A view of the exterior of the Mr. Robot VR Experience during Comic-Con International on July 22 in San Diego, California.[Photo/Agencies] |
The anti-heroes of Mr. Robot and Suicide Squad are breaking into San Diego Comic-Con in 360 degrees.
The creators of the USA Network hacker drama and the Warner Bros. supervillain mash-up respectively premiered virtual reality experiences last Thursday in atmospheric venues located outside the San Diego Convention Center.
Unlike most other promotional VR content released alongside films and TV shows, the Suicide Squad and Mr. Robot short VR films featured their counterparts' casts and crew.
In the case of Mr. Robot, the original, 12-minute VR experience was directed by series creator Sam Esmail and stars Rami Malek as he undergoes an emotional, marijuana-fueled flashback as Mr. Robot protagonist Elliot Alderson.
The short VR film initially premiered last Thursday during a Petco Park event before doors opened to a venue a few blocks away that featured a recreation of Alderson's apartment from the series. Inside, fans could try out the experience and grab a free T-shirt.
For people not in attendance at the pop-culture convention, the Mr. Robot short VR film simultaneously appeared online last Thursday on the Within VR app before it was taken down. It will be available again next week for all major VR platforms.
A few blocks away, the immersive VR experience for Suicide Squad was showcased in a venue designed to look like the fictional Belle Reve penitentiary. It depicted a scene from the movie where cast members including Will Smith, Jai Courtney and Margot Robbie battle a gooey horde of soldiers in 360 degrees.
The short VR film, which also showed the scene from the viewpoint of Robbie's manic Harley Quinn, will be released alongside the film Aug 5 on the Samsung VR platform.
Afterward, fans could nab fake tattoos, T-shirts and other swag in the style of the forthcoming film's neon-hued baddies.
Both experiences are being demonstrated through Sunday with Samsung Gear VR for hundreds of fans waiting in lines snaking down the streets of San Diego. The headsets work in tandem with a Samsung smartphone rather than a computer.
Other entertainment properties with VR experiences on display at this Comic-Con include FX's American Horror Story: Hotel, MTV's Teen Wolf, Amazon's The Man in the High Castle and TBS' Conan, which requires fans to don giant cartoon heads resembling the talk-show host.
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