There will be a comic book to accompany the upcoming indie feature '...And Out Comes the Wolf', which is inspired by the ...
It's important to note that the Omnibus collects the updated, reformatted versions of the '70s-'80s strips, which were put ...
In a CBR exclusive interview with Christian Ward, we talk about his upcoming Event Horizon sequel comic book series ...
Each December, the IGN team looks back at all the comics we’ve read over the past year and votes on which one we think is the greatest of them all. Now, the time has come to narrow down 2025’s lineup ...
A detail from Johnny Craig's infamous cover to "Crime SuspenStories" No. 22 from EC Comics. Credit: Comic Book cover For avid followers of comic book history, 1954 was the most epochal, unsettling, ...
(NEXSTAR) – You may still remember your first comic book. Do you remember the last time you saw that comic, though? Depending on what it is and the condition it’s in, it could be worth something – in ...
The identity of the comic's buyer has not been publicly released. It's a bird! It's a plane! No – it’s the most expensive comic ever sold! An original "Superman" No. 1 comic, printed by DC Comics in ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. It’s a bird, it’s a plane ... it’s a Superman comic beyond most of our price range! A pristine copy of “Superman” ...
An original copy of the first edition of the first "Superman" comic from 1939 — which had been lying undiscovered in an attic for decades — was sold at auction on Thursday for more than $9 million, ...
They had heard the family legend about the rare comic books for years. But the three brothers had never seen their mother’s collection in her California home, so when they were cleaning out the attic ...
Before the AMC Anne Rice Immortal Universe, and even before the movies Interview with the Vampire and Queen of the Damned, the only non-book representation of Rice’s books came in comic book form. In ...
A comic found in an attic could become the most valuable ever. A pristine copy of the first Superman comic could fetch over $6 million after three brothers found it stored in their late mother’s home.