Supreme #53
Published by Awesome Entertainment in September 1997
The cover:
Title: 19th Dimensional Nervous Breakdown!
(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.)Welcome back to Supreme. So now that he's gotten the Story of the Year and Judgment Day out of the way, Moore has established Supreme as a fleshed-out hero in a broad superhero universe. Gone are the flashbacks (though we haven't seen the last of Rick Veitch). And now it's time to play.
While working at DC, Moore never had a chance to write Superman on a monthly basis, and in some ways, I think everything Moore did to get Supreme to this point was so that starting from here, he could now write the Superman series the way he wanted to. And I'm not alone in saying that these are way better Superman stories than were being put out by DC at the time.
As you can see from the cover, Chris Sprouse has taken over as regular artist, and he has said in several interviews that he feels this issue was his best work on the series. I might disagree, as only he could have pulled off issue #50, but this one is a beauty.
The inside credits have changed a little, with a few new jokes from Todd Klein tossed in:
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Anyway, we find out that Supreme is working on trying to retrieve Judy Jordan's personality from the empty shell of a body that Dax left behind when he shifted to MAGNO. Suprema comes and asks that Supreme deal with the villains in the Hell of Mirrors, who want Supreme to take Billy Friday away from them, as Suprema explains: "They're really anxious to get rid of him. Apparently he's been asking them questions about their childhoods and motivations." Hah.
Sprouse, unfortunately, still hasn't figured out Suprema's costume:
Um, no.
Billy, more concerned about his laptop communicator that he left behind, seems completely unhinged, so Supreme sends him to the Miskatonic Mental Institution for the Homicidally Distressed, which we get to see as a lightning bolt cracks behind it for effect. Moore is clearly enjoying himself.
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Concerned about revealing Supreme's personal secrets, Ethan takes it and runs off where we can see him thinking that he's reading his thoughts. It's very meta and very fun.
Supreme flies into Dazzle Comics and orders that they run the Omniman issue and not the Supreme issue, but a real life Omniman appears and tells them that he can't allow his secrets to be published like that.
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Supreme: "B-But Omniman isn't real! You're just a comic-book character!"
Omniman: "Oh, and you're not? Isn't that you on the cover of that comic you're holding?"
Supreme: "Well, yes, but this is some sort of mistake. I'm not just a made-up fantasy hero..."
Omniman: "Oh, come on! In that outfit? What are you, the mailman?"
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Carl's an interesting side character, as he's written to be a little oblivious, that he's a nice workplace foil for Diana. He very well could have been created just for the Civil War issue coming up, but I also think Moore had more in mind for him that we just never got to see. I hope so, anyway.
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I have to say I love the way Sprouse is able to mix his more realistic style for Supreme with a cartoony style for Szazs. It's a skill he'd Moore would make him use again in Tom Strong.
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Moore sort of trapped himself by using up the fourth dimension explanation for this issues, meaning that if he ever had Szazs return, he'd have to explain the fifth and sixth dimensions, but I guess he was lucky that Supreme got cancelled first.
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Die Hard: "Well, whatever comic book I'm in has turned pretty grim recently. It'd be nice to just close the covers on it and begin a whole new chapter."
Supreme: "Look on the bright side. We've both been in this business long enough to know that no era lasts forever... even a dark one."
And right there is Moore's guiding principle on Awesome and comics in general. No longer is he content to complain about the dark state of comics. He's now working to start a new and better chapter. Though he may not have quite made it with Awesome, there's a strong argument to be made that Awesome created the foundation that he built his ABC line on, which opened the door to a better way to do comics and superheroes.
But we'll talk about that more later. For now, let's just enjoy this wonderful run of delightful comics.
As always, please check out the Supreme Annotations Page, for all of the details and references that I completely missed.