Chichester Observer

Who is the greater hero?

- By John Nicholson www.johnnichol­sons.com

Comic Cuts, Victor, Valiant, Eagle, The Beano, The Dandy, Whizzer & Chips – these are just some of the weekly comics that entertaine­d youngsters from the 1930s onwards in Britain. Across the Pond in the United States, Action Comics led the way with its first superhero, Superman, in 1938. Copies of the first issue have changed hands at auction for hundreds of thousands of dollars, culminatin­g first in a $1.5million price in 2010, then a $2.16million bid in 2011 for a copy owned by the actor Nicolas Cage, and then a $3.21million bid in 2014. Key to those top prices was the pristine condition of the comics. This month we have had two more reminders about what an astonishin­g market this is. Comic store owner Billy Giles, who died in 2019, had bought a first issue of Batman – published in 1940 – for £2,200 in 1982. Now the all-but mint condition copy has sold at auction for £1.6million. Hard to beat? Yes, but Tintin, that great invention by the Belgian author and illustrato­r Georges Remi, known as Hergé, did just that in the same week. Okay, we’re not actually dealing with like for like here; the Tintin illustrati­on was a framed original gouache, ink and watercolou­r painting produced for the story The Blue Lotus, the character’s fifth adventure. Neverthele­ss, in all essentials it relates closely to the Batman comic, especially as it was meant to serve as the cover picture for the story, but was rejected. The price? €3.2million or £2.8million. So Batman may have more superpower­s, but Tintin packs the greater punch.

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