Alan Moore is nothing if not extremely clever and imaginative. I loved his Supreme stories, but Judgement Day shows Moore going through the motions. They're still a lot of creativity at work, but he doesn't seem to be into it as much: there simply isn't as much love shown here as he showed in his Supreme stories. There's even a mean-spirited edge on display, such as when Moore plainly describes how much of a cheerless, crappy world the Image universe is (I agree with him, but how did Moore basically insulting his work get by Rob Liefeld's radar?). The dialogue isn't as interesting, and the plot, as confusing and fun as it is, is only a mind-fuck without any substance but a jab/critique of 90's comics.
(The second part of this collection is a string of loosely-connected short vignettes including a dizzying array of unrealized superhero concepts, thrown together in a way that promises something down the road that unfortunately never materializes)
The art doesn't really help anything either. I like Gil Kane alright, and his work is pretty okay when it comes up, but he lacks the apish variety of Rick Veitch which helped Supreme's parody/flashbacks come to life. Liefeld's drawings are all Liefeld, which resorts to characters with names like Shaft shoving their codpieces in our faces, or gratuitous shots of Glory's ass and breasts (at one time Moore makes fun of this by having another character point out to Suprema that everyone can see her panties when she flies). It's sort of a bastard combination of the profound and the profane, Liefeld's totally 90's looking drawings clashing with Moore's confounding, elaborate plots. It sort of works, though just not as well as in Supreme.
This checker edition, as with the Supreme collections, has a real cheap/bootleg feel to it. Apparently Veitch (and others?) get no royalties for them, which is a shame, but I don't see any better quality editions coming out anytime soon thanks to legal shenanigans.
I'm really interested in the deal-with-the-devil Moore made at this period of his career: disbanding from DC and Marvel, signing up with Super Slacker Liefeld, losing his friendship with Veitch, and shortly after creating his own comic book company. Were the worlds created oh-so-briefly in this and the Supreme collection supposed to continue on to bigger and better things? Were they throwaway ideas? Were they unused ideas Moore had had for their DC/Marvel counterparts? (Every character in Image is a ripoff of some Marvel/DC character: look at the picture of Image's Troll is you don't believe me.) How frustrated was Moore when his Image projects got delayed and/or he couldn't use them again (because he was too greedy?) and had to start a new universe from scratch? Comic book nerd questions for the ages....