BBC.com Culture Presents Comic-Con 2015 Panel: How Comic Books Took Over Hollywood!

image001image002image003image004

We’ve all thought it at some point, ‘Comic books have taken over hollywood’ – some thinking it a good thing; others… not so much – but BBC.com Culture is taking that thought to Comic-Con 2015 as a fait accompli with a panel called How Comic Books Took Over Hollywood.

The panel, to be moderated by BBC.com’s Deputy Culture Editor Christian Blauvelt, will feature a discussion with Marvel Comics’ Editor-in-Chief Axel Alonso, Batman: The Animated Series’ writer/producer Paul Dini, Star Wars: The Clone Wars’ voice actress Ashley Eckstein, and Fanboys director Kyle Newman.

For further details, follow the jump.

BBC.com CULTURE PRESENTS ITS FIRST EVER PANEL AT SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON

“HOW COMIC BOOKS TOOK OVER HOLLYWOOD”

Featuring Axel Alonso, Paul Dini, Ashley Eckstein, and Kyle Newman

New York – June 24, 2015 – BBC.com Culture will host its first ever panel, “How Comic Books Took Over Hollywood,” at San Diego Comic-Con this year featuring Marvel Comics’ Editor-in-Chief Axel Alonso, Batman: The Animated Series writer/producer Paul Dini, Star Wars: The Clone Wars voice actress Ashley Eckstein, and Fanboys director Kyle Newman, marking the first time these industry legends and trendsetters will be together on one stage.  The panel, moderated by BBC.com’s Deputy Culture Editor Christian Blauvelt, will discuss the recent success of comics in Hollywood, explore why it “gets” comic book storytelling now when for decades it didn’t, and why the format has recently become so massively popular in film and television.

Panel room and time will be released closer to the event. Follow @Ctblauvelt for updates.

Christian Blauvelt is Deputy Editor of BBC.com Culture based in New York. Prior to joining the BBC, Christian was a culture and entertainment journalist for Entertainment Weekly and Hollywood.com, and he makes frequent TV appearances on BBC World News’ Talking Movies show and the CBS New York Sunday Morning News.

Photos courtesy of BBC America