By the 1970s, the world felt different — and comic books felt it too.

As trust in institutions eroded and certainty gave way to doubt, comics turned away from bright optimism. Stories became heavier, more grounded, and more willing to confront loss, failure, and consequence.

Heroes no longer stood above the world. They were shaped by it.

The Bronze Age pushed comics closer to reality, asking harder questions and offering fewer easy answers.

It was the bridge between innocence and awareness — and from that uncertainty, a darker era was ready to emerge.

This is Part 3 of a five-part documentary series examining how comics evolved — and why those changes mattered.
New episodes release weekly.

By Brian Isaacs - Executive Editor / Publisher

An avid comic collector/reader for over 50 years and self-proclaimed professor of comicology, Brian originally started up the site Pendragon's Post to share his voice. Well, that voice has been shared and evolved into The Fanboy Factor. Brian is an advocate for remembering comic roots, and that we don't forget what was created in the past, and encourage everyone to read it as well. When not swimming in geek culture, he can be seen corrupting..introducing his young son to comics, much to his wife's chagrin.

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