Things have been a little… off at Marvel Studios lately. With its varsity team of heroes like Captain America and Iron Man entering retirement, the company’s attempts to find similar breakout stars among its extensive back catalog of heroes have proved less sure of success. The latest to land in theaters, “The Marvels,” was plagued by the need for extensive reshoots, a relatively weak opening, and a massive drop in second-week box office figures.
That’s not to say that the hit factory behind “Avengers: Endgame,” the second-biggest box office smash of all time, is preparing to shutter. If anything, the “The Marvels” is the biggest victim yet of a strategy from Marvel, and its parent company Disney, to rush an endless stream of content out the studio door. It’s reminiscent of a period that brought Marvel Comics itself to the brink of total collapse in the 1990s. If the company’s executives are looking for a supervillain in all of this, they should start by looking in the mirror.
Now, comics weren’t just a fun read for kids — they were an investment.
Let’s jump back to the late 1980s and early ‘90s, a time when superhero comics suddenly became a literal hot commodity. Tim Burton’s “Batman” — based on a character from DC Comics, Marvel’s eternal rival — was a blockbuster success, helping to revive interest in the genre as a whole. A new stable of artists like Todd McFarlane and Jim Lee were reinvigorating the industry. And the first Sotheby’s auction of old comic books saw issues selling for tens of thousands of dollars. Now, comics weren’t just a fun read for kids — they were an investment. This shift spawned a legion of speculators and collectors who scoured publications like Wizard Magazine, which listed the estimated value of back issues each month, turning comic shops into mini-stock market trading floors.
Marvel responded by leaning into the craze. Limited-edition variant covers became all the rage, sending collectors scrambling to seek out each version in the hopes of completing the set. Soon, comics stores were all ashimmer with holographic and embossed covers gleaming from the shelves. At the same time, the entire industry coalesced around Diamond Comics Distributors, which from the early 1990s until 2020 was the only middleman between the publishers and comic book shops. The latter placed preorders with Diamond for how many copies of a title they thought they’d sell, which would then determine how many issues the publishers printed — and preorders had gone through the roof.
Some artists and writers were uncomfortable with the mania, but executives were more concerned with how much cash was flowing in. Publishers produced more and more copies of issues like they were printing money. But here’s the problem with printing money: Currency loses value as more of it floods the market. When Amazing Fantasy #15, which introduced Spider-Man to the world, was first published, it was mostly seen as cheap garbage that wasn’t worth keeping around. “Ironically, it was that disposability that led to the scarcity which afforded older comics their inherent value, a fact that was widely ignored but that would become monumentally important in the following boom and inevitable crash,” journalist Rosie Knight wrote about the era.
It didn’t take long for buyers to realize what was happening. By 1993, the gold rush suddenly came to a halt. “When they found their copy of Bloodshot No. 1 was worthless because everyone owned that comic, that helped spark the bust in sales that crushed the industry for the rest of the decade,” Jason Sacks, author of the “American Comic Book Chronicles” series, told The Hollywood Reporter. A number of smaller publishers folded entirely as Marvel and DC struggled to hang on in the wake of a massive drop in new comic book sales.
Marvel Comics filed for bankruptcy in 1996, before being purchased by Toy Biz, a company that produced action figures based on Marvel’s characters. Its new owner, Isaac Perlmutter, saw that the real value of the company wasn’t necessarily in comic books themselves, but in the intellectual property its characters represented. After the success of movies like “X-Men” (2000) and “Spider-Man” (2002) at other studios, Marvel decided to roll the dice on producing its own major motion picture. The result was “Iron Man” (2008), which launched the Marvel Cinematic Universe into the juggernaut it is — or, potentially, was.









