Welcome

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, October 23, 2017

Weekly Reading: Supreme #53

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:


Apparently there's some debate about whether Supreme was popular enough to make it "worth publishing." Rick Veitch has said that sales on Supreme toward the end were regularly selling about 40,000 issues. Today, that would be one of the major hits in the entire industry, but at the time, that was a smaller audience. Awesome also had a major investor pumping money into all of the series, allowing Awesome to spend a lot of money, though it's doubtful they were making a lot of money. Anyway, I'll get into that more when we hit the financial crash of 1998.

So, the story starts with Ethan in a coffee shop explaining to Diana how he "heard" that Supreme tied up all of the loose threads from the end of the Story of the Year storyline. The first question I have is there anything more late-'90s than Diana's flower vest? Wow.

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.

Supreme then references that the Youngblood trial from judgment Day is just getting ready to start at the Citadel. The mention of superheroes causes Diana to pull out her make-ready of the latest issue of Omniman, except it isn't. It's this very issue of Supreme! We can see Ethan looking at this very page.

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.

There's a wonderful conversation between the two heroes.

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?"

They decide to settle it by demonstrating their powers, which of course leads to a brawl between the two. Diana offers to help Supreme, as she's knowledgeable about Omniman's powers. It's a little odd that Ethan doesn't know, since he's been doing the art on the series for longer than she's been writing it, but maybe this is a subtle dig at how uninvested artists are on the series they're working on.

There's a wonderful bit as Diana and Lucas talk about the heroes fighting, with Lucas saying, "Believe me, Omniman coming to life and losing his marbles in downtown Omegapolis is the last thing Dazzle needs right now! I mean, with the industry in the state it's in..." He's interrupted as the heroes come crashing through into a comicbook shop. And then Carl Chamber, the new assistant editor shows up for his first day.

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.

And then Omniman starts to break character and we learn that Omniman is actually Szazs, the Sprite Supreme. "I'm cute and I've got a big head!" he exclaims. And with that, he's already become a fan favorite. Szazs is competing in the Impolympics with the other imp, sprite and pixie analogs of the Awesome heroes to come up with "the most irrational and pointless stunt!"

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.

Szazs becomes a giant and wishes everyone could share his elevated view, but Supreme talks him out of making everyone into giants again. So Szazs makes a mirror image of the city on the sky, like something out of Christopher Nolan's movie Inception. Giant foam rubber clouds fall on the city, dampening Diana and the others on the ground.

Diana suggests that Supreme use the Supreme comicbook to see how to get Szazs to leave the dimension, which Supreme does. We find out that Szazs can only exist in prime-numbered dimensions, such as the three dimensions that we're able to see. Supreme explains that because we can sense time that we're in the fourth dimension, making Szazs disappear.

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.

Anyway, the issue of Supreme remained as a memento, which Supreme put into his trophy room in the Citadel. We can see that the back of it is advertising the Judgment Day trade paperback (which never came out). We see Supreme talking to Die Hard, who then segues into explaining about the upcoming Youngblood murder trial. They walk toward the stadium, which we see being converted into the courtroom.

There's a nice bit, sort of setting the stage for the trial and why it's important to the Awesome characters.

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.

4 comments:

  1. I love when comics get meta and this is a great example of how enjoyable that sort of story can be.

    Billy Friday (and even just reading your little Billy Friday synopsis paragraph) never fails to make me laugh out loud. I think the whole Billy Friday running sub plot might be the most fun part of the series for me.

    I don't have much else to say about this issue that you haven't already covered. Sprouse coming on as regular artist is a huge boost to the overall quality of the series. Moore made a pretty great effort to write the earlier issues in a way that worked with the stereotypical 90's artwork that he was getting, but it's immediately clear that Sprouse's artwork just fits Moore's story like a glove.

    This part of Moore's Supreme is really fascinating for the reason you mentioned. He's not setting up the story anymore. From here on, it's just Moore doing what he wants with a Superman character.

    I really try not to do this, because comparing these two magical comic book "rivals" is a tired cliche by now. But, it's really hard for me not to compare this period of Supreme to Grant Morrison's All-Star Superman. Both come from what I would say is almost the exact same idea, "If I could just write classic Superman stories without any editor or publisher telling me what I need to do...". Plus, in my opinion, both are pretty great. I don't remember if Forgotten Awesome has or will discuss Morrison's ASM at all, but I'll personally probably re-read that series again after I finish finding and reading everything there is from Moore's Awesome-verse.

    Anyway, I'm rambling on about something that might be out of the scope of your blog and probably something that would really irritate Mr. Moore if he ever somehow found this comment section, so I should probably stop!

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    1. Yeah, I sort of feel like this is the point where Moore figured out the basic template for his ABC line of comics. Have a fun, basic story without having to overtly try to build to something. You wouldn't think it would be that hard, but maybe he just makes it look really easy.

      And Sprouse was so good on these issues. I think you're exactly right about the physique no longer needing to be explained away, though Moore was pretty far along in his second year of scripts by the time he knew Sprouse was going to be his artist. And he never talked to Sprouse until Awesome was done.

      It's been a long time since I read All-Star Superman, and I intend to read it again for a comparison to Supreme, but I'm not sure when that'll happen. I want to do the same thing with Miracleman. But first I want to get through all the Moore Awesome/Avatar comics. Then deal with the two Supreme series, the Glory series and the five or so Youngblood series that came after Moore's runs. I also want to talk about some of the ABC comics, too. So, it might be a little while.

      I doubt Moore would care too much about comparing Supreme and ASS. I feel like he's trying to put all of his comics work behind him, sadly.

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  2. I bought all these when they came out except for maybe the first 3 or 4 issues. Anyhow what do you think the street dates were? 52a 52b and 53 all saySept1997. I seem to recall getting this one in October. And 54 does say November. I also distinctly remember 56 coming out in Feb

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    1. I tend to trust the months on the inside covers (probably more than I should), and think they all came out right around each other.

      Toward 56, you can see Awesome starting to fall apart. Though it's nowhere near as bad as Judgment Day: Aftermath, which took forever to finally come out.

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