What is wrong with our hobby???!
I have been reading a bunch of comics during the pandemic and got an itch to look at what an x-men no 1 might cost. Well the highest graded copies are close to $100k and the lowest are going for around $1000 (missing pages!)
There are currently 5000+ graded copies... This book is from 1963!
https://www.cgccomics.com/gallery/details.aspx?comic=201
What is wrong with our hobby??? You would think the greatest movies ever with low population posters would match these.
There are currently 5000+ graded copies... This book is from 1963!
https://www.cgccomics.com/gallery/details.aspx?comic=201
What is wrong with our hobby??? You would think the greatest movies ever with low population posters would match these.
I mean I know we argue the rarity of say Mad Max but even if there are 300 copies out there - that is a drop in the bucket compared to comics. AND the new flock to these art prints (I’m guilt of buying them..)
Wonder if it’s lack of availability in mass quantities make it commercially unattractive. Basically, you can only buy what you see.
I’m stumped. Sports cards too! Mike Trout RC from 2011 sell for $3-4K... They made 20,000 of them...
Rant over...
Wonder if it’s lack of availability in mass quantities make it commercially unattractive. Basically, you can only buy what you see.
I’m stumped. Sports cards too! Mike Trout RC from 2011 sell for $3-4K... They made 20,000 of them...
Rant over...
1

Comments
I think its a bit different.
Kids collected and loved comics and cards.
When the kids grow up they want to get back what they had.
Movie posters...hmmm, dunno many kids that collect movie posters.
Sure we had movies that we loved growing up, but after we acquire the few we really cherish, we are done usually.
Posters are hard. You have to be able to store them, display them.
You can get containers and the like to store comics and cards...Who has walls to display 100 posters?
Those who want a few nice ones for their theatre room are happy with 20 buck repros...
I think a few with a love of film or art or both, venture into posters more fully, but I think we are a select few.
2) The second biggest problem is that many desirable items are incredibly rare. Yes, if you want to collect 1960s on posters, for the most part every one is obtainable and the only question is the price, as is true in baseball cards and comic books.
But for most desirable 1950s and older posters, you CAN'T buy many of them no matter how much you are willing to pay, and that surely turns off many would-be new collectors.
This "lack of supply" also means a massive shortage of dealers of older material. Dealers have no easy way to replenish their stock of older material, so there is a constant problem of not many dealers with a reasonable stock of vintage material that is TRULY desirable. In comics or baseball cards, there is a massive flow of older material entering those hobbies from people finding them in their attics. This is hardly ever true for posters.
And of course there are display issues, as Ves points out, and massive restoration issues. Many auctions are all too happy to sell heavily restored items as having "minor fold and border wear", and the newer collectors who get stuck with those likely exit the hobby as fast as the ones who got ripped off by a repro seller.
Every week we are sent a number of repros as consignments by people who were sold them as originals. This is a GIANT problem in the hobby that is being ignored.
HAS unrestored and unenhanced images - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS 100% honest condition descriptions - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS auctions where the winner is the higher of two real bidders - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS up to SIXTEEN weeks of "Pay and Hold" to save a fortune on shipping - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS real customer service before, during and after EVERY auction, and answers all questions - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS 25% or 26% "buyers premiums" of any kind (but especially the dreadful "$29 or $49 minimum" ones) - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "reserves or starts over $1 - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS hidden bidder IDs - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "nosebleed" shipping charges - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS inadequate packaging - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS no customer service to speak of, before, during and after any auction, and answers almost no questions - NOT eMoviePoster.com
I think it really comes down to a numbers game. Our hobby just isn't anywhere as big as these others! Look here:
https://www.psacard.com/pop/baseball-cards/1952/topps/49722
The 1952 Topps set is hugely popular and PSA have graded more than 250,000 cards from that set - including nearly 1,400 examples of Mickey Mantle.
And that's just one company's numbers!
As a contrast - Bruce, probably the largest poster site online, has auctioned less than 200 one sheets for The Godfather in nearly 2 decades.
We even have a thread on here about only known copies of a poster. It's safe to say we deal with far rarer items and I think that why the number of people in the hobby is less, which in turns decreases demand / prices.
And why don’t they sell for six and seven figures... We just haven’t done a good job of making our hobby an attractive investment... People buy comics and cards thinking investment.
Hello Charlie. You wrote your post six years ago — at a time when there was no AI, when social media didn’t allow you to generate cats playing baseball via a prompt, or produce seemingly perfect action scenes within minutes — entirely without Industrial Light & Magic.
In fact, I do see prices rising. De facto, it seems to be somewhere between 5 and 15% per year. I also notice that on Prime Video (Amazon) there are more and more classic niche channels, and that people are rediscovering the magic of old Technicolor films and Harryhausen monsters. Today’s actors stand in front of green screens. It won’t be long before even those actors disappear — replaced by AI. AI doesn’t get sick, doesn’t complain, doesn’t demand backend participation, and isn’t unionized.
There will come a time when films advertise the fact that their actors are real.
What fundamentally distinguishes movie posters from trading cards is the absence of completion addiction. “I’m still missing one card!” — that dynamic doesn’t exist with movie posters. Also, for the average person, it is almost impossible to understand how many variants exist (Studio, Style A, B, D, Circus, etc.).
In the end, it’s like stocks. Whoever holds, wins. The only question is what you are holding. 😉
Movie posters have spatial dominance, and not every wife can be convinced that a poster doesn’t necessarily have to match the color of the pillows and curtains — even if it cost $5,000. I know what I’m talking about. I have a poster ban in the living room. 🙂
please keep at it!
I contacted eBay twice and both times they responded to say the item didn't breach their guidelines.
I think they might need to review their guidelines.
I now think what hurts are hobby the most is lack of availability. In the sense that card and comic shops are abundant and easily restocked. If I want a comic, I can find the majority of main stream stories. AND I don’t have to worry about bootlegs or fakes.
Those hobbies are commercially driven - products are made to be sold.
Our hobby is probably the largest where the item we collect was not meant to be sold.
That is why many new collectors have turned to limited screen prints. They are predictable and available without having to educate yourself on bootlegs and fakes.
For example of the 1000+ films released last year, only 100+ saw a wide release.
So 100 movies with wide release - and what 20 worth buying a poster for?
Now - comics - 50 new titles a week?
Cards - I have no clue.
I do think people are starving for movie memorabilia - that is why the limited print space opened up.
There just isn’t enough to keep average collectors excited.