Current trends
Recently popular interest in superheroes has increased with the success of feature films such as Spider-Man (2002) and X-Men (2000). To captilize on this interest comics publishers have launched concerted promotional efforts such as "Free Comic Book Day" (first held on May 5, 2002). In addition, the filmed adaptation of non superhero comic books like Ghost World, Road to Perdition and American Splendor have the medium's fans hopes that its image can be changed for the better.
Comic books remain very popular in Asia and Europe. Translated Japanese comic books imported into North America comprise another genre, called manga. In France, comic books are considered another art form (with the associated popularity), and are called "BD" (pronounced "bay-day")
Some comic books have gained recognition and garnered their creators awards outside the genre, such as Art Spiegelman's Maus, which won the Pulitzer Prize and Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, an issue of which won the World Fantasy Award for "Best Short Story".
In the early 2000s, the continuing decline of the monthly comic book format (22-to-30 page issues), along with a steady increase in sales of graphic novels at retail bookstores, led comic book industry insiders to consider the possibility that the era of monthly comic books may be coming to an end, with the industry being subsumed and dominated by the publication of graphic novels. As it is, most publishers arrange nowadays to have their stories geared to run around the equivalent page length for binding into a graphic novel.
Some examples of famous comics include: