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Another weekend, another comic convention for former TV actor Keith Mahar. Most people don't recognize Keith. His only claim to fame was as a child star in an 80's television show. Keith reluctantly joins his close friends,cartoon voice-over actor Matt,comic book artist Allison,and 80'sTV star Brock,who are also working the convention, but things take a turn for the worst when Keith's former co-star and Supercon's big ticket draw for the weekend - Adam King - decides to have this group fired and banned from the convention with the help of the convention promoter. This launches the friends on a crusade to bring down King and the promoter in the most epic way imaginable.
Rating
R (for strong crude sexual content throughout, pervasive language, and drug use)
Director
Zak Knutson
Studio
Archstone Distribution
Writer
Zak Knutson, Dana Snyder, Andy Sipes
  • Sometimes a movie is bad because they were young and tried their hardest. In the pile of shit, you may find some pure gems of inspiration or creativity. Welp... None of that's here. Some ass people got together and made an ass movie full of ass jokes. Actually, more like dick jokes. If you want to see a dude make the Jack-off motion like 20 times, you'll def like this movie.
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  • This movie has a subtle subversiveness that the reviewers I have read seem to have missed. They appear not to perceive the humor inherent in con fans watching a movie to see con fans pretending to be con fans. They are going to get all the jokes. They also seem to not appreciate the unabashed playing with the industry's hypocrisy of feigning extreme offense at every type of awful stereotype while building and maintaining a business model that uses those stereotypes as their stock and trade. Some people don't take offense in the abstract. But what they seem to miss most is that there's an actual twist ending that makes the whole much more than a prurient bagtag slapstick heist caper.
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  • I wanted to go on the heist with them, but it was fun to go along for the ride.
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  • What makes the film fun is how it spoofs the whole world of fans eager to see the TV stars of their youth without making those fans the butt of the joke.
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  • It's hard to take any of Supercon's over-the-top silliness seriously, and the increasingly-bizarre hijinks are just funny enough to recommend for open-minded folks not easily offended by patently politically-incorrect fare.
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