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Real world article
(written from a production point of view)
The Marvel/Paramount Comics logo from the late 1990s

The Marvel/Paramount Comics logo from the late 1990s

Marvel Comics is an American comic book publisher which has twice been the licensee of Star Trek in comic form. Marvel, best known for their popular titles such as X-Men, Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and The Avengers, has been a publisher in various forms since the 1940s. Movie and TV adaptations of their franchises have featured Michael Bailey Smith, Carl Ciarfalio, Jay Underwood, Joseph Culp, Patrick Stewart, Famke Janssen, Bruce Davison, Eric Bana, Doug Jones, Faran Tahir, Chris Hemsworth, Idris Elba, Neal McDonough, Damion Poitier, Spencer Garrett, William Sadler, Miguel Ferrer, Alice Krige, Alan Dale, Steven Culp, Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Gregg Henry, Reg E. Cathey, Alfre Woodard, Benedict Cumberbatch, Brad Dourif, Titus Welliver, Ray Wise, Clancy Brown, and Lorenzo Henrie with Jonathan Frakes and Roxann Dawson directing.

In 1979, Marvel gained the license to create comics based on the new movie, Star Trek: The Motion Picture. They were the second publisher to make Trek comics (Gold Key Comics was the first). Marvel began by publishing an oversized adaptation of that movie in the Marvel Super-Size periodical (which was later reissued as the first three installments of a monthly Star Trek series). Their license was limited: the company was given permission only to use copyrighted material based on the movie, and was legally forbidden from reintroducing characters and concepts from Star Trek: The Original Series. This limit was felt by many to be the cause for the short-lived nature of the series. It was canceled after 18 issues, in 1981, and DC Comics picked up the license shortly thereafter.

In 1996, Marvel again gained a license to produce new Trek comics, under the imprint of a new line commissioned by Paramount Pictures, entitled Paramount Comics. They began with a controversial crossover, between the original Star Trek crew and the X-Men. They produced several monthly series, including Star Trek: Voyager (the first ever Voyager comic), Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (taking over DS9 from Malibu Comics, a line which Marvel bought and absorbed into their own), Star Trek: Early Voyages (about Captain Pike and crew) and Star Trek: Starfleet Academy (about a group of young cadets including Nog). They also published a quarterly series, Star Trek Unlimited which featured TOS and Star Trek: The Next Generation adventures. Numerous other special issues and crossover books that were not part of these series were also published. Many believe the large influx of Trek comics killed the market: sales dwindled, and most of the series were canceled a year-and-a-half later.

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Apocrypha

In the second issue of Marvel's Starfleet Academy series, it is revealed that Nog had found several comics about the Human Torch in 1947 when his father and uncle crash landed at Roswell and caused a incident in "Little Green Men". It is then revealed that his roomate, Matt Decker (β) had a collection of Marvel comics from the 1960s that included stories about the X-Men, Captain America, and Sgt. Fury & his Howling Commandos. The two of them read them during their time at Starfleet Academy on Earth.

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