After the TV actor grew up and most people did not recognize him, he became a very disappointed person who joined some of his friends in fan concerts. Why did not he try to find another job?. A comedy story full of exciting events.
Though devoted fanboys may find it worth a chuckle or two on streaming outlets, most will find it as unsatisfying as a photo op with an extra from Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.
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.
Utterly hopeless and downright lazy, unwilling to satirize the juicy details of the convention circuit (especially its vicious game of profiteering), preferring to slap poop on everything and call it a day.
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.
Supercon has its moments, although not nearly enough of them, and its grossest-of-gross-out scenes might be disgusting enough to cause John Waters to wince.