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So a long time ago (the mid-1990s), the greatest writer in comics agreed to take over the writing duties for Image Comics' Supreme. He would radically reshape the character, the book, and due to forces beyond his control, a whole comic book universe. And it led to an award-winning run of comics, three additional titles (among several proposed) and ultimately led to the genesis of Moore's much better known America's Best Comics. And then it all went out of print and was forgotten by way too many.

Having gathered quite a bit of information about Moore's Supreme and Awesome runs, I decided to create a home for the forgotten Awesome. Over the course of a year, I put it all together here.

Each week I did a main "Weekly Reading" post that was a read-through of that issue. I followed that up with a couple of other posts about topics from that Weekly Reading or whatever else I came up with to talk about. You'll find the lost Youngbloods in the Youngblood section and the fan-edit of the last Supreme in After Awesome.

Below is the archive of posts broken up by book. Thanks for checking the site out!

Book 1: Supreme: The Story of the Year

Book 1: Judgment Day

Book 3: Supreme: The Return

Book 4: Youngblood

Book 5: Glory

Book 6: After Awesome

Book 7: 1963

Book 8: Night Raven

Book 9: A Small Killing

Monday, April 16, 2018

Weekly Reading: Glory #2

Glory #2

Published by Avatar in January 2002


The covers:


  

  

  

  

  

  

Title: Alan Moore's Glory and the Gate of Tears Chapter 2: The End of Delight

(As always: Glory 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 to the unintentional final issue of Glory. It still amazes me that they couldn't even make it through the four issues Avatar promised. I guess even Avatar had license to be Awesome. (I'll show myself out.)

Anyway, getting into the story, we pick up in Gloria's apartment the morning after her "date" with Granger Troy. She wakes up, but from her captions, we quickly realize that Glory is in charge of the body for a while. She's quickly off to work as Glory, saving people from an apartment fire.

Then she's off to the diner, where she lets Gloria take over the body once more. It's such an interesting way to deal with a secret identity, to have it be two separate ones. It reminds me a bit of the Mike Moran/Miracleman relationship, if anyone remembers that. Hopefully this one will turn out better for the human half.

Gloria starts discussing her night with Phoebe while the volume on the lettering is turned down, revealing Glory in Thule, watching the scene play out in the Earthly realm.

Demeter approaches and Glory can tell that something is wrong. Demeter tells Glory about Lilith's visit, and how her garden hasn't been the same since. In fact, Demeter's ten of swords, also called Ruin, approaches and tells Glory that when ten blades turn against her, it will be the end of delight.

Demeter asks about Glory's human aspect, and finds out about Granger Troy, which Demeter admits is not the luckiest name.

Demeter: "Please be careful, my darling. Don't get tied to anyone. You tend to get enchanted so easily..."

Glory meets up with Hermoine and they head off to talk.

Meanwhile, Granger starts waking up and getting dressed. He's feeling ashamed at having slept with Gloria, even though she's clearly crazy. He notices her comics and thinks that maybe Gloria identifies with Glory, the superhero. He picks up one from 1954 and then we get our flashback... except it doesn't try very hard to feel like a flashback. Consider that this is an image of the Holliday Girls, whom the Danger Damsels are based on:


...and then look at what artist Matt Martin drew for the flashback:


The style ruins the whole point of the flashback, which was to lovingly capture the weird split between the fetishism of being bound and the innocence of the artwork. Instead, the whole thing feels tawdry and cheap.

There's a rumor that the reason Avatar stopped publishing Glory with issue #2 was because as part of the agreement with Rob Liefeld, Liefeld had final say in artists on the series. Liefled didn't sign off on Matt Martin and wanted Melinda Gebbie to continue doing the flashbacks (at least partly to stay in Moore's good graces). After this debacle, Liefeld pulled the plug on the whole thing.

In the flashback, Glory is summoned telepathically by the Danger Damsels. At Miss Smart's School for Girls, Glory finds out that the Danger Damsels have been abducted by Madame Manacle, the ruler of Slaveria. In Slaveria, she finds the four Damsels bound up. They introduce themselves, revealing their characters as the rich girl, the fat girl, etc., but Matt Martin's art does nothing to distinguish any of them, ruining the joke. Ugh.

Glory agrees to submit to four traps in order to free the girls. The first is a giant record player with a diamond needle, getting closer and closer to scratching her skin. But she manages to shift her weight and send the whole thing crashing. The next is a giant beaker with water slowly threatening to drown Glory. But she manages to mix the water with sulphuric acid to explode her way free. The third is to be pulled by two horses, but she quickly charms the horses.

The last is that Madame Manacle pretends to be Glory's sweetheart Trevor Tracey, and asks Glory to marry him/her. Glory says yes, and Trevor asks that she cook and clean for him. The Danger Damsels unmask the villain just before the ultimate submission and they attach her to a wagon to pull them all back to school.

And the flashback ends on a personal not for Granger:

"All people who try to tie women down have got a nerve, Wanda... especially ones who'd screw a poor lonely schizophrenic like that buttwipe Granger Troy did."

Granger has to look twice before the comic returns to normal. He decides he needs to get out of Gloria's apartment before he goes crazy himself. He runs into Lillian the hooker, who tells him that she can get him a drug for schizophrenia, which he agrees to give to Gloria.

Meanwhile, in Thule, Glory explains to Hermoine about her feelings for Granger.

Glory: "He loves Gloria so much, and he's afraid of hurting her. It's so silly..."

Hermoine: "How could you ever hurt somebody by loving them?"

During their next date, Granger slips the drug into Gloria's drink.

Glory, in Thule, wanders through Demeter's art pavilions, where artists come while they're working. The sky soon starts to grow dark and windy. The ten of swords is trying to wave to her.

Meanwhile Gloria, under the drug, is starting to realize that she may be crazy.

In Thule, the earth opens up and swallows Glory. In the Ninth Kingdom, Hecate, the goddess of magic, witchcraft, the night, moon, ghosts and necromancy, hears a cry. In the Sixth Kingdom, Helios, the sun god, says, "Oh no. Not again."

And Demeter comes running to find Glory gone beneath the ground.

The next issue would have been called Paradise Lost, but well, I guess it's just lost. It's such a shame, because, while very flawed, it was an interesting comic playing with some new ideas. Unfortunately, I haven't found any copies of the last two scripts Moore did for Glory nor any fan-creator issues.

Drat.

Okay, next week we'll finish off the last of Moore's Awesome works with Supreme #63. Prepare for the mother of all cliffhangers!

As always, please check out the Annotations Page for more details and references and be sure to let me know any that I missed.

6 comments:

  1. I really, really hate the choice of font for Demeter. It's not an inherently bad font, but it was never intended for use in a full caps context, and has many badly distracting features when so used.

    Did you notice that each of the traps is thematically associated with one of the Danger Damsels?

    Haloperidol was also a plot point in Twin Peaks, in a vaguely similar fashion. Moore is known to be a TP fan, so he may have learned of it from there.

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    1. I'd have to look, but was the font the same as used in the Awesome preview #0 that featured Demeter? If so, that was probably ComiCraft, and they're usually better than that.

      I didn't notice about the Danger Damsel traps, mainly because I was so annoyed by the art that I didn't pay too much attention to it. The problem is that it is very clever and could have been a lot of fun, but Avatar tried to make it sex instead, and it just sucked.

      Funny you mention Twin Peaks, as I was just reading a thing about Blue Roses that came from Twin Peaks, and how that was part of the inspiration for Warren Ellis for his Supreme series.

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    2. The Awesome #0 had a different Demeter font, though the two are superficially similar. The one used by ComiCraft is, as one would expect, more professional.

      While I agree that the art for the Danger Damsels section was way sub-par, I have no doubt that Moore intended (barely sublimated) sex to be a large part of it as well.

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    3. Oh yes, sex was a big part of the Glory DNA, but the sex in the old Wonder Woman Comics is very different from the sex in modern comics. It’s much more subtext, where you can’t believe what you’re seeing as opposed to having no doubt of what you’ve just seen. Or that’s my take on it, anyway.

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  2. If that rumor about Liefeld and Gebbie's art is true, it might be for the best the rest of this series didn't see print. The book is clearly written to take advantage of multiple art styleslike Moore's previous Awesome-i-verse stories. Avatar must have missed the point or just not cared when choosing artists.

    Still, if they were going to do two more issues, there must be at least two more Alan Moore scripts out there. I'd love if they got the fan treatment like Youngblood!


    And that's a cool Twin Peaks reference from Alexx! Twin Peaks is one of my favorite shows. I know Moore is a fan.

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    1. Yeah, I was surprised when I heard that rumor because Liefeld mostly gets cast as the villain in the Awesome story, but it makes a degree of sense. And he could have done it just because Avatar didn't follow the agreement. But that second issue flashback should have been so much better, and really would have added another level to the series, similar to the way the flashbacks in Supreme did.

      Eric Stephenson said that two more Glory scripts exist, but I haven't seen them out there anywhere. If they ever surface, I sure hope fans will complete those ones too (and maybe fix the flashback from issue 2).

      What I wonder though, is if the fourth issue was a natural stopping point? From the proposal, it didn't sound like Moore was planning on doing Glory for long. He may have planned a four-issue story to launch the series, much like he did the first arc of Crossed+100 and then turned it over to another writer. And that would have explained why Avatar was willing to do it as a miniseries.

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