Wednesday, December 15, 2004

Questioning Big Business: Trigger #1

Ethicorp owns everything. They own all the businesses, all the insurance companies, all of the media, all of the technology, and all of the government. Lucky for you, Ethicorp "gets the bad out" of everything. Thanks to Ethicorp, you have the opportunity to enjoy this pro-active discouragement of "bad" comics.

Trigger #1, from DC's Vertigo imprint, is a dark tale in the tradition of 1984, Fahrenheit 451, Brazil, and many other repressed future societies in which "Big Brother is watching you." If you try to create a perfect society, there are always going to be some people who just have to ruin it for everybody. They refuse to be happy, or to believe everything they're told, or just want to think for themselves. In Ethicorp's world, those people tend to "disappear" with the help of mysterious hit men called"Triggers." (Which, of course, don't exist.)

Writer Jason Hall's protagonist is a low-level office worker named Carter. Carter is unhappy with his pointless, sanitized life, but he takes some comfort in the oddly violent stories he writes in his spare time, and in the quaint, antique books he reads. Carter sure doesn't believe the "crackpots" and their crazy conspiracy theories about Ethicorp. That is, he doesn't until he runs into some Triggers out taking care of business one dark and stormy night. Are the conspiracy theories true? And if the Triggers do exist, what do they have to do with Carter?

Trigger #1 presents a dystopic future, not too far from the world we know today. The dark and moody art by John Watkiss adds to the feeling of impending doom. This story, like 1984, gives readers some serious issues to think about, and provides enough action to keep things interesting. Besides, you should buy it because Ethicorp cares about you. Count yourself lucky that Ethicorp has asked Four Color Fantasies to make Trigger #1 their Book of the Week. It is guaranteed, but really, you know you can trust us. Don't you? (Yes, of course you do.)

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