Supreme: The Return #2
Published by Awesome Entertainment in June 1999
The cover:
Title: A World of His Own!
(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.)(Originally, I had scheduled to start reading Youngblood this week, but it makes more sense to finish off the Awesome run of Supreme first, as there are some things that happen in these issues that will be referenced in the pages of Youngblood.)
With Chris Sprouse leaving Supreme, Awesome turned to a number of different artists over the next several issues, which makes The Return issues a bit of a hodgepodge art wise. It also gives the feeling that the whole thing could collapse at any given moment (which of course, it eventually did). Some of the artists worked really well with the material, some less so. We've moved beyond the best of the series and we're slowly stumbling toward the end.
Drat.
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Drawing this issue will be Jim Starlin. Starlin is a favorite of mine, but I tend to only like his art when he's drawing his own stories. I'm also not certain he was a great fit for this specific issue, what with the need to draw so many different styles of characters, but instead they all feel like they're Jim Starlin-styled characters. Still, as we'll see, it could have been much worse.
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Our Dax finds out that he's in Daxia, the Supremacy of Daxes that are no longer in continuity. Not one to let himself be robbed, he snags a molecular disrupter and threatens to vaporize the three.
Daxor: "This '90s model villain is dangerous, His almost complete lack of motivation makes him unpredictable." Ha.
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A side note: I'm not really certain who the Supremes/Supremas are here. Maybe really weak Daxes that the more aggressive Daxes made dress up as Supremes?
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And that's where the issue ends. The last two pages, oddly, don't seem to have been drawn by Starlin and look off in a number of ways, from the Dazzle Comics logo being drawn by a six-year-old to where is Ethan's thumb in the panel above the Dazzle one. It's sloppy and unprofessional.
On the back cover, we got an advertisement for Alan Moore's The Allies series which never came to life. But I'll talk more about that in a post later this week.
This is where I say, "As always, please check out the Supreme Annotations Page, for all of the details and references that I completely missed." As I've pointed out, I've run out of the Supreme annotations by Aaron Severson and am now doing them myself. Please help me by letting me know anything I missed that can be added to the annotations. Thanks!