A first-edition copy of the comic that introduced the world to Superman in 1939 has become the most expensive comic to date after selling for a staggering $9.12 million at Heritage Auctions on ...
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” ...
It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a new record price for a comic book – with an unusual backstory. A “Superman #1” comic book from 1939 sold for $9.12 million on Thursday in an auction from Heritage ...
A comic found in an attic has become the most valuable ever after being sold for $9.12 million. The pristine copy of the first Superman comic was found by three brothers stored in their late mother’s ...
Warner Bros Studio and the Superman 1939 comic Getty/Heritage Auctions No matter who ends up owning Warner Bros Discovery, Superman will remain a jewel in the crown of the 102-year-old studio. With ...
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, ...
A copy of the first ever issue of “Superman,” discovered in a Californian attic last year, has become the most expensive comic ever sold, fetching $9.12 million at auction. Three brothers from ...
A family’s forgotten copy of Superman No. 1, from 1939, was sold by Heritage Auctions. By George Gene Gustines Up, up and sold for millions! A high-grade copy of Superman No. 1, from 1939, closed at ...
As many fans had expected, Superman and Lex Luthor will reportedly form an uneasy alliance to defeat Braniac in James Gunn's upcoming Man of Tomorrow. Speculation that classic Superman villain ...
From the moment David Corenswet donned Clark Kent’s hypno-glasses, fans have wondered about the future of James Gunn’s Superman franchise, the big movie debut of his newly reinvigorated version of the ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...