I Can't Get No Satisfaction....
By Philip SchweierJan 25, 2009 - 17:11
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| The animated cast of Star Trek |
Two things are common to collectors. For one, we all like to enjoy our chosen item. It’s not enough that we have it stuck up on a shelf or filed away in a closet. We want to take it out and look at it and appreciate it. We flip through our comic books, listen to our record albums, and watch our John Wayne movies.
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With that in mind, why is it I have such a hard time remaining satisfied with my collection for more than a day or so. For instance, I’m in the process of replacing my old taped-off-cable-TV VHS James Bond films with pristine new store-bought DVDs. since in some instances, only two movies will fit on a video cassette, I have already replaced one film but not another. I find this intolerable, and am just itching to get my hands on some of the later Roger Moore films, even though I never cared for him in the role.
My comic collection is also a challenge, especially in the wake of certain crossovers between Batman and Detective Comics and Superman and Action Comics. It’s a filing nightmare to have part of a story in one box, and alternating chapters in another. I guess that’s just another argument for why waiting for the trade isn’t such a bad idea.
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| Roger Moore in The Spy Who Loved Me |
Meanwhile other films are quietly backing up on my shelves, waiting patiently for me to crack them open and enjoy them, as well assorted comics in long, involved story arcs. Remember the Bat-murder er saga from the mid-1970s. Kinda pointless for me to read only disjointed sections of the story, until I get all the chapters.
It makes me study my want list endlessly, trying to figure out a way to buy the least number of issues and consolidate some lists while disposing of others. A year ago my list came in at a whopping (for me, anyway) 17 pages. Since then I’ve managed to trim it down to 12. But by buying a handful of key issues (six, maybe?), I can discard another three pages.
Call me OCD, call me anal retentive, it just reminds me of another character trait among collectors – we like order. Everything follows a system of some sort, whether it’s alpha-numeric of by the thickness of the dust that eventually gathers upon .
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| Steve Guttenberg and Daniel Stern in Diner |
Of course my wife and I have never had any such discussion in our house. She knows better than to get my comic books out of order. As for my Diner DVD, it right where I left it last time I watched it: top shelf of my closet, far right, between A Christmas Story and The Hudsucker Proxy.
Who’s crazy now?
Praise and adulation? Scorn and ridicule? E-mail me at philip@comicbookbin.com
Last Updated: Jan 7, 2012 - 7:41
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