Type | Limited Liability Company |
---|---|
Industry | Comics |
Founded | 1999 |
Headquarters | San Diego, California, USA |
Key people | Ted Adams, CEO/Owner Robbie Robbins, Executive Vice-President/Owner Chris Ryall, Publisher/Editor-in-Chief Matthew Ruzicka, CFO Alan Payne, VP of Sales |
Website | http://www.idwpublishing.com |
IDW Publishing, also known as Idea + Design Works, LLC and IDW, is an American publisher of comic books and comic strip collections. The company was founded in 1999 and has been awarded the title "Publisher of the Year Under 5% Market Share" for the years 2004, 2005 and 2006 by Diamond Comic Distributors.[1] IDW is the fifth largest publisher of American comic books.[2] In addition to their printed comics and graphic novels, IDW has more than 650 books in digital distribution across multiple partners and platforms.[3]
The company was initially known for horror comics, such as 30 Days of Night and Dark Days. Some well-known writers and artists of horror comics, including Ashley Wood, Ben Templesmith and Steve Niles contributed to IDW. The company now also specializes in licensed properties, acquiring the rights to 24, Angel, CSI, Ghostbusters, Transformers, Star Trek, Dick Tracy, Doctor Who, G.I. Joe, True Blood, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Godzilla.
Contents |
Idea + Design Works (IDW) was formed in 1999 by four entertainment executives and artists, Ted Adams, Alex Garner, Kris Oprisko and Robbie Robbins. They decided to create a company that would allow them to work with a variety of clients on the things they liked: video games, movies, TV, collectible card games, comic books and trading cards. The company's services include character design, concept design, logo design, computer color, custom comic books, custom trading cards, trading card games, DVD menu design, online and print style guides, text stories and more. Scott Dunbier is IDW's Special Projects Editor.
The company has built a client base that includes: Activision, the BBC, Artisan Entertainment, Bandai America, Brady Games, Cartoon Network, Dimension Films, Electronic Arts, Fox Family, Golden Books, LEGO, Lions Gate, The Man Show, Microsoft, Pepsi, Pioneer, Revolution Studios, Square, Simon & Schuster, Trimark Pictures, Upper Deck and more.
In 2007, IDT Corporation purchased a majority interest in IDW. In 2009, IDT created CTM Holdings via a tax-free spin-off. This new company is compromised of the majority interest in IDW and CTM Media Group.[4]
The company's first comic series, 30 Days of Night, edited by Scott Dunbier, started a seven-figure bidding war between Dreamworks, MGM and Senator International, with Senator winning and Sam Raimi attached to produce.[5][6]
IDW Publishing's second title, Popbot, was acknowledged with two Spectrum Gold Awards.[7]
IDW also publishes comics based on the CBS TV franchise CSI. The company's other licensed comics include Sony's Underworld, FX's The Shield, Fox's 24[8] and Angel; Hasbro’s The Transformers and G.I. Joe, Universal’s Land of the Dead and Shaun of the Dead; and Konami’s Silent Hill,[9] Castlevania, Metal Gear Solid and Speed Racer.
Beginning in 2008, the company licensed the Doctor Who series from the BBC, launching two concurrent titles: Doctor Who Classics, which reprints colorized comic strips featuring the Fourth Doctor originally published in the late 1970s-early 1980s by Doctor Who Magazine, and Doctor Who: Agent Provocateur, an original six-part limited series featuring the Tenth Doctor and overseen and written by TV series script editor Gary Russell. An additional six-part limited series titled Doctor Who: The Forgotten started in mid-2008 by Tony Lee and Pia Guerra,[10][11] as well as a series of monthly one-shot, self-contained stories. July 2009 saw the beginning of Doctor Who, an ongoing series featuring the Tenth Doctor, written by Tony Lee and illustrated by a rotating art team.[12]
IDW formed an imprint with EA Games in late 2009, called EA Comics, to focus on adaptations of the latter's video games, with initial titles including Army of Two and Dragon Age.[13]
September 6, 2011, for the 10th anniversary of 9/11, IDW teamed up Charlie Foxtrot Entertainment and released the graphic novel Code Word: Geronimo, written by retired Marine Corps Captain Dale Dye and Julia Dye, drawn by Gerry Kissell with inker Amin Amat.[14] Code Word: Geronimo reached #22 on Diamond Comics top 100 list its first month after release[15].
In 2008, the first volume of The Complete Terry and the Pirates received an Eisner Award for Best Archival Collection.
IDW launched two new imprints in 2008: Worthwhile Books, part of their children's books division,[16] and Scott Christian Sava's Blue Dream Studios, previously a separate self-publishing venture.[17][18]
IDW acquired the G.I. Joe comics license in May 2008 (previously held by Devil's Due Publishing) and released three new series under editor Andy Schmidt,[19] from writers such as Chuck Dixon, Larry Hama and Christos Gage. Other comics were released in time to tie-in with the summer 2009 G.I. Joe film.[20][21]
In March 2009, IDW forged an agreement with Mike Gold's Comicmix.com to publish print versions of Comicmix's online comic books. The agreement stipulates Comicmix must provide two comic books a month to IDW to publish, as well as graphic novels and trade paperbacks as demanded by the market. The books are published with both the IDW and Comicmix.com logos on the covers. As of the end of 2009, the agreement has produced print versions of the Grimjack series The Manx Cat; the Jon Sable series Ashes of Eden; Mark Wheatley and Robert Tinnell's pulp hero series Lone Justice; the graphic novel Demons of Sherwood by Tinnell and Bo Hampton; and a graphic novel collecting Trevor von Eeden's The Original Johnson. A collection of Munden's Bar stories original to Comicmix's website is also forthcoming.[22]
In 2004, 2005 and 2006 IDW was named Publisher of the Year by Diamond Comic Distributors.[1]
Konami acquired the video game rights, and minority ownership, in IDW’s CVO: Covert Vampiric Operations.[23]
30 Days of Night has been adapted into a film of the same name in 2007, starring Josh Hartnett and Melissa George, directed by David Slade and produced by Spider-Man director Sam Raimi. It is distributed by Columbia Pictures.
Dimension Films has an option on two Steve Niles/IDW properties: Wake the Dead, with X2 screenwriter Michael Dougherty attached to write, and Hyde, with Mike Fleiss (The Bachelor, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) attached to produce.[24][25]
Paramount has an option on the Steve Niles/IDW property Aleister Arcane.[26]
The motion comic version of Transformers: Movie Prequel titled Transformers: Beginnings (albeit excluding characters not present in the movie) is included in the Transformers DVD.