Publisher: Marvel Comics
Writer: D.G. Chichester
Penciler: Netho Diaz
Inker: J.P. Mayer
Colorist: Andrew Dalhouse
Release Date: 22nd November 2023


Announced at the San Diego Comic-Con in July 2023, and set during D.G. Chichester’s “landmark run” with Daredevil, this first in a four-issue limited series does a good job in both updating those readers who aren’t too familiar with Chichester’s fan-favourite era, whilst simultaneously stimulating those bibliophiles who remember the Man Without Fear wearing his armoured costume with a previously never-before-seen adventure. Sure, it does take the Connecticut-born writer a good ten pages to recount the numerous changes made to Matt Murdock’s character during the 90s, but that still leaves two-thirds of this book with which the audience can be thrown into the non-stop intense action and brutal fighting of Jack Batlin’s mission to thwart a series of mysterious abductions across Hell’s Kitchen.

Furthermore, once the storytelling does finally get going it wastes little time in throwing the blind vigilante up against the formidable Sabretooth in a mouth-watering confrontation that arguably shows the mass-murdering mutant at his most terrifyingly savage, and wearing Jim Lee’s instantly iconic costume redesign to boot. This sadly short-lived skirmish proves an excellent hook to the upcoming shenanigans, particularly when it alludes to a master super-villain capable of stopping Victor Creed’s ferocious alter-ego dead in his tracks with a single command, and ordering him to “disengage” from a hero who has already humiliatingly battered the brute with his trademark batons.

Just as tensely penned is probably this publication’s almost obligatory exchange with Wilson Fisk, who is seen as a down-and-out Kingpin of crime scrambling around for a quality limousine in a disreputable garage. Seeming to not know the (new) incarnation of Daredevil isn’t the same blind lawyer he’d repeatedly locked horns with in the past, the dialogue between these two long-time foes is still top-notch, with the once powerful crime lord lacing his polite words with plenty of deadly menace and threat; “Time to earn some respect.”

Helping to add plenty of “Snappkt”, “Tnnk” and “Trrk” to the proceedings is the artistic team of Netho Diaz on pencils, J.P. Mayer with inks, and colorist Andrew Dalhouse, who together make Murdock’s sleek new armoured costume wholly believable. In addition, some of the splash-layouts showing Matt’s highly emotive struggle with his Catholicism and dedication to the law are incredibly well designed, and provide some wonderful insights into the titular character’s conflicting motivations.


[PREVIEW ARTWORK – CLICK TO ENLARGE]


The writer of this piece was: Simon Moore
Simon Tweets from @Blaxkleric ‏
You can read more of his reviews at The Brown Bag


One response to “Review – Daredevil: Black Armor #1 (Marvel Comics)”

  1. Forgot about this mini-series. I always liked the black armoured costume that Daredevil used back in the 90’s. It was quite a major move for the character at the time, and those storylines were really good. Cool to finally see this era being revisited, will have to check this one out.

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