Gas prices through the roof. A Russian invasion halfway round the world. Gary Numan on tour. It's either 1979 all over again, or we are on the brink of Cold War nostalgia –the kind that spawned Mad Max and other tales of the Post-Apocalypse.

Inflation Is Real

Mad Max & Post-Apocalypse NostalgiaThe parallels between the late 1970s and the early 2020s are undeniable. The recession caused by Covid may be almost over but it has spawned inflation in its wake. We saw the first signs of inflation back in 2020 when the cost of toilet paper went through the roof as supply chains bottle-necked and grocery store shelves became barren.

Two years later there are still supply-chain issues, but necessities have become more abundant and more affordable as luxury items have sharply increased in price. The Six Dollar Burger at Carls Jr may have only set you back $3.99 in 2002, but now their average burger meal set costs about $20. Likewise, that Uncanny X-Men #141 you could get in a 9.8 back in 2002 for $190 will now cost you north of $1,200.

The Days of Future Past story that started in that issue is still considered one of the all-time great (and most consequential) storylines in all of comicdom, but it didn't develop out of thin air. By the time that Claremont/Byrne classic hit newsstands in January 1981, the Post-Apocalyptic wasteland motif was already building-up steam on the back of a modestly-budgeted Australian action film with a sci-fi bent called Mad Max.

It's Always an Oil Economy

Mad Max & Post-Apocalypse NostalgiaThe gas apocalypse that Mad Max predicted in 1979 (and really drove home with The Road Warrior in 1982), was spawned by the oil crisis of 1973 and 1979.  Prices hit their peak in 1980 at over US$35 per barrel (US$110 in today's dollars), just as a dubbed Mel Gibson was hitting American movie theaters in his breakout role.

Collectors of a certain age will recall the long lines at the gas pumps and the (then) unheard of price of $1.19 per gallon (US$4.06 in today's dollars) which gave way to the explosion in sales of Japanese economy cars from Toyota, Honda, and Datsun –initiating the slow death of Detroit and the muscle cars that were so celebrated in the films of George Miller.

To give context, the current average price per gallon for mid-grade gasoline in California is just under $6.00 and peaking at almost $8.00 in some parts of San Francisco and Los Angeles. With the Cold War heating up in Europe, and cultural touchstone like Luke Skywalker and (baby) Yoda, experiencing a resurgence of sorts, we can learn from the past to make smarter investments in collectibles today.

Lesson number one: take advantage of slumping prices to Buy in the Dip

While the unpopularity of The Book of Boba Fett has driven down prices on Star Wars #42, everybody still loves Yoda and his first full comic book appearance is also in that issue (after an in-the-shadows cameo in Star Wars #41). He's bound to appear in Obi-Wan Kenobi on Disney+ and that will drive the price back up on this as well as Marvel Super Special #16, which is the undisputed first appearance of ALL the characters introduced in The Empire Strikes Back.

The World Isn't Ending, and We're Not in a Bubble

Hot books are always changing and so it's not unusual to see prices spike, correct, and then rise again. Some big money books have slipped a bit in recent weeks, but other books have continued to replace them. At this moment in time the on-screen fate of a character has much more consequence than their published history, so bear in mind that many of the villains being announced (and probably quite a few heroes) will have no lasting on-screen contribution and it might be smart to steer clear from the announcement hype.

While many collectors are seemingly liquidating keys for characters whose MCU entry seems still far-off, this creates a lot of opportunity for a patient collector. Any Silver Age or Bronze Age key that took a tumble recently is probably a smart investment now.  While risky, it's generally better to buy on the rumor and sell on the news. Right now, a lot of collectors who bought on the rumor are selling before the news, which passes more potential value onto whoever picks these books up now and puts them away for a while.

Lesson number two: any character that can launch a franchise and whose presence is a necessity to the longevity of that franchise is a good investment.Mad Max & Post-Apocalypse Nostalgia

This may even be true for Bloodshot, a character who may well survive the disappointing film that failed to launch him. So many people got rid of their Rai #0 after the film flopped, not stopping to think that Paramount is probably way too invested in making their Valiant Universe succeed for that to be the final word.

Harbinger is confirmed to be on the way, and we can probably expect a Bloodshot cameo in that, but we know that characters introduced in Harbinger #1 and Harbinger #2 are guaranteed to be in that film. Remember that Hannibal Lechter, the horror icon that won Anthony Hopkins his first Oscar in Silence of the Lambs was first portrayed by Brian Cox as a minor character in the film Manhunter.

Whether we get another Vin Diesel version of Bloodshot or a complete recast, the character is pretty damn cool and under the right circumstance, with the right script could be awesome. You can pick up two of the key issues mentioned in this paragraph for under $100 in 9.8 right now –but for how much longer?

Speaking of Franchises

Mad Max: Fury Road has a sequel in production right now, and it's a prequel built around the origin of Imperator Furiosa. While the titular Max has roots that go back to the 1979 film, the very first Mad Max comic book was Mad Max: Fury Road Nux & Immortan Joe #1 published in May of 2015. Former cop, Max Rockatansky, is but a minor character in this prelude to the film series reboot and wouldn't get his own comic until two months later with Mad Max: Fury Road - Max #1.

Perhaps because of this confusion (and because it can be argued that he's not the hero of the movie that bears his name), prices are low on both comics. Each can be had for under $100 in 9.8, and even the rarest variant is only a few dollars more. Furiosa's first appearance is in Mad Max: Fury Road Furiosa #1, and that is probably the pick of the litter.

Since it's she and not Max that will be taking over the future of the franchise, this undisputed first appearance is an absolute steal with eBay prices hovering between $60 and $200. And with Anya Taylor-Joy taking over the origin-story role for the character first brought to life by Charlize Theron, we are poised for possibly the best entry in the Maxiverse. Whether you liked or hated the New Mutants movie, odds are that you loved Anna's performance as Magick.

The Way, Way Back

No discussion of the Post-Apocalypse can be complete without discussing Planet of the Apes or Kamandi. It can be argued that the former was the film that really kicked off the Post-Apocalypse genre, but since the subsequent films in that series were more about the apes than the humans, it's kind of a thing unto itself.

The first sequential adaptation was actually a manga published in Japan, but the first US comic book was the Gold Key adaptation of the first sequel, Beneath the Planet of the Apes #1. Like most Gold Key comics it is rather undervalued, and the highest-graded copy is a 9.6 which last sold in 2018 for under $500. I would expect one now to be around $1,500, but I wouldn't recommend it as an investment as much as the Planet of the Apes #1 published by Marvel under the Curtis Magazine imprint.

Bronze Age Marvel Magazines are notoriously hard to find in high grade and are becoming quite collectible. The first six issues adapt the first movie but like the Marvel Star Wars comics would also tell original stories. The stated FMV of $675 for a 9.8 seems out of step with recent sales which range $779 - $1110, but I wouldn't consider this necessarily investment-worthy either. If the Matthew Vaughn film series (which was excellent) couldn't drive these prices up I don't see the pending kid-friendly reboot doing it either.

Lesson number three: always bet on Kirby.

So I'd have to put my money on Kamandi, The Last Boy On Earth #1. While developed as a consolation prize for not getting the rights to Planet of the Apes, it's classic Kirby, through-and-through. The Wednesday Comics serial written by Dave Gibbons and illustrated by Ryan Sook and Kamandi Challenge (which gathered stories from 12 artists and 12 writers, including Tom King & Kevin Eastman) showcased how interesting this character could be in the right hands. The FMV on his first appearance in 9.8 is under $1000, which is pretty much in-step with any early Bronze Age DC first issues.  Whether or not this gets rebooted, it's an excellent comic from Kirby's last great creative output and the cover of that first issue is as classic as they get.

What parallels do you see between now and eras past?  Please comment below and be sure to like this post if you do!

This blog is written by freelance blogger Matt Kennedy: Matt Kennedy is owner of Gallery 30 South and author of Pop Sequentialism: The Art of Comics. The first comic he bought on the newsstand was Werewolf by Night #32 which he somehow managed to keep in good enough condition to get it graded 9.0 forty years later. Please follow him @popsequentialism on Instagram & Twitter and visit his website: www.popsequentialism.com

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*Any perceived investment advice is that of the freelance blogger and does not reflect advice on behalf of GoCollect