Uncommon first Superman comedian as soon as stolen from Nicolas Cage sells for $15m

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A uncommon copy of the 1938 comedian that launched Superman to the world has bought to an nameless collector for $15m (£11.2m).

The personal sale of the Motion Comics No 1 copy – as soon as stolen from actor Nicolas Cage’s residence and returned to him over a decade later – was introduced on Friday.

The earlier file for the sale of a comic book e-book was set in November, when a pristine Superman No 1 fetched $9.12m at public sale. Each gross sales far exceed the unique 10-cent worth tags – or round $2.25 in at this time’s cash.

Superman’s debut is one in all a number of tales anthologised in Motion Comics No 1, which is broadly credited with having outlined the superhero style as we now realize it. Fewer than 100 copies are thought to exist.

Friday’s Motion Comics sale was negotiated by New York-based Metropolis Collectibles/Comedian Join, which mentioned each the comedian e-book’s proprietor and the client wished to stay nameless.

The dealer mentioned the copy had been graded 9 out of a attainable 10 factors by the Licensed Guartanty Firm, which specialises in authenticating collectables – making it the joint-highest scoring copy of the comedian up to now.

The dealer mentioned its worth was additional inflated by its storied affiliation with Hollywood star Cage

The Con Air and Nationwide Treasure star bought this explicit copy in 1996 for $150,000 – a file on the time.

However the comedian was stolen throughout a celebration at Cage’s residence in 2000 and solely discovered – inside a storage unit in California – in 2011.

“Throughout that 11-year interval, it skyrocketed in worth. The thief made Nicolas Cage some huge cash by stealing it,” mentioned Metropolis/ComicConnect CEO Stephen Fishler.

Cage was reunited with the copy and, six months later, bought it at public sale for $2.2m.

Fishler in contrast the comedian’s historical past to the brazen theft of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa from the Louvre museum in Paris in 1911, which remodeled the then little-known work to the world’s most well-known portray.

“The restoration of the portray made the Mona Lisa go from being only a nice Da Vinci portray to a world icon – and that is what Motion No 1 is. An icon of American popular culture.”

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