Archive for the 'Marc-Oliver Frisch' Category

DC Month to Month Sales: December 2008

02/6/09

by Marc-Oliver Frisch

The question whether the economy has any effect on DC Comics’ periodical output is increasingly difficult to answer. On the one hand, many titles not right at the center of the publisher’s big superhero line are losing units by the truckload, and new series debut with abysmal numbers — case in point in December: Vigilante. Then again, these are trends which have been visible for a while, so what we’re seeing may as well be a continuation of what’s been happening anyway, rather than the result of the current crisis. Of course, it could also be both.

That said, DC’s average periodical sales in the direct market recovered slightly in December, mostly thanks to an issue of Final Crisis and multiple entries by three high-ticket series: There were three issues of Batman and two issues each of Justice League of America and Justice Society of America. Average sales didn’t recover as much as you might have expected, however. One reason for this is the increasing decline mentioned above, another is that a number of series returned to a much lower level, now that the “Batman R.I.P.” event is over.

Vertigo and WildStorm’s average periodical sales were in decline again in December. Whereas the average Vertigo title remains in the 11-12K area, the average WildStorm periodical dropped to yet another historical low point, selling fewer than 9,415 units. We don’t know the exact number because multiple new WildStorm releases again failed to make the Top 300 chart — a rather more recent trend. Their number rose to four in December.

On a technical note, I should mention that the December chart includes books which shipped on January 2, 2009 — not because any of them were late, but because Diamond evidently felt more comfortable with that date. Originally, those titles were expected on December 31, which is presumably why they ended up on the December chart.

See below for the details, and please mind the small print at the end of the column. Thanks to Milton Griepp and ICv2.com for the permission to use their figures. An overview of ICv2.com’s estimates can be found here.

—–

2 - FINAL CRISIS
05/2008: Final Crisis #1 of 7 -- 144,826          [166,641]
06/2008: Final Crisis #2 of 7 -- 126,082 (-12.9%) [134,116]
07/2008: --
08/2008: Final Crisis #3 of 7 -- 123,881 (- 1.8%)
09/2008: --
10/2008: Final Crisis #4 of 7 -- 115,666 (- 6.6%)
11/2008: --
12/2008: Final Crisis #5 of 7 -- 109,181 (- 5.6%)
----------------
6 months: -13.4%

Final Crisis is continuing a fairly smooth drop-off for a blockbuster miniseries. As usual, the book was promoted through a 50/50 variant-cover edition.

For comparison, Marvel’s Secret Invasion #8, which topped the December chart, sold an estimated 152,429 units, which is more than even the debut issue of Final Crisis managed in its first month. That’s quite another ballpark, obviously.

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Meet the Elite Beat Squad: Marc-Oliver Frisch

01/13/09

Mof 2008Continuing our spotlight on our valued collaborators here at The Beat, today we spotlight Marc-Oliver Frisch, who reecently moved to Boise (from his native Germany) for educational purposes. Marc-Oliver’s monthly DC Sales Chart analyses have captivated and infuriated in equal parts for the last six years or so. He started them out on Usenet, but we picked them up for the Pulse and have been posting his efforts ever since. It’s a mind-bogglingly tough task that Marc-Oliver does for no money, so let’s give him a huge round of thanks. You can read his equally opinionated thoughts in the two blogs listed below.

Name: Marc-Oliver Frisch
Residence: Boise, ID
Occupation: Student
Elite Beat Squad Codename: Standard Attrition
Website(s): http://comiksdebris.blogspot.com/ and http://supercritic.blogspot.com/
The first comic book you ever remember reading: An Asterix album, maybe.
Name three of your favorite graphic novels: We3, Y: The Last Man, Casanova
Favorite comics writer: Grant Morrison
Favorite comics artist: Hmm, don’t know. Too many to pick one.
Favorite musical act: Right now, TV on the Radio.
Name a movie that made you cry: Two Days in Paris
Name a movie that made you laugh: In Bruges
In my spare time I like to: read stuff, write stuff, watch stuff, run
Betty or Veronica? Um, Olivia?
World of Warcraft or City of Heroes? Um, Zak MacKracken?
Lost or 24? Um, Deadwood?
What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery? Secret Invasion.
Blogging — boon to mankind or a clear and present danger? Both, probably, like most things.
In five years comics will be… mostly paperless.