Icon Comics

{{Short description|Imprint of Marvel Comics}}

{{About|the Marvel Comics imprint|the Milestone/DC Comics character|Icon (character)}}

{{More citations needed|date=December 2009}}

{{Infobox company

| name = Icon Comics

| logo = Iconcomicslogo.png

| foundation = 2004

| predecessor = Epic Comics

| founder =

| key_people =

| defunct = 2017

| location =

| parent = Marvel Comics

| owner = Marvel Entertainment
(The Walt Disney Company)

| industry = Publishing

| products = Comic books

| homepage = {{official website|http://www.marvel.com/comics/Icon}}

}}

Icon Comics was an imprint of Marvel Comics for creator-owned titles, designed to keep select "A-list" creators producing for Marvel rather than seeing them take creator-owned work to other publishers.{{Citation needed|date=January 2017}}

History

Icon Comics was launched in 2004 with Michael Avon Oeming and Brian Michael Bendis' superhero/detective series Powers and David Mack's Kabuki moving to the imprint, both from Image Comics. In June 2005 the imprint's third title J. Michael Straczynski's Dream Police was launched, followed in September by The Book of Lost Souls, also from Straczynski. Criminal by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips is an ongoing crime comic also published by Icon.

Mark Millar has described the deal with Icon in relation to his Kick-Ass series:

{{bquote|The creative team get all the rights and you do all the promotion yourself.

You could end up out of pocket because some of the team get paid upfront under these deals whereas Johnny and I don't take a page rate. But it was a calculated risk as we both have pretty good reps and so anything over, say, 25,000 would basically cover our Marvel page rates.{{cite web |first=Matt |last=Brady |url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=143399 |title=Mark Millar, Marketing Machine |publisher=Newsarama |date=January 16, 2008 |access-date=December 7, 2009}}{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}}}

Titles

Following the move of Brian Michael Bendis (as well as all of his comics) to DC Comics in 2017, the Icon imprint has been dormant:

See also

  • Epic Comics, an earlier Marvel imprint for creator-owned works

Notes

{{Reflist}}