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In France, Comic Books Are Serious Business (nytimes.com)

It's a big year for comic book anniversaries. Batman's 80th is this year, and Asterix is turning 60. But at the Angouleme International Comics Festival in France, which finished on Sunday, there was a sense that the form's best days may be yet to come -- in the French-speaking world, at least. From a report: "It's a kind of golden age," said Jean-Luc Fromental, a comic book author who also runs a graphic-novel imprint for the publisher Denoel. "There has never been so much talent. There have never been so many interesting books published."

There are now more comic books published annually in France and Belgium than ever before, according to the festival's artistic director, Stephane Beaujean. "The market has risen from 700 books per year in the 1990s to 5,000 this year," he said in an interview. "I don't know any cultural industry which has had that kind of increase." Research by the market research company GfK, released to coincide with the festival, showed that turnover in the comic book industry in those two countries alone reached 510 million euros, or around $580 million, in 2018.

The bumper year in France and Belgium contrasts with a mixed situation worldwide. Comichron, a website that reports on comic book sales in the United States, where the market is worth around $1 billion, says that sales there are declining. But in terms of respect and recognition, comics are on the way up.

5 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. Funny... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've been raised on Franco-Belgian comics (Belgium is a comics powerhouse, too — that’s where Tintin comes from, after all), and I can trace back the inspiration of many movies to those Franco-Belgian comics; Star Wars being the best known example (and the Star Wars designers admit having the whole Valérian comics collection)

    1. Re:Funny... by dargaud · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Same here, and I'll add that the main difference with US comics is that the latter are mostly about super heroes, while the former are mostly about anything else (fantasy, SF, drama, humor, family, thrillers, etc)... I find superhero comics horribly repetitive (and here's yet another fight between jacked-up tight-wearing guys with no link to actual physics)...

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  2. Get out! by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 4, Funny

    What's this nerd subject doing on this serious, political website! >:-(

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  3. Re: Different format from US comics by Vintermann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The reason most of the Franco-Belgian comics never succeeded in the US, is that Americans interpret the art style as childish.

    So the exceptions are the comics that actually are for children (the Smurfs!) and to some degree the realistically drawn stuff a la Moebius.

    If "Percevan" for instance was drawn as an American superhero comic, I'm sure it would have been very popular. But for American comics readers it's jarring.

    There are/were a few US comics artists who wrote for adults in a "childish" style, but then it was played as somewhat deliberately grotesque, and funny for that reason too. I'm thinking of Sergio Aragones and the others who wrote for MAD. But they were also very popular in Europe and had close contact with the Franco-Belgians (Aragones even appears as a villainous CIA agent in a "Natascha" story!)

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  4. In other news: by Qbertino · · Score: 4, Funny

    "US comic fan utterly amazed at the concept of a comic without superheroes."

    "Are US marvel and DC fans finally discovering how shitty, bland, boring, overpriced and repetitive their favorite comics are?"

    "DC comic readers head explodes from overload after catching glimpse of Franco-Belgian hardcover by Vance & van Hamme"

    "Marvel enthusiast dies of heart attack and endorphine overdose after repeatedly masturbating to French Milo Manara album."

    "US Superhero fan sells all belongings, moves to southern Europe after enchanting read of Coseys "A trip to Italy" comic"

    "Euro comic shipment arrives at US borders. Marvel & DC stock plummets."

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