Set on the road to BlizzCon 2017, a massive gaming convention (attendance: 35,000) cosplayers consider an annual red carpet for their outfits, Becoming Jessica Nigri follows its subject struggling - and ultimately, failing - to complete her dream costume, opting for an alternative. Becoming Jessica Nigri, directed by Mat Hames that premiered Friday on Rooster Teeth’s digital platform FIRST, gives fans and curious parties an intimate, sometimes difficult look at the highs and lows of being a cosplayer through the perspective of arguably its biggest homegrown personality. It’s incredible when they’re driven by passion.”Ī self-taught costume maker, Nigri’s career is built on a constant internet presence, but a new documentary is the first time she’s opening her doors. “Think about the skills they acquire to represent this thing they love: Makeup, woodwork, armor builds, all because they like something a lot. “I’ve never met more die hard fans than cosplayers,” Nigri tells Inverse in a phone interview. With over 8 million followers across social media, the 28-year-old from New Zealand (now living in Arizona) is one of the most prominent faces of cosplay, a portmanteau of “costume play,” in which fans dress in homemade outfits based on fictional characters. She isn’t the first to do so, but even in 2018 very few people who love anime, video games, and sci-fi can say the same. Jessica Nigri makes a living by being a fan.
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