Supreme #51
Published by Awesome Entertainment in Late July 1997
The cover:
Title: A Roster of Rogues
(As always: Supreme is currently out of print. There are a number of ways to read it, which can be found on the How do I read Moore's Awesome works page.)Wasn't issue #50 great? It's appropriate that after that we learn that Alan Moore won the Eisner Award for Best Writer for his work on From Hell and Supreme. I'll talk more about the Eisner in a post later this week, but what a glow I'm feeling. It doesn't get better than this, does it?
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But before we can get there, let's take a moment to consider this cover. It's a Liefeld drawing of Supreme (or maybe Emerpus?). But the color isn't right for Emerpus, as seen in this issue. It could be the Shadow Supreme, but again, the coloring isn't right.What do you think?
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Rather than go through it, I'm just going to quote some of my favorite Cyberzerk lines:
- "You must be Diana Dane! They say you are 'taking over' Omniman! If you are his new love interest then he will have to face me in order to rescue you!"
- "This is my moment at last! It's Cyberzerk versus Omniman in a fight to the finish we just had to call 'When Titans Collide!'"
- "Y-you must have used your omni-vision to sever my arm! B-but you lost that power in issue #232 when you were 'siphoned by the space sponge'! This is a continuity error!"
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There we get to see Stupendo the Simian Supreme, who used to be a force for destruction but has since become a friend and lives on Conqueror Island. (Note: Conqueror Island will become more important as we get into Judgment Day.) We learn more about Darius Dax and Emerpus, the backward Supreme. In the Backward Zone, old folk are dug up from the ground and slowly dwindle into babies. Emerpus would take villains from prison, help them undo their crimes, and watch them devolve into decent children.
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We meet Korgo the Space Tyrant (who will turn up next issue) and Szazs the Sprite Supreme (who will turn up in a later issue). Judy is getting bored and wants to go to the main exhibit, but notices that the villain statues have shifted position.
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It's a nice moment, obviously designed to give us a feeling for who Judy Jordan was, so we understand why she's not the Judy Jordan we see at the end of this issue.
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Judy Jordan and Hilda are below the Citadel when Hilda grabs onto Judy and blasts off with rockets for legs and flies her to the Citadel. Hilda produces a lightning bolt to enter Supreme's home and makes short work of the suprematon guards. When Supreme returns, he's tricked into the Hell of Mirrors by Hilda.
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"'Judy'? Well, you just tell him from me, honey... Judy's not who he's talking to." So, who is it? Prepare for the Return of Darius Dax!
Then we get a notice that the story will conclude in "our 80-page giant spectacular." But only in the letters page is it explained that the 80 pages will be spread over two issues (that will be numbered the same). The numbering on Awesome series was always a little weird.
As always, please check out the Supreme Annotations Page, for all of the details and references that I completely missed.