we shimmied our way through and around people and ascended a staircase to the second floor. We joined another thick line in a hallway bypassing the dealers’ room and a few creators’ tables on both sides. We followed a lone “celebrities” sign up yet another staircase and found ourselves in the upper balcony of the Lerner’s actual theater.

Sidebar: the Lerner’s origins date back to 1924, when vaudeville and movies still alternated in American entertainment venues. The most recent renovation efforts in 2011 brought new life and classic pizzazz to old architecture. Even without the con, the Lerner would be a nice place to tour. Among other amenities, it boasts the roomiest, cleanest, most elegant bathrooms ever provided to a comics convention in American history.

Lerner Ceiling!

The resplendent theater ceiling above us.

Lerner painting!

Chandelier and painting visible when we later descended the same staircase…slowly, because my newly bum knee wouldn’t bend.

Secret Elk!

Some art normally on display was shoved into a corner to make room for crowds, including another elk we missed on our last Elkhart walk.

That being said and shown: a theater balcony didn’t seem like a logical place for an autograph line. We assumed either the sign was mistaken or we’d missed a follow-up sign. We exited through a doorway in the rear of the balcony and followed a dark hallway to a flimsy curtain. I drew back the curtain; Anne stepped forward, tripped over a stack of Styrofoam packaging, and fell into a sign, right next to a con volunteer and right in front of the signing table for Dr. Forrester and TV’s Frank. The makeshift use of the theater spaces in creative fashions, combined with a lack of communication, had us technically sneaking into the celebrity autograph area without meaning to. The volunteer hadn’t even known what was behind the curtain and jumped back at our surprise infiltration. Thanks to the saving grace of that Styrofoam — the holders for some of the guests’ posters — Anne took zero points of damage from her fall, faring infinitely better than I had with my incident outside.

It was tempting to beg the guy to let us stay if only because the Mads were right there. But I wanted my autograph nice and legal, no under-the-table shenanigans, not even accidentally so. We exited the room, returned to the hallway, returned to the “celebrities” sign, and confirmed with another volunteer that the autograph line for all the celebrities ran across the theater balcony and toward the exit on the opposite side. Still a weird idea, but Elkhart doesn’t have a convention center to call its own. One must do what one has with the square footage available.

Side benefit of the arrangement: while we waited for the line to move forward, we were treated to a panel down on the main stage starring the 501st Legion, America’s premier Star Wars cosplay organization. Representatives from the Jedi and Sith alike were giving cosplay tips to would-be members and their families.

501st Seminar!

We failed to take notes. Anne made a face when one speaker had a slip of the tongue and referred to a movie called “Return of the Sith”, possibly a big hit on Earth-2.

Fun Easter egg: down in the orchestra pit is Tony Stark’s demolished Cobra from Iron Man 2, a staple at the Hall of Heroes’ con appearances. Anne posed with it at Wizard World Chicago 2015.

After waiting a couple dozen minutes, slowly inching through the balcony to the other exit, and down another staircase that my knee hated, we got far enough in line to reach another volunteer who was inviting forward any fans who were there just to meet special guest Reb Brown, a.k.a. the 1970s Captain America, or Our Villains from MST3K, which she called “Mystery Theater”. I knew what she meant. More importantly, it meant us. 95% of the other people in line were here to meet this man…

Dean Cain!

(MCC file photo from our Wizard World Chicago 2012 experience.)

…TV’s Dean Cain, a.k.a. Superman from The Adventures of Lois & Clark, now known to younger viewers as Kara’s adopted dad Jeremiah Danvers from The CW’s Supergirl. Anne enjoyed the heck out of meeting him in 2012 and discussing their mutual high opinions of Superman: The Movie. I missed out at the time because we’d gone in different directions to cover more of our respective to-do lists on our own. I wouldn’t have minded meeting him, but first and foremost, I was there for TV’s Frank.

The esteemed Messrs. Conniff and Beaulieu were a pleasure to meet and had books to sell. I love when people I’m already excited to meet at a con also happen to bring their own books to sell, whether comics creators, actors, or TV mad scientists.

Mads Books!

So they’re mine now. Mine mine MINE.

Primary objective achieved, ’round noon-ish. Alas, meeting Dean Cain would mean rejoining the same long line through the theater balcony but not skipping to the front. To make matters worse, I knew Cain had a Q&A at 1 p.m., which would mean staying put in the same long line through that, then continuing onward once he returned to his table. Alas, I made the call and opted out. But I did not, regardless of how he looks on Supergirl and disregarding a few jokes I’ve seen while live-tweeting the show…in person, to the two of us, on this day, Cain looked as buff as ever.

From there the next natural move was a stroll through the dealers room across the hall. The designated ballroom was a giant can of sardines crammed together.

Dealers Room!

Like this, but on all four sides. Special thanks to whoever was in charge of HVAC and ensured we could breathe and didn’t overheat in such cramped quarters.

Both in the dealers room and in the adjacent hallway, I recognized at least two artists and one organization from our Chicago cons. A few animators held court on the far side; a couple of local talents on another. Throughout this inch-by-inch bazaar and the intermittent sellers elsewhere, I didn’t buy much beyond the Mads’ books (just a few new buttons for my convention bag), but noted a few nifty sights along the way.

Rocket Raccoon!

Life-size Rocket Raccoon statue at the Hall of Heroes Museum’s own booth downstairs.

Balloon Superman!

Look! Up in the sky! It’s a blimp! It’s a zeppelin! It’s Balloon Superman! (Craft work by Tim the Balloonatic.)

The CW!

In support of headliner Dean Cain, The CW showed up with free posters and buttons from The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, and TV’s Arrow.

Supergirl!

Also, we understand there is a show with Supergirl in it.

By the time we wrapped up our minimal shopping and overview of the complete show floor, it was lunch time and we had no mandatory activities left. I had been considering Cain’s 1:00 panel and possibly a 2:00 seminar on WWII comics by main man Stewart himself. But I was ready for lunch elsewhere in Elkhart, I wasn’t sure how much more my knee could take, and I didn’t want to wait through that freezing line outside to reenter later after eating. When we mutually agreed we were done and ready to call it a day, that outside line wasn’t much shorter than it had been two hours earlier.

Hall of Heroes Line!

This is maybe 20% or so of the line as of noon-ish. A second time through this queue was not tempting.

Naturally we won’t close without touching on the most critical asset of every valid comic convention: Hall of Heroes Comic Con cosplay photos! The shortage of elbow room and photogenic spaces in the Lerner made mandatory costume pics next to impossible, but we did what we could in the few opportunities that opened up.

501st quartet!

Up closer with reps from the 501st.

Star Wars!

We have friends who insist you can never have too many Star Wars costumes at a con. This one’s for them, then.

Five Nights at Freddy's!

A pair from Five Nights at Freddy’s lurking by the concession stand.

Ariel + Ursula!

Ariel and Ursula from The Little Mermaid, plus bonus Flounder.

Believe me, I wish I had more, but it wasn’t happening under the circumstances.

I also dearly wish we could’ve seen Dr. Forrester and TV’s Frank on stage, but their panel wasn’t till Sunday, which we couldn’t do, and their special “Mads Live!” MST-style movie-mocking performance wasn’t till 6:00, which was later than we could stay. Those limitations were already decided before my injuries, which now have me typing this entry while wearing three bandages and planning to call them “war wounds” to anyone who asks. Because these were the scars I earned just for braving the gauntlet to meet TV’s Frank.

Alas, we left Hall of Heroes Comic Con earlier than average, but satisfied with what we’d gotten out of it, happy to be there, appreciative of all the nice volunteers we met, grateful for the even-tempered fans who all kept their cool and likewise had fun, and wanting to give a shout-out to the folks at McCarthy’s on the Riverwalk for an A-plus lunch before we headed home. Here’s hoping all went well and a good time was had by everyone else. If that phenomenal turnout of several hundred fans helps HHCC beat the odds, set up again next year, and pin down more awesome all-stars to meet, then we might have to indulge in an encore road trip. But next time we’re getting into town much earlier and watching our steps much more carefully.


Indiana Comic Con 2017 Photos, Part 1 of 4: Friday Cosplay

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Queen of Hearts + Robin Hood!

The Queen of Hearts and Robin Hood welcome you to Indiana Comic Con!

It’s that time again! This weekend my wife and I attended the fourth annual Indiana Comic Con at the Indiana Convention Center in scenic downtown Indianapolis. Once again Anne and I found a few intriguing names on the guest list and decided to drop by. Unfortunately Anne had to work Friday, leaving me to my own devices at a con for the first time in…possibly ever?

For all of Saturday she was once again at my side as we went about our various lines and shopping and panels and whatnot. While we recuperate and wait for our feet to forgive us for their punishment (to say nothing of my bum knee), please enjoy this collection of cosplayers who brightened my day and gave me purpose and inspiration around the show floor on Friday before the Saturday crowds overran everything. The actors, comics artists, and objects of note will be shared at the end of this special miniseries. Enjoy!


Beardpool!

Beardpool! Because it wouldn’t be a con without at least one Deadpool variant. That’s a federal guideline now.

Yuna!

This may be the same Yuna from Final Fantasy X I encountered last year, but this time the lighting is better.

Hellboy! Canary! Daredevil!

Hellboy (dragging around the undead Tam O’Clannie from “The Corpse”), Canary, and season-1 Daredevil.

Soul Eater + Jedi Snow White!

Maka from Soul Eater and Snow White, Jedi Knight.

Matt Murdock!

Matt Murdock, attorney at law, complete with blind cane action.

Harley + Bluntman!

Harley Quinn and Kevin Smith’s Bluntman. After I took the pic, their adorable son waved up at me to show off his really cool lanyard!

Leia + Mandalorians!

Princess Leia and a pair of Mandalorians, because not all of us fans could afford to fly out to this same weekend’s Star Wars Celebration in Orlando.

Organization XIII!

A representative of the nefarious Organization XIII from the Kingdom Hearts game series.

Catwoman + Harley!

Catwoman (Nolanverse) and Harley Quinn (Suicide Squad).

Riddler!

The Riddler, appearing on behalf of The Toy Pit, a new collectors’ shop up on Indy’s northeast side.

Bender!

Bender from Futurama! Actual bending and beer sold separately.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 2: Costume Contest Highlights
Part 3: More Saturday Cosplay
Part 4: Who We Met and What We Did


Indiana Comic Con 2017 Photos, Part 2 of 4: Costume Contest Highlights

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Stranger Things family!

One of several families that cosplayed together: Eleven, Sheriff Hopper, Nancy, Joyce with Christmas lights, and Barbara from Stranger Things.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! This weekend my wife and I attended the fourth annual Indiana Comic Con at the Indiana Convention Center in scenic downtown Indianapolis. Once again Anne and I found a few intriguing names on the guest list and decided to drop by…

We spent 11½ hours at the Convention Center on Saturday because we wanted to be there early to head up one particular actor’s line, and had to stay late for one particular actress’ near-sundown photo op. In between we had a lot of hours on our hands — some of it scheduled, some of it free time. By mid-afternoon we were beat, had exhausted nearly all our entertainment options, and weren’t finding much else to do on the panel list. On a whim and in need of seating, we decided to check out our first convention costume contest in two years.

Longtime MCC readers may recall the overlong essay explaining why I decided to stop attending costume contests. I stand by that essay and the problems I developed, but in this case: (a) I had planned to sit back during the contest and watch from afar rather than trying to go full-bore full-coverage amateur photojournalist again; and (b) instead of frustrating herself with fuzzy zoom-lens results, Anne decided to get up, head over toward the contestants’ milling space, and start capturing faces and souls up closer because she’s awesome like that. All but two photos in this entry are her handiwork, and represent the folks who caught our eyes most sharply and who held still. Enjoy!


Funko Pop Mason!

Third place in the kids’ costume contest. If you can’t find the Funko Pop you want, make it yourself. Or as young Mason did, make yourself it. I love how the snazzy Red Lantern T-shirt is on the box, too.

Pimppool!

The Deadpool variants continued with the first of two Pimppools we saw this weekend.

Darth Pool!

“Come to the Pool Side. We have chimichangas!” Thus is the questionable T-shirt slogan from Darth Pool, probably.

The Dude!

The Dude from, like, The Big Lebowski abides.

Count Chocula!

Count Chocula was the tallest and wielded the most complicated rigging of the contest. As I type this, I’m just now realizing this might be the work of the same mad scientist who brought the super-sized FrankenBerry costume that followed us to several cons.

Blackfire!

Starfire’s evil sister Blackfire from Teen Titans. I’m old enough to remember her from the comics before she leapt to animation.

X-24 + Logan!

X-24 and the titular hero from Logan. Uhhh, P.S.: spoilers for Logan in this pic and contest.

Bat-Villains!

Bat-Villains united! And not just from movies or TV! Red Hood, Scarecrow, Catwoman, Poison Ivy, Harley Quinn, Hush, and Black Mask.

Star Wars!

Mandatory Star Wars! On a related note, our hearts go out to the fans in Orlando who’ve been trying to enjoy this weekend’s Star Wars Celebration Orlando despite the horribly mismanaged lines, ruder-than-rude security, and occasional pervading greed and selfishness on either side of the cash registers. From what we’ve heard.

Asgardian family!

They’re regal and they’re ruling / They’re always ever dueling / Their tempers never cooling / Asgardian family!

Aladdin Family!

They’re eminently Arabian / Steal every scene they be in / They’re way cooler than Fabian / Aladdin Family!

Winners!

Mandatory group shot of all the finalists crowded on stage at the same time. Best one we didn’t get in a solo shot was at far right, the sinister Venger from my Saturday mornings’ Dungeons & Dragons.

Princess Mononoke!

Post-contest shout-out: Princess Mononoke.

Big Sister!

Mandatory quadruple bonus points as always to costumes I recognize from video games I’ve played: Big Sister from Bioshock 2. Her character was particularly — HEY! STOP THAT, DARTH POOL. STOP THAT RIGHT NOW.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Friday Cosplay
Part 3: More Saturday Cosplay
Part 4: Who We Met and What We Did


Indiana Comic Con 2017 Photos, Part 3 of 4: More Saturday Cosplay

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Sam Wilsons!

Sam Wilson, Captain America; Sam Wilson, the Falcon; and Jedi Knight Phoa Toe-Bhomm.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! This weekend my wife and I attended the fourth annual Indiana Comic Con at the Indiana Convention Center in scenic downtown Indianapolis. Once again Anne and I found a few intriguing names on the guest list and decided to drop by…

And now, the part everyone’s always waiting for: all the rest of our cosplay pics from our Saturday walkabout. As with every such con, the following represents a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the total number of attendees, cosplayers, and characters on hand. One of the innumerable beauties of the internet is that no two convention cosplay photo galleries will ever be alike. This one is ours.

But first: a great big cosplay mob! On Saturday morning a bevy of professional photographers and dozens of cosplayers rendezvoused outside Hall J for one colossal photo shoot. Anne and I happened to be walking toward the food-truck exit when we found them at work and took a few minutes to ignore our appetites and marvel at the dynamic spectacle.

Now or in the days ahead you’ll find the expertly crafted results of their respective efforts — whether at Indiana Comic Con or at other fun events — posted online at the following participants’ pages, all of whom we highly recommend over our own meager fan-work:

* Photography by Homme
* Daxorr Studio
* Kaminsky Kandids Photography
* Michael P. Hoover Photography
* The Portrait Dude – Cosplay Photography
* Dillon Taylor Photography
* Spectra_HD Photography
* Gabe Duval Media

Special thanks to Brittany at Bsquared Cosplay for providing us with the complete lowdown, and for coordinating this fabulous congregation on behalf of the cosplay community.

…and on a lower level, here’s our rendition of us peeking over their shoulders:

Indiana Comic Con cosplayers!

…yeah, I’m not labeling all of these.

Indiana Comic Con cosplay group photo!

Cosplayers to the left of me…

Indiana Comic Con costume photo!

Cosplayers to the right of me…

Cosplay army!

As cosplay above…

Eleven! Luigi! Ant-Man!

…so cosplayers below.

Pimppool #2!

Very nearly escaping our lenses: our second Pimppool of the weekend, hiding in plain sight.

Meanwhile, back on the show floor…

Men in Tights!

Men in Tights from Mel Brooks’ Robin Hood: Men in Tights starring Cary Elwes as Robin Hood and men in tights as Men in Tights.

Colonel Sanders!

Colonel Sanders, hero to American chicken lovers everywhere.

Flintstones!

Flintstones. Meet the Flintstones! MEET THEM. MEET THEM NOW.

Chucky!

Chucky from Child’s Play, literally lurking in a dark corner.

Thor + Wolverine!

Thor and Wolverine, crossing the film universes. Wolverine was one of our early Saturday morning line-buddies this year and last.

Pyramid Head + Nurse!

Silent Hill‘s Pyramid Head and Nurse, plus…uhhh., a Big Boy muscle mag, or something.

Hawaiian Wookiee!

Hawaiian Wookiee, another fellow Star Wars fan probably keeping this weekend’s Star Wars Celebration Orlando in their thoughts. Not that we Midwesterners are bitter.

Hawkguy!

HAWKGUY! Or, I guess, just “Hawkeye” to you movie-only fans.

Squall and Rinoa!

Once again I brake hard for Final Fantasy characters: Squall and Rinoa from FFVIII.

Leprechaunpool!

Leprechaunpool! A month later, people still be chasin’ his Lucky Harms.

Goku and Chi-Chi!

Another happy couple: Goku and Chi-Chi from Dragon Ball Z.

Toothless!

Toothless from How to Train Your Dragon.

Disney Princesses!

Disney presents three princesses and a goddess: Belle, Aurora, Ariel, and Storm.

Deadman!

Deadman welcomes you to the convention life!

Red + Yellow Robots!

I snap the pic thinking, “They look familiar, but I’m blanking on names. My son should know.” So later I email the boy, “Do you recognize the characters in this photo?” He responds, “…a Donkey Kong carrying a baby Peach,” and I’m like, THAT’S NOT WHAT I MEANT.

Savage Dragon!

A rare moment of Image Comics cosplay: Erik Larsen’s Savage Dragon.

Moon Knight!

Moon Knight, patiently waiting for Marvel to let him make the leap to any other medium beyond comics. Someday his turn will come.

Rorschach Pokemon!

After a ghastly incident involving a depraved felon and a brutally butchered Jigglypuff, Pokemon Trainer Rorschach was born.

Pink Panther!

Pink Panther. No, not that one.

That’s it for our Indiana Comic Con 2017 costume photo galleries but we’re not done yet. Coming soon in our candid finale: jazz hands and storytime!

Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: Friday Cosplay
Part 2: Costume Contest Highlights
Part 4: Who We Met and What We Did


C2E2 2017 Photos, Part 1 of 4: Comics Cosplay!

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Negan vs. Bedpool!

Is the reign of the Deadpool cosplay variants at an end? Is C2E2 truly Negan’s world now, judging by the 10,000 Negan cosplayers we saw this weekend?

It’s that time again! The eighth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″) just wrapped another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking. Each year C2E2 keeps inching ever closer to its goal of becoming the Midwest’s answer to the legendary San Diego Comic Con and other famous cons in larger, more popular states. My wife and I missed the first year, but have attended every year since 2011 as a team.

In this special miniseries I’ll be sharing memories and photos from our own C2E2 experience, in all its vivaciousness and vexations. Caveats for first-time visitors to Midlife Crisis Crossover:

1. My wife and I are not professional photographers, nor do we believe ourselves worthy of press passes. These were taken as best as possible with the intent to share with fellow fans out of a sincere appreciation for the works inspired by the heroes, hobbies, artistic expressions, and/or intellectual properties that brought us geeks together under one vaulted roof for the weekend. We all do what we can with the tools and circumstances at hand. We don’t use selfie sticks, tripods, or cameras that cost more than a month’s worth of groceries.

2. It’s impossible for any human or organization to capture every costume on hand. What’s presented in this series will be a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the sum total costume experience. Other corners of the internet will represent those other fractions that we missed, which is the cool part of having so many people doing this sort of thing.

3. We didn’t attend Sunday. Sincere apologies to anyone we missed as a result.

4. Corrections and comments are always welcome, especially when we get to Part 2, which will include a few anime and/or gaming characters we young geezers didn’t recognize. I do like learning new names and universes even if you’re more immersed in them than I am.

5. Enjoy!

First up: the heroes and antiheroes of Marvel, DC, and other comics, who made up just over half our costume photos. And as usual, we wound up spotting far above the FDA recommended annual allowance of Deadpool variants…

Spidey + Deadpool!

Ultimate Spider-Man and a funky fresh skateboard-dancing Deadpool welcome you to the show floor!

My Little Ponypool!

My Little Ponypool, or possibly WeirdSlumberPartyPool.

Westboropool!

Westboropool thinks your favorite heroes are stupid and unholy.

Linkpool!

Linkpool says Westboropool can cram it.

Steampunkpool!

Steampunkpool with Victorian rubber chicken. Or something. Honestly, this one kind of lost us.

Tijuanapool!

Tijuanapool is proud to tell you what an authentic chimichanga tastes like.

And now, back to anyone but Deadpool, already in progress:

Power Man & Iron Fist!

Power Man and Iron Fist share a toast to friendship and Netflix residuals.

Angel!

Angel from X-Men: Apocalypse.

Days of Future Past Wolverine!

Logan from Days of Future Past, smacking a dude down for trash-talking X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

Black Panther!

Black Panther, soon to be a major motion picture.

Aquaman!

Aquaman, soon to be a major motion picture.

Doctor Strange!

Doctor Strange, already a major motion picture.

Batman and Lego Batman!

Batman and Lego Batman, no slouch at the box office themselves.

DC Heroes!

Flash, Hawkwoman, Speedy/Arsenal/Red Arrow/whichever, and Nightwing.

Aquaman + Superboy!

Aquaman and Superboy straight outta the early ’90s.

Hellgirl!

Hellboy. I mean Hellgirl. Or Hellwoman! HELLPERSON. You get the idea.

The Tick!

The Tick, soon to be a major Amazon series. Voldemort in repose is not impressed.

Cosplayers of Wisconsin!

Cosplayers of Wisconsin reminding you that cosplay in and of itself is absolutely never an open invitation to leering or groping, no matter how great or how minuscule the temptation.

My five personal faves from this section:

Squirrel Girl!

Squirrel Girl! Squirrel Girl! SQUIRREL GIRL!

Squirrel Girls!

Squirrel Girls! Squirrel Girls! SQUIRREL GIRLS!

Moon Knight II!

Marvel’s Moon Knight. in his dapper yet unhinged “Mr. Knight” suit.

Moon Knight I!

A more recent Moon Knight variant from the current hallucinogenic Jeff Lemire/Greg Smallwood run.

Animal Man!

For fellow old-school fans of DC/Vertigo and Grant Morrison: Buddy Baker, a.k.a. Animal Man!

To be continued! Other chapters in this miniseries:

Part 2: More Cosplay!
Part 3: Comics Creators Cavalcade [coming soon]
Part 4: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]



C2E2 2017 Photos, Part 2 of 4: More Cosplay!

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Thrawn!

Straight from the pages of my wife’s Star Wars Expanded Universe bookshelves and into the world of Star Wars Rebels, it’s that master planner Grand Admiral Thrawn and an Ysalamir.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

It’s that time again! The eighth annual Chicago Comic and Entertainment Exposition (“C2E2″) just wrapped another three-day extravaganza of comic books, actors, creators, toys, props, publishers, freebies, Funko Pops, anime we don’t recognize, and walking and walking and walking and walking…

…and cosplay. Lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of cosplay. Of course we took photos, but we missed much impressive handiwork, partly because we spent a lot of time in lines and partly because we hadn’t rested yet from the previous weekend’s Indiana Comic Con and feared overextending ourselves to the point of burnout.

But! These are the costumes we’re glad we didn’t miss from the worlds of animation, gaming, movies, and what I’m being told is one extremely popular webcomic. (Special thanks to my son for naming assistance with a few of these.)


Star Wars!

More Star Wars, naturally. I’m assuming everyone can name these action figures by now?

Jurassic Park Docs!

Also from a film everyone’s seen, Drs. Ian Malcolm and Alan Grant from Jurassic Park.

David S. Pumpkins!

He’s David Pumpkins. Any questions?

Belle + Snow White!

Belle, star of the runaway smash Beauty and the Beast, and Snow White, waiting for her live-action upgrade as soon as Disney figures out how to do the “Dwarfs” part without inciting rage-filled thinkpieces.

Newt Scamander!

Newt Scamander representing for the wizarding world of Harry Potter.

Darkman!

I’m so old and odd, I saw Sam Raimi’s Darkman in theaters and liked it. Too bad Liam Neeson couldn’t have done ten of those instead of the Taken series.

Ferris Bueller!

Ferris Bueller returns to Chicago, probably up to no good again.

Mojo Jojo + HIM!

Plotting revenge against the Powerpuff Girls are Mojo Jojo and…yes, that’s HIM. The one at right is…we’re not sure. Harvey Bullock, Mouse Detective?

One-Punch Man!

One-Punch Man from the anime satire One-Punch Man starring One-Punch Man as One-Punch Man. My son tells me I’d like it.

David Pumpkins!

He’s David S. Pumpkins! ANY QUESTIONS?

Skeletor + Reyes!

Skeletor (who was a hoot and on a roll in person) kicks off our gaming section with special guest Blackwatch Reyes from Overwatch.

Starman and Coin Block!

Two for any gamers past and present, 60 and under: a Starwoman and Coin Block from Super Mario Bros.

Luigi Acrobat!

An unusually limber Luigi demonstrating circus skills at the Acrobatica Infiniti booth.

Splicer!

From the Department of Games I’ve Played as an Adult: one of the creepy Splicers from Bioshock.

Sander Cohen!

One of the most twisted Bioshock nemeses, the artist Sander Cohen. I lost a trophy because I eliminated him a bit too soon.

Borderlands Psycho!

Same department, different game: a Psycho from Borderlands. Love the game-accurate thick-lined detailing.

Shepard + Psycho!

Another, spikier Borderlands Psycho along with (I think?) Commander Shepard or a coworker from Mass Effect.

Ahri, League of Legends!

Ahri from the online game League of Legends, complete with Orb of Deception.

Saber!

Saber from the Japanese visual novel Fate/stay night.

ULTIMATE DAVID PUMPKINS!

I’M DAVID PUMPKINS! ANY QUESTIONS?

Moana!

Last cosplayer we saw on our way back to the car, and one of the finest: Moana!

To be continued! Other chapters in this miniseries:

Part 1: Comics Cosplay!
Part 3: Comics Creators Cavalcade [coming soon]
Part 4: Who We Met and What We Did [coming soon]


10 Tips for Having a Super Awesome Free Comic Book Day

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Free Comic Book Day 2017!

Harley Quinn, Spider-Gwen, and Ms. Marvel welcome you to a whole wide world of whimsy and wonder!

It’s that time of year again! Today marked the sixteenth annual Free Comic Book Day, the one official holiday in my lifelong hobby when comic book shops across America lure in fans and curious onlookers with a great big batch of free new comics from all the major publishers and a bevy of smaller competitors deserving shelf space and consideration. It’s easy to remember when to pin it on the calendar because it’s always the first Saturday of every May and virtually always coincidental with a major movie release (in 2017’s case, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2). It’s also easy to notice if you live near a comic shop and the parking spaces are much scarcer than normal.

I’m too late for this entry to be immediately useful, but for future generations who might be considering participating in the joy of reading and/or the rush for freebies, we offer the following ideas for maximizing your graphic storytelling holiday to the fullest extent, whether you’re brand new to comics collecting or a savvy peer who likes nodding along with solid reminders.

1. Find a local comic shop! Most large cities and many medium cities have comic shops available. If you haven’t noticed one in plain sight, the Comic Shop Locator will help sort you out with pointers to viable options in your area.

If you’re among the far too many Americans who live in a comics desert, where no shop is within a fair radius of your home because of the economy or rampant illiteracy or local Footloose-esque laws that oppress comics instead of dancing, I strongly recommend checking with the online comics purveyors who sometimes find ways to deliver the fun directly to you through internet magic. Alternatively: zillions of webcomics are free everyday, so it’s great motivation to go digging. I wish I could better assist with this contingency, but I’m old and addicted to my paper comics. I’m not even crazy about digital music, so I’m the wrong guy to ask for comiXology browsing hints.

2. Plan ahead! The official Free Comic Book Day site posts a list in advance of all FCBD offerings that retailers could choose to carry for the occasion. Not every shop will carry every title, but it’s safe to assume all the major publishers will be represented. At the very least, seeing the potential options should give you hope and stoke your excitement level.

3. Arrive early! Comics are free while they last, but sometimes they don’t last. Sixteen years into this tradition, FCBD has built up decent attendance in most areas, and some titles run out more quickly than others. For the widest selection available, you’ll want to get there while the getting’s good or else there’ll be no more getting to be gotten. What constitutes “early” is up to you — my wife and I usually plan to show up at least 60-90 minutes before the doors are unlocked for the morning. In some states and weather conditions, check the weather forecast and gear up as needed. If the thought of standing in a long line for an hour or more is a turn-off, I do understand. Long lines aren’t for everyone. To us geeks it’s all part of the game.

4. Keep your camera handy! Some shops stage special events the day of. We’ve seen FCBD welcomes and sideshows provided by cosplayers, local fan clubs, actual comics creators, local musicians, charity drives, random Samaritans bearing donuts, face painters, and roller derby teams. One of the many fantastic things about comics is the broad intersection they provide for entertainment lovers from across all media and spheres. You never know what kind of talents will be in the house or interacting with the crowd. If what they do looks cool, you’ll naturally want to commemorate that in picture form for all your friends and followers.

Free Comic Book Day 2017!

Classic Ms. Marvel and the unbeatable Squirrel Girl are kinda like LeVar Burton hosting Reading Rainbow but times 100.

5. Choose carefully! Once you’re inside the door, walk (don’t run because there’s no space for that) calmly to the assigned tables or racks bearing the specific Free Comic Book Day issues designated for the occasion. If the shop posts rules limiting how many you can take, play nice. If they’re cool with you nabbing whatever, that’s fine, but you don’t have to be greedy. You don’t need one of everything, especially not the kiddie-only fare if you’re over 12. Each comic you leave behind means one more fan at the end of the day won’t leave empty-handed and depressed and ranting through tears about how Free Comic Book Day is just a sham holiday that Hallmark made up to sell more Peanuts greeting cards.

6. There is no number 6. Look, there just isn’t, okay?

7. Shop around! Fun trivia most comics fans already know because we remind each other constantly every year: those free comics aren’t free to the retailers. They’re purchasing them from the distributor same as any other comics on sale. FCBD is entirely a voluntary promotion meant as community outreach, which means they’re bankrolling this splendid event from their own coffers, while the publishers still get paid. Comic shop ownership generally sees razor-thin profit margins and moves less than .01% of its careerists into upper tax brackets. So while you’re there…see all those hundreds of thousands of other objects lying around the store? Maybe look through the other comics, graphic novels, toys, T-shirts, and ephemera and buy a thing or two or ten. Not only do you end up with more new things, it’s a nice way of thanking them for their part in this special day and supporting businesses, in that order.

8. Road trip for more! If you’re extraordinarily blessed to live in a city or town that supports more than one comic shop (Indianapolis has at least six or seven), and if you have the time and funds and gas, why not go drop by other shops and see what they’ve made of it. Say hi to more cosplayers, grab another freebie you didn’t see at the first shop, buy even more stuff, keep FCBD alive, repeat until you’re out of either shops, time, money, or space in your trunk.

9. Make time for reading! Congratulations! You now have a reading pile, if you didn’t when you woke up that morning. At some point you’ll need to dive right in and live vicariously through those varied imaginations and universes and licensed merchandise all-stars. Peruse the pictures, absorb the written word, watch those two sides work together in a loving harmony that encourages art appreciation, vocabulary building, and narrative thrills all at once.

For the record, #9 is the step where I failed this year. We’ve been so nonstop busy today that…well, there’s a reason why I’m writing this entry at 11 p.m. about what fun we had at 11 a.m. As of this moment I’ve read 4½ of the 15 comics my wife and I selected, and will likely be scrounging for quality reading time tomorrow. Don’t be me: read now, read often, read faster, glare menacingly at anyone who tries to stop you mid-page.

10. Spread the love! Once you’ve finished, what do you do next? Tell other readers which ones were amazing. Write reviews, as I’ll be doing here in the next day or two because it’s what I do. Return to the shop in the weeks ahead to spend more money on those publishers or creators who brightened your life. For extra credit, once you’re done with your FCBD stash, consider pass on a few books to other folks that you think might get a kick out of them. If you’re hoarding them only because you dream of selling them on eBay someday, you’re like the Grinch of Free Comic Book Day yanking stories and inspiration out of the little hands of all the Whos down in Whoville.

Free Comic Book Day isn’t about fiduciary investment. It’s about the comics. Honestly: duh. Don’t make us have to send Squirrel Girl to your house to beat some super-hero altruism into your head.

Free Comic Book Day 2017!

Our Free Comic Book Day 2017 reading pile, less than half the total titles that were in stock. ‘Twas a good year.

Full disclosure: beyond this haul, I also spent money on an issue of Astro City I was missing; the most recent issues of Hawkeye, Angel, and R. L. Stine’s Man-Thing; and Jeff Lemire’s Essex County. Yay comics!


Motor City Comic Con 2017 Photos, Part 1 of 2: Cosplay!

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Yondu and Mary Poppins!

Yondu and Mary Poppins. Um, mild spoiler for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.

My wife and I have a twice-yearly tradition of spending our respective birthdays together traveling to some new place or attraction as a one-day road trip — partly as an excuse to spend time together on those most wondrous days, partly to explore areas of Indiana we’ve never experienced before. For my 45th birthday, we decided to expand those parameters.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: we’ve ruminated from time to time on the possibility of attending comic book/entertainment conventions in other areas outside our hometown of Indianapolis. While researching other Hoosier sightseeing options we haven’t tried yet for our birthdays (we haven’t quite run out of historical sites, odd museums, or pretty nature), I decided to check into American comic-con schedules for the weekend, assuming I’d find nothing within a thousand miles of home. I was surprised to discover a handful of results, including a rather large one at the top of the list.

This weekend Anne and I had the pleasure of attending the 28th annual Motor City Comic Con in the city of Novi, a safe suburb northwest of Detroit, some 300 miles from home. Well established and catering to fans of comics and media guests alike, MCCC is a shade smaller than our two regular Chicago shows, but proved an excellent reason to return to Michigan for our first time in fifteen years.

But first and foremost, per our standard convention procedures: cosplay! Presenting a showcase of all the costumes we photographed during our hours walking through and around the exhibit hall on Saturday. Longtime readers know the drill; hence, costumes from MCCC here on MCC. Enjoy the gallery!


SECTION 1: MARVEL AND DC!

Spider-Foes!

The sinister foes of Spider-Man: Kraven the Hunter, the Rhino, Mysterio, and the Shocker.

Moon Knight!

I brake for any and every Moon Knight, even if we’ve already met.

Spider-Woman!

Your friendly neighborhood Spider-Woman.

outback Deadpool!

Mandatory Deadpool variant #1: um, outback Deadpool?

bloody maid Deadpool?

Mandatory Deadpool variant #2: uhhh, killer maid Deadpool?

Moondragon!

Moondragon! In the Marvel comics universe she’s technically kindasorta related to Drax, whose origin was a bit different back in the days before he hooked up with the Guardians of the Galaxy.

Aquaman!

Aquaman, soon to be a major movie star. He’s a real righteous dude!

Deadshot!

Deadshot, the erstwhile Batman villain who beat both Aquaman and Wonder Woman to Hollywood stardom.

Ringwraith and Grifter!

Grifter from the WildCATs was dragged into the DC Universe several years ago, though currently seems to be on a separate Earth. The Ringwraith wishes someone would drag him into a paying super-gig.

Rorschach!

Also soon to be dragged kicking and screaming into the DC Universe, quite probably: Rorschach from Watchmen.

SECTION 2: STAR WARS!

Kylo Ren and Mini-Ren!

Teaser image from Star Wars: The Last Jedi in which Kylo Ren introduces his new apprentice Mini-Ren.

Chewbacca!

Chewbacca ready and willing to harm his way through the dense crowds.

Mara Jade and Wookiee!

Mara Jade lives! The patron saint of the Star Wars Expanded Universe hangs out with another unidentified Wookiee.

Mandalorians!

Mandalorians punish a fan for telling them to their faces that Boba Fett sucks.

Trooper Bunsen!

Over by the 501st Legion booth we caught a brief parade of Muppet-themed Stormtroopers, beginning with Bunsen T. Honeydew, who I guess would be their science officer.

Trooper Dr. Teeth!

Dr. Teeth, the Trooper most likely to have internet radio piped into his helmet.

Trooper Sweetums!

Trooper Sweetums, least likely to wear a helmet.

Trooper Sam the Eagle!

Sam the Eagle, who’s more tired of your nonsense than Vader is.

SECTION 3: AND THE REST!

Buzz Lightyear!

Buzz Lightyear to the rescue, but of course.

Eye of the Beholder!

My wife is a massive Twilight Zone fan and will dedicate all available resources to hunting down any related costumes. Case in point: one of the doctors from “Eye of the Beholder”.

the Ood!

One of the Ood, brain in hand, from Doctor Who.

Jeannie!

Jeannie from I Dream of Jeannie, on hand to meet one of the con’s most special guests.

Turd Ferguson!

A Saturday Night Live fan as Norm MacDonald as Burt Reynolds as “Turd Ferguson” from “Celebrity Jeopardy!” I am now all out of prepositions.

Dread Pirate Roberts!

The Dread Pirate Roberts: still not left-handed.

Mortal Kombat!

Kitana, Mileena, and Sub-Zero from Mortal Kombat. FRIENDSHIP!

Wilson!

Rare sighting of the elusive Wilson from Home Improvement.

Predator!

Predator, wishing someone would put in a good word for him with Ridley Scott.

Strawberry Shortcake!

Strawberry Shortcake hanging out with two of her mortal enemines. At right is Sour Grapes; at left is (my wife quite obviously had to help me with this one) the Peculiar Purple Pieman of Porcupine Peak. Can’t wait for the gritty reboot version.

Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy!

Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy! From the wacky world of Spongebob Squarepants.

Powdered Toast Man!

From the bygone era of Ren & Stimpy: Powdered Toast Man returns!

Roger and Jessica Rabbit!

Representing for Toontown: Roger and Jessica Rabbit!

To be concluded!


Superman Celebration 2017 Photos, Part 2 of 4: Cosplay!

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Spider-Woman!

Spider-Gal, Spider-Gal / Does whatever a spider shall / Spins a web, catches creeps / Strikes a pose, plays for keeps!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: on June 9th and 10th my wife Anne and I attended the 39th annual Superman Celebration in Metropolis, IL, a grand bash in honor of the Man of Steel in particular and all the super-heroes who owe their existence and livelihoods to him in general.

And of course there were costumes! Lots of cosplayers spiffing up the town with their favorite characters from the worlds of comics, film, TV, animation, and toy stores. I’ll shut up now and let the photo gallery roll!

(Special thanks to my son for light naming assistance.)

Superman!

Of course Superman was there. On Friday he led a kids’ costume parade from the north end of Market Street to the Superman statue, noisemakers at full volume all the way.

Parade's End!

The parade’s big finale: a group statue rendezvous.

Supergirl!

Of course Supergirl was in town to mark the occasion and say hi to her cousin and whatnot.

Vigilante + Friends!

Another Supergirl hanging out with Vigilante (Golden Age version), the Wizard (old-time DC villain), and Marlon Brando’s Jor-El.

Wonder Woman!

Wonder Woman representation was increased manifold this year. Her movie’s now in theaters. You might’ve heard of it. It’s a big deal.

Bizarro and Wonder Woman!

Another Wonder Woman tries to see the good inside Bizarro. But him give Wonder Woman film 0/10, call it “not awesome and extra rotten!”

Lex Luthor!

When we’re talking Superman villains, it wouldn’t be a complete lineup without Lex Luthor.

Aquaman!

Aquaman bides his time, waiting for his big chance to become America’s Next Top DC Hero. SOON.

Nuclear Man!

Guaranteed not to hassle Aquaman in his film: his evil twin Nuclear Man from Superman IV: The Quest for Peace.

Clark Kentpool!

It wouldn’t be a gathering of comics fans without at least one Deadpool variant. Filling that critical quota is not-so-mild-mannered Clark Kentpool.

Daily Planet Staff!

Daily Planet staff meeting! Perry, Jimmy, Lois and Clark hang out by an old-timey car in front of the Super Museum.

Harley Quinn!

Also from the automotive department: Harley Quinn crosses the media to smash Tim Burton’s Batmobile to bits.

Casey Jones!

Also speaking loudly and carrying a big stick: Casey Jones on patrol, Turtles or no Turtles.

Red Tornado + Friends!

The JLA’s heroic android Red Tornado flanked by new versions of Zatanna and Cheshire from the Young Justice animated series.

Marvels + Titans!

A very special Teen Titans/Marvel Family team-up! Mary Marvel, Captain Marvel, Wonder Girl and Superboy.

Saturn Girl!

Saturn Girl, founding member of the Legion of Super-Heroes, brings greetings from the 30th and/or 31st centuries.

Shade!

Originally the Shade was a straightforward Golden Age DC villain, but fans of the wondrous James Robinson/Tony Harris 1990s Starman series recall his complicated life rather differently.

Steel!

The most elaborate costume we saw this weekend: John Henry Irons IS Steel.

Fun science fact to keep in mind: whereas your average convention cosplayer spends most of their time indoors and surrounded by air conditioning that helps counter all the body heat milling around them and inside their costumes, all of these fine folks were cosplaying outdoors in summertime in temperatures pushing 90 degrees, some for hours at a time. Their dedication and stamina are impressive and enviable and I hope other fans brought them lots and lots of water.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 1: All-Stars! (photos with our special guests!)
Part 3: Festival Food!
Part 4: Who else we met, what else we did!


FandomFest 2017 Photos, Part 2 of 2: Cosplay!

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Spectre!

The Spectre, DC Comics’ renowned spirit of vengeance, bids you welcome to the land of the vengeful!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: on Saturday my wife Anne and I attended FandomFest in Louisville, KY, the twelfth iteration of this entertainment/”comic” convention that’s quite low on comics, heavy on controversy, improper in its online customer service, saddled with a years-old negative image not really helped by the depressing role call of thirty-one canceled guests, and graded a solid F by the Better Business Bureau. But beyond the mountains of baggage, their volunteers were pretty friendly to us in person despite their upper management, and the fifteen actors in the house seemed like decent folks.

But enough about that. Are you as tired of reading about FandomFest’s issues as I am of typing about them? If not, I totally understand and I hope one day true customer satisfaction will be yours without requiring a nasty blood vendetta against the Lochners. Until then: we got costumes! Lots of costumes! Fans do love the cosplayers and their cosplay. Backroom shenanigans or not, dozens of cosplayers sported their finest duds this weekend and did what they could for the sake of convention quality-of-life and their favorite characters. Enjoy!


Savitar!

Continuing the theme of “characters pointing or aiming things at us” is Savitar, self-styled “god” of speed and mortal enemy of the Flash.

Doom FF!

Doctor Doom in his rare Future Foundation variant armor.

Squirrel Girl!

The unbeatable Squirrel Girl and Tippy-Toe the squirrel wonder.

Scarecrow!

Scarecrow, who wants to show Batman something up close…

Scarecrow Face!

…HIS SURPRISE EXTENDABLE JAW, which made Anne jump about three feet back.

Jack Skellington!

Jack Skellington getting antsy between holidays.

Miles Morales!

Miles Morales, your other friendly neighborhood Spider-Man.

Robocop!

Robocop thanks you for your cooperation.

Tenth Doctor!

In addition to the usual sonic screwdriver, the Tenth Doctor brought his spare hand and a tiny dollop of Adipose.

River Song!

The Doctor’s extremely good friend River Song, one among many Doctor Who fans really missing Paul McGann and Daphne Ashbrook this weekend. (Check out her official page for more cosplay fun.)

Colonel Sanders!

In case you thought I was kidding about Colonel Sanders cosplay in Part One. And he even brought one of Gonzo’s girlfriends for lunch!

Moana!

Continuing the theme of “fans who insisted on posing with Anne”: Moana!

Hugpool!

Mandatory Deadpool. I think the variant-Deadpool cosplay fad is finally dying, judging by its absence here.

Orlok!

Count Orlok from Nosferatu, energetically working the show floor on behalf of The Devil’s Attic, a local Halloween haunted house.

Lego Batman!

The kindly Lego Batman tabling on behalf of the Ohio River Valley Cosplayers and Prop Builders, a fine cosplay group that participates in local charity events. Their next benefit will be a street painting festival in October on behalf of the Foster Children of New Beginnings Foundation.

Butler + Beauty!

Earl Alois Trancy (Black Butler II) and Elizabeth Midford (Black Butler: Book of the Atlantic) meet Belle and Prince Adam, both really missing those five canceled Beauty and the Beast guests.

Nightwing Croc Two-Face!

Nightwing, Killer Croc, and Two-Face.

Gamora + Star-Lord!

Star-Lord, Gamora, and li’l Baby Groot.

Krennic!

Director Krennic from Rogue One.

Jawa + Sandcrawler!

A Jawa in a Sandcrawler that also functions as a wheelchair. Not sure if it fit into the Macy’s elevator.

Black Knight!

The Black Knight, limbs intact before the flesh wounds.

Ursula!

Ursula, wondering if the mall food court sells scoops of mermaid on rice.

Planet Hulk!

If you’ve read the great Planet Hulk, then you know this variant. If not, you’ll get to see extracts from it in Thor: Ragnarok.

Tinkerbell!

Margaret Kerry, one of the thirty-one cancellations, was the original voice of Tinkerbell from Peter Pan. A shame she missed this awesome tribute.

The End. Thanks for reading! Hopefully we can find a great non-FandomFest opportunity to return someday to the Kentucky convention scene. If so, see you then!


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