
Marvel filed for bankruptcy in 1996 and sold Spider-Man to Sony and the X-Men to Fox. Spider-Man alone grossed $1.6 billion in films - Marvel got $62 million. Marvel kept the characters nobody wanted: Iron Man, Captain America, the Avengers. Iron Man made $585 million in 2008. Disney bought it all for $4.24 billion the following year.
Marvel Sold Spider-Man to Survive Bankruptcy - Disney Paid $4.24 Billion for What Was Left
In 1996, the company that created Spider-Man, the X-Men, and the Avengers walked into bankruptcy court.
How the Mightiest Brand in Comics Collapsed
Marvel Entertainment had spent the early 1990s riding a speculator bubble. Collectors bought comics not to read them but to flip them. When that bubble burst, Marvel's sales cratered. Debt piled up. By December 1996, the company owed more than it could pay and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Its stock had fallen from $35.75 a share to $2.38 in three years. More than a third of its employees were laid off.
The Fire Sale
To generate cash, Marvel sold the film rights to its most valuable characters. Spider-Man went to Sony. X-Men and Fantastic Four went to Fox. The deals were signed under financial pressure - and they showed. Blade (1998) was produced by New Line Cinema and earned $131 million at the box office. Marvel received a flat fee of $25,000. The Spider-Man film series grossed over $1.6 billion worldwide - Marvel collected roughly $62 million across those films. The X-Men series grossed over $2 billion - Marvel received $26 million.
The Characters Nobody Wanted
After the fire sale, Marvel was left with its second tier - the characters no studio had bothered to buy. Iron Man. Captain America. Thor. The Avengers. These were considered B-list heroes. Iron Man had never had a hit TV show. Captain America was not a household name outside comic shops. But these were the pieces Marvel kept.
Building an Empire From the Leftovers
In 2005, Marvel secured a $525 million credit facility from Merrill Lynch to self-finance its own films, using its retained characters as collateral. The first film under this plan was Iron Man (2008), starring Robert Downey Jr. It earned $585 million worldwide. The gamble worked. Marvel Studios built a shared cinematic universe around the heroes nobody had wanted to buy.
Disney Paid $4.24 Billion for What Was Left
In 2009, Disney acquired Marvel Entertainment for $4.24 billion. That price covered the leftover heroes - the ones no studio had fought over in 1996. The Marvel Cinematic Universe went on to become the highest-grossing film franchise in history, earning over $30 billion at the global box office. The characters nobody wanted became the foundation of a multi-billion dollar empire.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Marvel go bankrupt in 1996?
Why did Marvel sell the rights to Spider-Man and X-Men?
How much did Marvel receive from the Blade movie?
How did Marvel come back after bankruptcy?
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Verified Fact
Verified Jun 19, 2026
Source: We Minored in FilmShow verification details
Claims checked
- Marvel Chapter 11 bankruptcy December 27 1996
- Marvel stock fell 5.75 to .38
- Spider-Man to Sony, X-Men to Fox
- Spider-Man 1-2 gross .6B / Marvel 2M
- X-Men 1-3 gross B / Marvel 6M
- Blade 1998 gross 31M (worldwide) / Marvel 5,000 flat fee
- Iron Man 2008 85M worldwide
- Merrill Lynch 25M credit facility 2005
- Disney acquisition .24B 2009
- MCU highest-grossing franchise / over 0B
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