Sunrise Distribution (a.k.a. Sunrise Comics and Games[1]) was a Commerce, California-based comic bookdistributor which operated in the early-to-mid 1980s. Owned by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, the company was intimately connected to a number of small comic book publishers from that era, including Eternity Comics and Malibu Comics, as well as three extremely short-lived publishers: Amazing, Imperial Comics, and Wonder Color.
History
Sunrise Distribution evolved from Rosenberg's mail-order comics business, Direct Comics, which he had founded when he was 13 years old.[2]
Publishing ventures
Eternity Comics
In early 1986,[3] income from Rosenberg's comics distribution business allowed him to privately finance Eternity Comics,[3] originally based in New York City[4] and helmed by Brian Marshall.[3][5] Writer/editor David Campiti worked as a packager to supply content for Eternity.[3][5]
Amazing and Wonder Color
Beginning in the summer of 1986, after disputes arose between Marshall and Campiti,[3] Rosenberg (along with fellow investors Paula Brown, Mitch Everitt, and Jules Zimmerman)[5] provided capital for Campiti to form two new small publishers: Amazing and Wonder Color,[5] with business offices for both publishers based in the same location in Long Beach, California.[3] (Marshall, meanwhile, retained control of Eternity.)
Amazing and Wonder Color were affiliated with another publisher with which Campiti was involved: Pied Piper Comics. The plan was that Campiti would package comics for all three publishers through his studio Campiti and Associates,[6] with Pied Piper handling "special projects such as posters and graphic novels; black-and-white [comics] were Amazing's domain, and Wonder Color would product strictly color comics."[5]
Wonder Color's staff included investor Paula Brown as Publisher, editor-in-chief Campiti, and Consulting Editor Roger McKenzie.[7] Writer David Lawrence edited a few titles.
Malibu Comics and Imperial Comics
Near the end of 1986,[5] Rosenberg and his investors financed two new publishers: Imperial Comics, based in Brooklyn, New York, and helmed by Marshall; and Malibu Comics, based in Calabasas, California, headed by Dave Olbrich (previously an employee of Sunrise Distribution)[8] and cartoonist Tom Mason.[4]John Arcudi served as an editor for Imperial Comics.
Mergers
In the spring of 1987, Sunrise announced that due to cash flow issues, it would not be able to pay its client publishers until July.[9]
Concurrently, Rosenberg revealed his connection to Amazing, Eternity, Imperial, Malibu, and Wonder Color, and declared that he was assuming direct control of all five publishers.[10][5] At this point, Rosenberg shut down Amazing, Imperial, and Wonder Color, while keeping Eternity Comics as a Malibu brand. Some Imperial titles moved to Malibu/Eternity; a few Amazing and Wonder Color titles were retained by Campiti and moved to Pied Piper Comics.
Sunrise Bankruptcy
Sunrise went bankrupt and abruptly folded in the summer of 1988, during the "black-and-white implosion."[citation needed] This left a number of small publishers without the cash flow to continue, and they, too, went out of business.[11] Two of Sunrise's clients, the West Coast publishers Blackthorne Publishing and Fantagraphics, sued the distributor,[12] but ultimately, neither publisher was able to recoup its losses.[13]
Rosenberg continued with Malibu, which survived into the mid-1990s, with many ups and downs, before being acquired by Marvel Comics in 1994.[14]
Analysis
In 2015, Tom Mason, a co-founder of Malibu Comics, described Rosenberg's operations this way:
He secretly financed four (yes, that’s right) comic book companies with the idea that they would publish comics, he’d push them through his existing distribution channel at Sunrise, then sell individual copies by mail order through yet another company of his called Direct Comics. Having a distribution company that distributes books from multiple publishers, then expands to publishing its own books while also running a mail order division isn’t a bad way to create a vertically-integrated company without many assets. Unfortunately, he did it in secret, and had been trying to manipulate the market to create “hot” comics that could be sold at higher prices post-publication, and it all went bad when the bubble of inflated high-priced “hot” comics burst. Sunrise was bankrupt and shut down leaving behind a trail of bad debt that hurt a lot of small publishers at the same time Malibu was launching.[4]
Office of Publication address (listed in indicia): 1841-B East 65th Street, Long Beach, CA 90805; Camptiti ran the company from his home of Wheeling, West Virginia
^"Sunrise announces it may not pay some publishers until July". The Comics Journal. No. 115. April 1987. p. 24.
^Rosenberg, Scott (March 1, 1987). "New Goals... New Directions... New Management...! A Re-Organization of Amazing Comics". Amazing Comics Premieres. No. 5.