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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, October 30, 2017

Weekly Reading: Supreme #54

Supreme #54

Published by Awesome Entertainment in November 1997


The cover (which you can apparently buy here for $7,000):


Title: The Ballad of Judy Jordan

(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.)

Poor Judy Jordan. She spent a lifetime pining for Supreme, only to see him take off into outer space without her and then have her mind destroyed and body stolen by Supreme's nemesis. That's pretty awful.

Fortunately, this is Awesome and Alan Moore isn't giving anyone an awful ending. So we come to Supreme #54, a beautiful little story featuring art by the three best artists who have worked on Supreme (though, this being Awesome, they managed to partially mess it up, too - but I'll explain that in a minute).

First off, we get another wonderful credits page by Todd Klein:


Then we get the first chapter, drawn by Rick Veitch. It starts with Moore writing in verse of Judy's life, first as the teenage girlfriend of Kid Supreme and later working with Ethan Crane at K-ZAM radio and having adventures with the adult Supreme. But all of that stopped by the time she was 48, when Supreme left. So distraught, she didn't think to not open Dax's book, which stripped her of her body, darkening her soul.

I'm not one for poetry, and Moore's use of verse has always been hit or miss for me. There are a few nice lines that it's tough not to appreciate: "In that cloud of heady spices/while she had not time to sneeze/tiny microbe-sized devices/stripped her of her faculties."

As she lay on her kitchen floor, for all intents and purposes dying, all she can think of is Supreme. "Yet it seemed, as life was fleeing/that the song, the great refrain/that was Judy Jordan's being/missed a beat... and then began again."

And then, after the darkness, she wakes up to Supreme, welcoming her back. Of course, it's not really Supreme, just S-1. And she's not really Judy Jordan. She's the Judy Jordan suprematon, who appears to be only 25.

I love Veitch's flashback work, but his attempts at telling the modern story always felt to me like it wasn't quite fully-formed. It's too doughy or something.

Anyway, Radar fills her in on what happened as only a talking superhero canine could: "Since your own personality had been gnawed away by the dust, the body was left empty when Dax departed, like a clean dogbowl." Supreme found enough of her personality to put it into this robotic body.

But now she just feels like a Citadel exhibit, like the trophy room she and Radar walk through. (Note, there's the issue of Supreme #53 along with the superhero costume the real Judy wore when she became Supreme Woman in 1959.) "I wanted to be his wife. I was waiting for him... He can't love me as a robot. He can't love me as an old woman. What point does my existence have?"

One thing you can count on is Moore to think through any situation he writes about. And this seems like exactly the state Judy would be in at this point. She was created to be Supreme love interest. What is she if she can't be that?

She asks Radar to leave her alone. Later, we find out that she's donned the Supreme Woman costume and flown off. (Note the small image of Alan Moore that Rick Veitch drew into that last panel on page 8.)

 

The verse captions transition us from one chapter to the next.

How you're reading this issue will determine whose chapter two you get next. It turns out, through some mess up, two artists were assigned to this second chapter: J. Morrigan and Melinda Gebbie. In the issue, Gebbie's was lettered and printed in order and Morrigan's was presented as a special feature at the back of the issue. Checker, which later published the trade paperbacks and hardcovers lettered the Morrigan pages and replaced the Gebbie pages. I'll present them side-by-side in a post later this week so you can compare.


And now, part two: Duel of the Durable Damsels! Suprema sees Judy catching a flaming meteor. Judy quickly comes across as a jerk, telling Suprema that Omegapolis doesn't need her any more because Super-Judy's there. Suprema's worried that Judy doesn't know what she's doing, as evidenced by Judy hurling the meteor away, right into the path of a passenger jet, which Suprema shoves out of the way.

Judy and Suprema quickly get into it, with Suprema telling Judy that she doesn't have what it takes to be a hero. Judy responds, "Suprema, I'm getting tired of your snottiness supreme!" and then insults Suprema's costume. Suprema responds and ultimately tells Judy that suprematons are just disposable people, at which Judy hits her.

Now it's on.

Suprema shoves Judy so hard they end up on the moon where they have a cool, soundless space fight. Suprema knocks her out and brings her back to Earth, realizing that she let herself go too far: "Me and my durned temper! It's always the same when I get into a snit supreme!"

I love this characterization of Suprema, where she knows that she gets mad and can't stop herself. But she also feels a great deal of sympathy for Judy and resentment of her brother for unintentionally making things so bad for Judy. If you were to ask me who I thought was the most developed character of all the Awesome characters, I would say that I think Moore did his finest work on Suprema.

Suprema brings Judy back to the Citadel, where the real Supreme is waiting. But that's for the final chapter.

Then we get part three: Old Flames & New Sparks, drawn by Chris Sprouse. Supreme and Judy sit in the beautiful rooftop garden to talk in private. Judy is mad that Supreme wasn't there when she woke up, for which he apologizes and tries to tell her that she's more than a robot. But when she goes to hug him, he gets uncomfortable and says they should head back inside.

There's another beautiful page of the pair wandering down the central stairway where Judy tries to come up with a solution to her situation, whether flying off into space or becoming a light phantom in Amalynth. But those aren't solutions.

And then S-1 interrupts, explaining that he might have a solution because he is an exact copy of Supreme and has independent consciousness. He admits that he's always loved Judy and asks if, now tat she's a suprematon too, she would become his wife.

Supreme asks if this a relapse into S-1's madness. And it's a fair question. Let's remember that back in issue 43 Supreme found out that S-1 had turned on this very same Judy suprematon (along with others) and told her she was the real Judy and married her. But she didn't have independent consciousness then, so she had no choice. When she found out she was a fake, she asked to be turned off.

This time, though, she knows what she is and she has the freedom to make up her own mind. It's an interesting distinction and a powerful reminder of the importance of free choice. But it's also a little disturbing and it makes you wonder if she should end up with S-1 considering his violation of her when she wasn't able to make a choice. I don't know what I think, but I love how Moore's taken a couple of loose ends and strung them together to make something beautiful, rich and complicated. What do you think?

Anyway, Judy realizes that Supreme really does love her, but can't as a robot. However, a robot Supreme would have no problems with a robot Judy. She asks Supreme to leave them be and sparks fly as she and S-1 kiss.

In the epilogue, where Ethan is explaining the situation to Diana, he tells her that Judy and S-1, now renamed Talos, were married in a ceremony in the reconverted stadium after the Judgment Day trial with Suprema as maid of honor and Radar as best dog. It's a nice touch, again clearing away the violence and murder of the old Extreme universe and replacing it with the joy and love of the new Awesome universe.

There's also a nice touch about how suprematons make love: "It may be androids have more options for mutual pleasure and communion than us organic beings."

The pair then took off for outer space, where they found a planet and started constructing a new civilization. Next, they're working on splicing their programming to create unique children.

Carl mentions that the small talk in the office is really weird, with Billy Friday calling, wanting his missing laptop communicator. Gosh, I wonder if that'll become important.

The story ends with Ethan figuratively and literally staring off into space, possibly seeing Judy and Talos enjoying their happy ending. As the verse concludes: "So our ballad now is ended/in a crackling, chrome-lipped kiss/with Judy and her intended/in cyber-conjugal bliss."

You can call me a big softie if you like, but I love this ending for Judy and that she even got an ending. Remember that Judy was essentially Supreme's version of Superman's Lana Lang. As you may remember from Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?, Moore's ending for Lana was to be killed, burned by future villains.

The 1980s Moore left her dead, mourned, but gone. But the Moore of the 1990s was determined that the Awesome universe be more upbeat and optimistic. And so Judy died, but did not stay dead. Instead, she got the best of all possible worlds, marrying a version of Supreme and forming a new world with him, having children and having a new life filled with the adventure she was used to. Personally, I'd much rather this ending. In it's own way, this optimism is more powerful than the dark grimness that swallowed the 1980s.

As always, please check out the Supreme Annotations Page, for all of the details and references that I completely missed.

2 comments:

  1. I agree with you that it's great that Judy Jordan gets a happy ending. That plot thread getting some closure is one of the best parts of Alan Moore's Supreme, in my opinion. So many comics (especially those of the era in which Supreme was written) had these "something bad happens to the female character to motivate the male protagonist" plots. Moore's Supreme gives the female character a happy ending, plus a bit of an idea that life isn't all about the male protagonists all the time.

    I had no idea the chapter two was swapped out like that. I remember the first time I read this issue, I really liked comparing the two versions of the artwork. Seeing the Morrigan pages with lettering will be interesting. I look forward to that post.

    Also, I just have to say, Veitch/Gebbie/Sprouse/Gordon/Klein is like the Alan Moore All Star art line up.

    (The following paragraph can probably be disregarded as nonsensical, half-thought out ramblings.) Regarding the idea of S-1 and Judy getting together, man that's a complicated situation, isn't it? Relationships are complex and often involve very uncomfortable baggage. That's been an occasional theme in Moore's work as far back as Watchmen, and he'll get into uncomfortable, taboo relationships as a theme again in the Top Ten/Smax/49'ers and Lost Girls stories. Actually, your paragraph about S-1's "violation" of the Judy automaton makes me think of the Watchmen Silk Spectre/Comedian relationship. Silk Spectre is brutally victimized, but her later feelings are very complicated and it's incredibly uncomfortable for the reader (at least for this reader). I'm not sure if there's a similar story here or not, with the formerly insane S-1 ending up with the automaton who he initially violated, but it seems plausible. It's also plausible that I'm incredibly ignorant about these things and I'm drawing lines where there are none to draw.

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    1. Your whole point about "something bad happens to the female character to motivate the male protagonist" is a good one. I'm thinking about doing a post on that much later when we get to Supreme: The Return and Diana Dane's visit to the Supremacy.

      Check out the two chapters side by side in today's post. Personally, I always liked Morrigan's art and have been saddened to see how little credit he got for it. In my mind, he captured THE Suprema look, which as we saw, was a challenge for a lot of artists. After this issue, he never works in comics again, which is really sad.

      I think you're trying to say what I was trying to say about the complex relationship between S-1 and the Judy suprematon. That's a good callback to the Comedian/Silk Spectre relationship, which has been problematic for readers for years. I'm surprised there wasn't more of an issue here, but then again, there hasn't been a lot of analysis of Supreme, certainly after Story of the Year.

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