The drama received mixed reviews, some were critical that the focus was on DCI Caroline Goode and the investigation, as opposed to Banaz Mahmod herself. Anita Singh of
The Daily Telegraph wrote that Banaz was "reduced to a bit part in her own murder". and Flora Carr of the
Radio Times wrote that it is a "very good drama, but whether or not it assuages its critics' early fears remains to be seen". In
The Guardian, Chitra Ramaswamy, gave Honour four stars, writing that the drama "makes for haunting television... this is no white-saviour narrative. The central theme (...) is the police force's abject failure to protect a terrified British citizen (...) Honour possesses a quiet authenticity that comes partly from Hawes – her performance is a study in controlled anguish – and partly from the way it was brought to television. Both the real-life Goode and Bekhal... consulted on the production, and it shows. Rachel Cooke, writing in the
New Statesman, called it a "moving, vital drama" about honour killings, and that it was "deftly, delicately done", "It was so delicately done. If there was horror, sorrow and respect were the more important things". Paul Hirons, writing for The Killing Times, referred to the drama as "frantic, emotional and extremely harrowing". Further, "Writer Gwyneth Hughes does a fine job of telling the story of the search for Banaz with tension and pace – it's a stripped-down, purely procedural narrative with Goode and her team joining the dots"; "this was a very well staged drama and very well played. Keeley Hawes was on top form... as was the supporting cast. In the end though, this was about Banaz Mahmod. People failed her. They
all failed her". ==See also==