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Batman vs Superman: Huge Comics Collection to Go on Tour

What Fandango did reveal is that more than 90 percent of its ticket sales were for the opening weekend of Zack Snyder’s DC Superheroes movie, so Warner Brothers may just get the estimated $350 million opening weekend earnings it is hoping for.

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“What sets the Impossible Collection apart – beyond the improbability of seeing over 1,000 original comic books in such incredible condition – is its breadth and depth which are unprecedented”, said Vincent Zurzolo, a spokesman for the Impossible Collection.

A rare copy of “Action Comics No. 1” which was originally owned by actor Nicolas Cage will be on private display at London’s St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel beginning March 23rd.

The collection, previewed to media on Wednesday in London ahead of a global tour later this year, belongs to Ayman Hariri, the son of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik al-Hariri, who was assassinated in 2005.

“Jason [Momoa] and I were talking about Aquaman and I love that people underestimate the character”, DC Creative Officer Geoff Johns told ComicBook.com. “I don’t think anyone could possibly imagine a world without Superman”.

Since this week is all about Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, it’s a no brainer that the Screen Junkies team have given 1978’s Superman and 1989’s Batman their weekly Honest Trailer treatment.

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This story has not been edited by Firstpost staff and is generated by auto-feed.

'Batman v Superman' to Soar to $300 Million-Plus Global Debut