A world without Marvel or DC Comics. It’s something many of
us can’t imagine. But it’s something that might possibly become a reality
sooner rather than later.
In August the comic book industry posted the worst sales
numbers in the history of the medium. Many books like X-men and Spider-Man
which posted 500,000 sales in the late 1980s are now barely selling 50,000
units. Many iconic characters like Superman who sold five to six million comics
in the 1950s are barely selling 40,000 comics.
Worse, comic shops aren’t ordering comics. Due to the poor
sales of shoehorned SJW “diversity” characters and events like Secret Empire at
Marvel, and the seven-year long debacle at DC’s rebooted New52, Convergence,
and Rebirth, many comic shop owners aren’t ordering as many titles as they used
to. And due to the fact that comics are non-returnable, comic shop owners are
stuck with so many unsold back issues that some shops are being forced to close.
Are these the last days of Comic books at the Big Two? It’s
looking like it.
While there are many comic fans out there, they don’t see a
reason to buy comic books. Thanks to two decades of mismanagement at Marvel and
DC’s editorial departments, both Marvel and DC have struggled to pull a profit
since the 1990s collapse. After two decades of trying to bring readers back to
the medium with numerous failed campaigns like revamps and reboots there comes
a point where a business like Marvel and DC just can’t afford to keep producing
a product that customers aren’t buying.
The parent companies of DC and Marvel, Warner Brothers and
Disney may make billions of dollars off licensing and merchandising the catalog
of popular superhero characters. However, the median age for a comic book
reader is 40 years old. At that median age, corporations discontinue products.
Why? Because there’s no place for the customer to go but the grave.
And looking at the sales of print comics in August 2017, the
audience for print comics has one foot on a banana peel and the other in a
casket. With the comic book industry unable to find a way to sell comics to
younger readers, it’s looking more and more like we’re going to be living in a
world without Marvel Comics or DC Comics sooner rather than later.
It’s hard to imagine a world without the superheroes
generations grew up with. But we’re getting there.
I grew up with Marvel and DC comic books. They were how I
learned to read when I was 4. And they got me through a lot of hard times in
Junior High, High School, and College. I used to look forward to buying them on
Fridays in High school from a newsstand in Times Square and Wednesdays on
Fordham Road in The Bronx when I was in college. It saddens me to think of a
world without Marvel and DC comic books. They were the place so many kids like
myself who felt out of place with the rest of the world could find someone we
could look up to. And someplace where we felt like we belonged.
Yeah, it was an imaginary place. But that escape from the
harsh reality of broken homes, poverty, crime, and drugs helped many kids like
myself get through a rough day and gave them friends who could help them get
through the hard times. For some, they gave them something to aspire to when
they grew up.
Yeah, there are a bunch of superhero movies out there today.
But what happens when the Superhero movie craze is over? As publishers, Marvel
and DC aren’t in a place to sustain comics anymore. Nor are any of the indies. The
generation after this could be the first in a century to grow up without comic
books. And their world will be a sadder place without them.
I think that we will see comics in the future. There will be a renewed interest. However, I also feel that some of today's characters may end up being relics of the past in the way that Dick Tracy, The Shadow, or The Phantom have become. I too got comics ata young age in the form of teenage mutant ninja turtles when I was 4 or 5. But with the way things are with everything online and direct marketed, my honest feeling is that the old characters will die out and after some time of absence, get replaced.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone have any idea how the digital equivalents sell? That might say something if digital increased total sales. I was going digital because I can read them on a tablet or TV screen so long as I have an internet connection
But yeah, it's troubling to see how bad. Even worse is the price. It is up, and low sales may very well force the price up even more.
Usually a fraction of the physical copies are sold as digital. But I feel that it would still feel bad to see those numbers if the publisher actually showed them. Given how close to the drain the sales are, I can only imagine DC asking Frank Miller to make another Dark Knight Returns sequel out of desperation for cash.
DeleteOh yeah,it's John again.
ReplyDelete40,000 units sold for Superman? Are you ÷%÷€÷^ kidding me?!!!
ReplyDeleteNope, that’s what was collected as a stat by comichron. You probably add a few more units sold to account for digital and international, but 60 to 70 thousand is still a bad number in historical terms. Direct Markets haven’t been good for comic books.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteTrue, but as Shawn says, the movies not staying up would be a bigger blow to the profitability.
Delete