Sunday, June 8, 2025

Dark Honor #1 Review


 


Writers: KS Bruce & Brian Decubellis

Adaptation: Ethan Sacks

Artist & Cover Artist: Fico Ossio

Colorist: Raciel Avila

Letterer: Jame

Editor: Chris Ryall

Designer: Travis Escarfullery

Publisher: Image Comics

Price: $3.99

Release Date: May 28, 2025

 

The time: March 13, 2020. The place: New York City. The invader: Covid-19. Inhabitants flee the city, hide in their homes, and prize masks more highly than gold. The streets empty, and businesses close as a silent killer overwhelms mobile morgues. With New York driven to a standstill, how will the pandemic threaten the established order of the criminal underworld? Let's grab some cash, leap into Dark Honor #1, and see!

 

Story

A card game becomes the underworld’s first casualty as Grigor and his gun-toting goons invade the back room of a bar. Grigor-19 isn't an unknown as he mows down the criminal families and their favored customers. He has links to the five families that rule New York and the Hundred who protect them. But the soldiers who protect the families' interests respect Grigor's momentum and seeming invulnerability. Regime change amid a society-threatening virus prompts the crime families' soldiers to question who best represents their future or past in Dark Honor #1.

 

As Grigor upsets the delicate balance between the five families and the hundred, Rain languishes in prison. Or perhaps not so much languishes as disrupts the established order. But the wind of change that blows through New York also invades its prisons. Rain has links with the Hundred. When the parole board makes the addicted gambler an offer she can't refuse, Rain weighs the odds and makes her play in Dark Honor #1.

 

KS Bruce, Brian Decubellis, and Ethan Sacks shift the point of view to reveal the pivotal players and the levers that should prevent the corrupt system from breaking. Grigor and Rain's tongue-in-cheek dialogue leavens a dark, fast-paced story about intriguing characters who, either by inclination or necessity, prop up the criminal underworld rather than the democracy their forefathers fought and died for.

 

Art

Fico Ossio's art welcomes you to New York City with a sweeping view of glowing towers beyond a bridge devoid of traffic. Inside an empty bar, men in suits gather around tables, clutching cards and glasses and studying the cards in their hands. Framed by masked men carrying assault rifles, Grigor cuts a stylish figure in his finely tailored slacks, jacket, and scarf in Dark Honor #1. He smiles, defying Covid-19, as his cigarette fills the air with gentle arcs of smoke.

 

Raciel Avila lends Fico Ossio’s art a painted appearance. Purples and blues enliven the city that never sleeps, while the red cast on the bar's façade by a white neon light foretells the violence to come. Yellow lights from upstairs offices and green lighting from the bar fill the card room with the same stars and glare the skyscrapers produce. As guns strike the players like lightning, the sparkles filling the dark interior suggest a realignment of the criminal cosmos. Blood sprays like plants springing from fertile soil, while a reflection caught in crimson evokes the mark of a signet ring in wax.

 

Jame fills white dialogue balloons with black uppercase letters that occasionally grow bold for intonation, swell for raised voices, and shrink for lowered or distant voices. Sound effects fill the bar with a barrage of single shots and continuous fire, Rain making her position clear, and footsteps echoing through an empty transit station. Thanks to Image Comics and Synergy Publishing for providing a copy for review.

 

Final Thoughts

As a pandemic changes New York City overnight, a system built upon secrets, power, and government corruption seems doomed. Beautiful and bursting with energy, Dark Honor #1 ponders how fear over an uncertain future can change our world in ways we could never have imagined.

 

Rating 9.2/10

 

Find this review and others at Comic Book Dispatch

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