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Speakeasy Comics

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Speakeasy Comics was a Canadian publishing company of comic books and graphic novels. It was founded in August 2004 by Adam Fortier, and ceased operations on February 27, 2006.

Contents

[edit] History

In August 2004, Speakeasy Comics (based in Toronto) was founded by Adam Fortier. Previously, Fortier had worked for comics publishers Dreamwave Productions (where he revived the Transformers licence in comics), Devil's Due Publishing, UDON, and IDW Publishing.

In March 2005, the company published its first titles, the debut issues of Atomika and The Grimoire.

In November 2005, it was announced that Speakeasy had concluded a financing deal with Los Angeles-based Ardustry Entertainment, for a stated two-way purpose: Speakeasy would now also develop comics based on licenses brought by Ardustry, while Ardustry would represent Speakeasy's comics properties in the entertainment industry (movies, videogames, etc.) <ref>http://www.speakeasycomics.com/news/news_112905.html</ref> <ref>http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=6241</ref>

However, it was learned later (according to Ardustry's Wayne Williams, who handles Business Affairs for the company) that the deal was only an option to buy Speakeasy, which expired without materialization. Cash flow problems led to Speakeasy's demise before they could materialize various lucrative licensing deals, such as with HBO (The Sopranos or Deadwood).

At 3:30pm EST February 27, 2006 Vito Delsante (who had been handling public relations for Speakeasy Comics) announced by email<ref>http://www.comicsreporter.com/images/uploads/Delsante_E-Mail.doc</ref> the immediate closure of Speakeasy, with all March-solicited books still shipping, April and May's being tentative, and June's being cancelled.<ref>http://www.newsarama.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=61089</ref> The company, however, didn't file for bankruptcy, officially in order to try and pay people owed money.

In March 2006, only Beowulf #7 was published. In May 2006, Diamond Comic Distributors's monthly list of cancelled comics listed all the remaining unpublished Speakeasy comics, with the terminal cancel code 10 ("Supplier Out of Business").<ref>http://previews.diamondcomics.com/support/previews_docs/orderforms/archive/2006/MAY06/Cancel.txt</ref>

[edit] Controversies

  • In December 2005:
  • In January 2006:

[edit] Publications

During its operation, Speakeasy Comics:

  • Published numerous comics series in monthly pamphlets (such as The Grimoire #1-7, a modernization of Beowulf #1-7, Gatesville Company #1-2, Spellgame #1-3, Hero At Large #1-2, Helios: In With the New #1-2, Athena Voltaire: Flight of the Falcon #1, etc.).
  • Had published comics series which later went to other venues before Speakeasy's demise (such as Atomika #1-4, Rocketo #1-6, Of Bitter Souls #1-3, Mutation #1-3, Smoke & Mirror #1-2, Super Crazy TNT Blast #1, Lonebow #1, Wargod #1, Adventures of Bio Boy #1-2, The Hunger #1-5).
  • Had announced or solicited comics series which went to other venues before publication (such as Strangeways, Project Eon, Silent Ghost, O.C.T. - the Occult Crimes Taskforce).
  • Intended to collect some series in trade paperbacks when sufficient material had been created, however all solicited TPBs were eventually cancelled (such as Atomika Volume 1, Grimoire Volume 1, Beowulf Volume 1). Usually didn't reprint sold-out monthly issues, except for Atomika #1.<ref>http://speakeasycomics.com/news/news_32505.html</ref>

Also, on a business model not unlike that of Image Comics, they:

[edit] Circulation

Speakeasy titles had sales judged disappointing by some. Based on pre-order sales through Diamond Comic Distributors reported by industry resource site ICv2<ref>http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/1850.html</ref>, Speakeasy's top-selling monthly comics during its year of operation were:

[edit] References

General references:

Specific references:

<references/>

[edit] External links

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