Welcome back to the ongoing feature where I read the other comics published by Awesome that ran alongside Supreme. I read them so you don't have to! (You don't have to thank me, but you should.)
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Christina Baker, a young, plump African-American woman is our entry person point of view for the series. She's your average college student who happens to get headaches when supernatural occurrences are close by (I always assumed my headaches in college were from different causes, but maybe I just missed my chance to go on some poorly-plotted supernatural archeology adventures. Drat.)
She soon discovers two very supernatural people stealing from the university's museum: Scratch (a possessed priest) and Fantom (a French vampire). Both are members of the Coven. Soon, the evil Pentad show up and they sit down and talk reasonably about their differences. Oh, wait, no, they battle.
The leader of the Coven, Blackmass, soon arrives and recruits Christina to the world of magic and mysticism and explains how the Coven are trying to defend the world. He also explains that the Pentad are their evil counterparts.
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We follow the two groups as they collect artifacts that will allow the Pentad to resurrect Cain (of Cain and Abel) who will become the new king of men (just because).
(There must have been something in the water at the Awesome offices... perhaps holy water?... that so many series have to do with biblical references and angels and demons.)
Fortunately, Christina rejects the Pentad's offer to become a more powerful person and helps save the day. But before it ends, the leader of the Pentad mortally injures another member of the Pentad, who was secretly a spy and lover of Blackmass, even though we never knew about her or cared about their relationship.
Um...right.
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The weird part is that they could have been interesting. Take Scratch. He's a priest who is partially possessed by a demon. That has potential. Instead, he's only shown to be a lecherous, wise-cracking, red-skinned devil. Who cares? We don't see any of the inner conflict. He's just another jokey miscreant in an artform littered with them. If he didn't have red skin, he could be Gambit. Meh.
One thing that struck me as I was reading this is that Jeph Loeb is a frustrating writer because he's so hit or miss. This is the same guy who found a way to make Fighting American distinct from Captain America. But he can't make this anything interesting?
I imagine that a lot of it has to do with his collaborators. My theory is that if Loeb got overpowered by his artist's ideas, the story just disappeared into mush. But if he had a good collaborator, as on the Rules of the Game miniseries or the first Kaboom series, the art and the story work together. (Way to go out on a limb Mike: When the artist and writer work well, the series work. Brilliant deduction!)
It's also hard to escape the problem of Churchill's art. He's clearly a gifted artist, but he can't help but draw his women mostly unclothed and they all start to look alike. That his main character is a plump African-American woman with blonde hair is about the most refreshing aspect, but just highlights his lack of discipline to draw any other woman as anything other than a nearly-naked supermodel.
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As long as we're talking production, I also can't decide about the garish pastel coloring with bright pinks, yellows and baby blues. It's clearly from the mid-90s and is kind of great for that, but man it's also too much.
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There's also a recurring subplot about someone tracking down Christina, who on the last page of the first series, discovers some weird black cat woman we never see or gets mentioned again in any of the Awesome series.
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We got to see Christina care for the lost soul of a suicide victim. We got the origin of Scratch, which explained that the priest absorbed the demon within him so it couldn't get loose and do damage to the broader world (see, was that so hard?). And we got a dark story about the vampire, Fantom, herded into a Nazi concentration camp to be gassed, only to exact her revenge on the Nazis.
This last story was a little too similar to Magneto's origin form X-Men, but somehow that's only kind of a minor issue. Check out the page at right where he shows the starved, abused Jewish and other unwanted women herded into the gas shower stalls. They're all healthy, hot, beautiful women. Um... But at least they were trying to give us some reason to care for these character, which I guess is something.
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The short summary of Lionheart is that an archeologist comes across an artifact that lets her tap into half of the power God granted to humanity through the tree of knowledge (again, not what the Bible meant, but whatever). The other half is in the villain Blackheart, who immediately tries to kill Lionheart to get it all. The Coven get involved to help Lionheart, as does the archeologist's twin sister and Earnest Hemingway-inspired grandfather. There's no use getting too involved as the series lasted two issues and ended on a cliffhanger.
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Neither Loeb nor Churchill would work on these issues. Judging by their covers, I really don't want to even go through the motions of tracking them down, much less reading them. (Please don't make me.)
Churchill would go on to work for DC and Marvel after Awesome's collapse, drawing the "Code Red" story in Hulk and a spin-off of the Teen Titans. In 2010, he launched his creator-owned "Marineman," which received an Eisner nomination. So good for him.