Jon Bernthal’s Punisher Returns: A Gritty Comeback in ‘Spider-Man: Brand New Day’
Jon Bernthal is back as the Punisher in Spider-Man: Brand New Day. Check out his MCU debut, story information, trailer highlights, & how the character fits in.
Jon Bernthal is back as the Punisher in Spider-Man: Brand New Day. Check out his MCU debut, story information, trailer highlights, & how the character fits in.
There’s a certain electricity in the air when an actor and a character align so perfectly that you can’t conceive of anyone else inhabiting the role. For Marvel fans, that axis tipped a long time ago in 2016, with the now-iconic Jon Bernthal’s initial outing as Frank Castle in Netflix’s Daredevil season 2. What started as a small part rapidly developed into something much greater, a cultural phenomenon that redefined what a comic book anti-hero could be on television. After nearly one decade Jon Bernthal sings his encore as The Punisher in Spider-Man: Brand New Day, which is hitting theaters on 31 July 2026.
Let’s break down the trailer release of Spiderman: Brand New Day showing The Punisher in action.
When Jon Bernthal is first introduced with a white skull in a black tactical vest, Marvel Cinematic Universe marks him in a special position. The Netflix series had more realistic emotions and powerful action while carving out their own universe, instead of big screens.
Bernthal’s Punisher was a revelation, he was angry and broken, but also quietly human and shockingly vulnerable. He wasn’t a stand-in for your generic comic book superhero — instead he was a man who had been shattered by loss, transformed his grief into a merciless war on crime, and didn’t have any cash for a place to stay.
A spin-off of The Punisher series, which starred Bernthal as Frank Castle for two seasons and became the definitive version of the character, was greenlit by Netflix following the success of the Daredevil series. The axe then began to fall. The marvel universe on Netflix crumbled and fans started to question if they would ever see Bernthal’s Punisher again. Of course there was wishful thinking and speculation but nothing is ever guaranteed in the entertainment industry.
Kevin Feige, head of Marvel Studio took a different route for the studio, he collected Netflix characters and reabsorbs them into the Main MCU which is a strategic move. See for yourself, Charlie Cox returned as Daredevil, and Bernthal did likewise with Daredevil: Born Again. Although even that seemed to be a foretelling of something bigger. Bernthal makes history as he leads his Punisher to his first ever appearance in a MCU theatrical release with Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
There’s something poetic about The Punisher being introduced to the big screen in a Spider-Man movie. Purists will tell you that Frank Castle made his first appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man in 1974, written by Gerry Conway, with art by Ross Andru and John Romita Sr. He was introduced as a kind of antagonist – a vigilante who considered Spider-Man simply another criminal who needed to be wiped out. They’ve always had this great opposing dynamic: the bright quippy teen (or young adult) who believes everyone deserves a second chance, including criminals, vs. the battle-hardened veteran who believes some people can’t be saved.
Tom Holland’s Peter Parker has been through the ringer. The world has turned its back on Spider-Man after the incident of Spider-Man: No Way Home. In a city that has no memory of him, he is anonymous and isolated, and he wonders where he belongs. It is perfect ground for the rise of a character like The Punisher. During production, Holland and Bernthal allegedly developed a fascinating “big brother/little brother rivalry” with their characters transitioning from antagonism to a fragile understanding.
This matchup seemed so obvious, because at its core, it was really a battle of ideologies. All everyone deserves is a second chance, with great power comes great responsibility and Spider-Man is the symbol of hope. The Punisher is the hard truth that government machinery can and does grind to a halt, and when that happens, well, at least according to some, you fight fire with fire. To get these two in the same shot, is not only a fan’s dream, but a philosophical debate fought in fists and words.
Now we’re getting somewhere. The Punisher of Bernthal has always been defined by its unrelenting cruelty. The Netflix series were never afraid to depict the toll Frank’s war took — blood, trauma, and moral compromise were the pronouns of those shows.
Bernthal has gone on record to speak to these concerns and the answers should calm fans down. He did acknowledge the “level of violence” that fans are used to seeing, but offered a reassuring perspective.Around the time of the release of Spider-Man 4, Disney+ will release The Punisher: One Last Kill, a Special Presentation that Bernthal co-wrote and says will be the “high octane kind of Punisher you’ve ever seen.”
Bernthal also stressed that it was “really important to us” that he, director Destin Daniel Cretton, and Tom Holland that the version of the Punisher in Spider-Man be the “same character from the special.”I do believe that we achieved that,” he said, indicating that while the violence is likely toned down for the family-friendly rating, the heart of Frank Castle — his anger, his pain, his unflinching moral compass, is still there.
It is crucial that Bernthal has always been “incredibly protective” of the character, and he has said that he’s “only interested in serving it right” and that the character needs to be respected in every version. He walked away from previous scripts of Daredevil: Born Again when he felt they were not respecting what The Punisher stands for. The fact that he’s locked in for this film, indicates Marvel figured out a way to do the character without “Disneyfying” him to death.
Marvel’s tactic here is actually pretty smart. In The Punisher: One Last Kill—a TV-MA special presentation—before Spider-Man: Brand New Day, you’re getting the best of both worlds. The special, which is directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green and co-written by Bernthal himself, will be the most “visceral, psychologically nuanced, merciless, no-holds-barred” iteration of the character. It has a release date of May 12, 2026, which gives audiences two months to enjoy getting their fill of hard-R Punisher adventure before catching him in the PG-13 Spider-Man movie.
It’s a permitting Bernthal to delve into the full dark depths of Frank Castle in the special but with a slightly more accessible version on the big screen. And, Bernthal says, the two projects flow seamlessly into one another. The Punisher who staggers away from the set of Spider-Man is the same Punisher who makes an appearance in the special .
What’s exciting in particular is that Bernthal hired real military consultants to make it real. Colton Hill, U.S. Marine Corps veteran, acted as weapons and tactics consultant for the special and served as military advisor for Spider-Man 4, confirmed that Frank Castle’s combat abilities and mentality is accurately represented for the character’s background. This is the level of detail that endears fans to Bernthal in this role — he gets that for a lot of vets, The Punisher is more than a comic book figure, he’s a reminder of the cost of war and how hard it is to come home.
A recently released trailer also gave us our first look at Bernthal, and it was indeed everything we could have hoped for. In a short but sweet snippet, we catch a glimpse of The Punisher plowing over Spider-Man in his iconic Battle Van, this is the first time we’ve seen this vehicle in a live-action adaptation.
Spider-Man franchise will take a new road which brings alpha and Gen Z generation altogether for its street-level fighting and more powerful characters. Destin Daniel Cretton directed this film who previously worked on Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. Kevin Feige has said this movie at last has Holland play a “real Spider-Man” fighting everyday crime on the streets of New York, rather than facing threats that could kill the planet, which is what the ending of No Way Home promised.
The other casting members like Zendaya and Jacob Batalon are also joining, which makes fans more excited to watch them together with Holland and Bernthal alongside newcomer Sadie Sink. It’s not enough yet because Mark Ruffalo portrays Hulk and Michael Mando returns as Scorpion, which means it’s heading towards the larger MCU.
Jon Brenthal showcasing his physicality and emotional realism which makes The Punisher original and keeps his ranking up in a world of CGI-heavy superheroes. He isn’t acting the role of pain, he is pain. Every sneer, every scar, every moment of barely contained rage feels earned.
Bernthal’s dedication is not limited to screen. He has openly talked about what the character represents to the military community and he has refused to waive on the darkness that defines Frank Castle. In a time when franchises seem increasingly focused-grouped to death, Bernthal’s Punisher is genuinely menacing, unpredictable and real.
As we tick away to July 31, 2026, the excitement is palpable. And this is not ‘just another superhero team-up;’ it is the culmination of almost a decade of storytelling, the crossing of two Marvel eras, and the confirmation of a performance that has shaped an entire generation’s perception of who The Punisher really is. Jon Bernthal is back. The skull is back. And this summer, moviegoers will get to know there’s no other person who could play this part like Netflix fans have for years now.
Read More:- How Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Blurs the Line Between Fiction and Reality
Ultimately, Jon Bernthal’s comeback as the Punisher in Spider-Man: Brand New Day isn’t just a simple return, but rather a full-circle moment for the character and the audience. It began as a gritty down-and-dirty perspective on the shadows of Hell’s Kitchen, and now its big-screen event bridging two very different eras of Marvel storytelling.
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Daredevil Born Again returns Matt Murdock to the MCU. Check out crossovers, Kingpin’s ascension, courtroom showdowns and Daredevil’s new street-level legacy.
Matt Murdock’s ascent as the ultimate TV comeback tale with Daredevil Born Again. After his grim Netflix show was axed after three seasons in 2018, it seemed like the “Devil of Hell’s Kitchen” might be out of luck for good. Instead, Marvel pulled a master class in character rehabilitation.
Splitting him (and his arch-enemy, Kingpin) across four very distinct series — Spider-Man, She-Hulk, Hawkeye, and Echo — Marvel connected the dots between his grim, street-level beginnings and the bigger, flashier MCU.
Daredevil Born Again neighborhood hero became more than that now. He’s been raised to the ethical and legal foundation of the whole franchise. It’s not just a Season 4; it’s a character study of a man caught between the law and the mask, searching for justice in a New York still grooving to the chaos of the Blip.
The Road to Daredevil Born Again is a meticulously crafted “what-have-you-done-for-me-lately?” Marvel made four deliberate cameos to convince us that Matt Murdock could leave his first dark, solitary Netflix pocket and step out into the wider, stranger battlefield of the Avengers and then get his own show again.
The Movie Star Moment (Spider-Man: No Way Home): This was the “official” handshake. Catching a brick and standing in for Peter Parker, Matt demonstrated that he and Marvel live in the same universe as the Avengers. It presented him as a “really good lawyer” who still had keen super-senses and was ready for the big leagues.
The Vibe Check (She-Hulk): That was our first time seeing Matt—cute, fun, and draped in a throwback yellow suit. It showed him as more than “a brooding guy in a hallway” but an experienced warrior who could square off against beings like “Hulk-level” villains and still maintain his composure.
The Villain Upgrade (Hawkeye): This focused on Wilson Fisk. Raising the stakes Marvel elevated the stakes by making Kingpin durable against explosions and car crashes. Now he wasn’t just a mob boss he was a “global threat,” and his shadow stretched over the whole city.
The Final Link (Echo): Daredevil Born Again brought everything full circle. In a savage battle and an extended view into Fisk’s history, it served as a reminder that Matt didn’t stop fighting during the “Snap” years. It culminated with Fisk’s bid for Mayor, which paved the way nicely for the new series.
For ages fans were fretting that Marvel was going to force a “reset button” on Daredevil Born Again, retconning everything that made the Netflix show great. But after a sweeping creative shakeup at the top, Marvel made a pivot that encompassed everything: they were going to look to the past instead of running away from it.
The “Hard Continuation” Victory: Although Daredevil Born Again was going to be a “soft reboot.” However, Marvel replaced the original creative team with a new showrunner to continue as a direct sequel to the original three seasons. Matt’s past – his scars, his faith, his feud with Fisk – still matters. We already are into the deep end of the main story where it originated.
Matt survival from Thanos: It turns out that both Matt and Wilson Fisk survived Thanos’s Snap. With the Avengers either off-planet or mourning, Hell’s Kitchen was unraveling. This gap of five years is the “secret sauce” of the new story. It gave Fisk a chance to reestablish himself as a power in the collapsing world, turning his criminal empire upside down and presenting himself as a “savior” for a broken city.
A New Kind of Crisis: For Matt the Blip wasn’t just a simple logistical nightmare, it was a spiritual one. Daredevil Born Againcompounded his “crisis of faith.” If the laws of nature can just extinguish half the population, how is a blind lawyer supposed to believe in the “rule of law” on Earth? He’s starting this new chapter in his life with what has been the heaviest burden of a decade’s worth of ups and downs.
Daredevil Born Again renders stark reality in its depiction of a disease-ridden, drug-addled Matt Murdock that no one could ever forget. He has laid down the brass knuckles and picked up the gavel in his election as mayor of New York City, and is now using the entire city government as a weapon against Matt Murdock.
The “Kingpin Squeeze”: Fisk isn’t just dispatching thugs to Matt’s home anymore. He’s making being a hero illegal through the Anti-Vigilante Task Force (AVTF). By painting Daredevil as a public menace, he’s employed the “rule of law” to chase his nemesis with a badge and a siren.
The Ultimate Strongman: Fisk’s ascent is a masterclass in manipulation. He preys on the anxieties of regular New Yorkers who feel the city has deserted them, not the Avengers. He presents himself as the only person who can restore order in a post-Blip world, and is taking advantage of “good optics” — even as he’s blackmailing the police commissioner and threatening martial law.
A Criminal “State-Within-a-State”: Behind the scenes of Daredevil Born Again, Fisk is working on the “Free Port,” in Red Hook. He’s attempting to establish a special-trade zone outside federal reach. If he pulls it off, he will have created a legal “black hole” through which the Five Families can move whatever they want without the law’s pesky interference.
Matt Murdock is basically a man serving two masters, and Daredevil Born Again, that strain is at last beginning to break. He’s a lawyer who takes an oath to uphold the law by day, but at night, he’s a vigilante who violates just about every ethical rule in the book. This isn’t just a “cool secret identity” this is a deep professional and moral crisis.
Here is what the “legal nightmare” Matt is facing right now:
The Threat of Disbarment: If a Bar Association in the real world got wind of what Matt does by night, he would be disbarred immediately. Rule 4.2 prohibits Attorney from communicating with a “represented party” without the party’s attorney being present. Anytime he has a Daredevil pin a criminal and punch the truth out of them, Lawyer-Matt is making a huge ethical error. He is basically using his mask to violate the legal rights which he is obliged to honor.
The Conflict of Interest: Matt frequently represents clients not to aid them but to gather intelligence for his missions. This makes it a “material risk” that he isn’t acting in the best interests of his client — which is the worst thing you can do as a lawyer.
The Hector Ayala Meltdown: This firestorm touches off Matt’s meltdown. To exonerate Hector (the White Tiger) from a murder charge, Matt stakes everything: he unmasks Hector in court to prove his innocence. It works—they win the case but what’s the victory but a hollow victory. Hector is assassinated by a corrupt cop right after leaving the courtroom.
The transition to the main MCU is not just a change of location; it’s a solidifying of Matt Murdock’s world. The people around him aren’t simply ”background characters”—they are the scars and the fuel for his new mission.
Here’s how the inner circle has changed in this “older and harder” reality:
The Heartbreak: The Death of Foggy Nelson. Foggy wasn’t just Matt’s law partner; he was his moral anchor. His death at the hands of Bullseye (by order of Vanessa Fisk) is the ruthless “catalyst” for the series as a whole. It shatters the “Nelson, Murdock & Page” trinity forever, and sends Matt into a year-long tailspin. In fact, he temporarily retires the mask, worried that his rage might make him a murderer.
The Evolution: Karen Page as a Peer. Karen is a long way from, you know, the secretary. Daredevil Born Again she’s basically a lawyer in her own right, a professional equal who challenges Matt to be better. She’s the one who pulls him back into the fight, with her investigation skills, she digs to what was left by Foggy. “She Feeds Matt his Humour-Detecting BS and Then Keeps Him Human“: As far as who the true Page is in the gloves is concerned, that would be Karen Page.
The Dark Mirror: Frank Castle (The Punisher). The two used to spend all their time arguing about the “morality of killing.” Now they’re a “reluctant duo. The rupturing effect of Foggy’s death and the city’s decay soup on Matt is so palpable (NOT in the traditional sense!) that he is seriously considering Frank’s brutal approach. This is a heartbreaking indication of how much Matt has dropped, he cannot have a flawless sense of morality in a world that seems to be inherently rigged.
Now that the MCU is blasting off to space and multiverse madness, Matt Murdock is becoming the man who keeps the franchise’s feet planted firmly on the ground. He’s gone from “that blind guy in Hell’s Kitchen” to a cornerstone of Phase 5 and 6—essentially the Captain America of the Streets.
Here’s how Matt is assembling his “Street-Level Avengers”:
The Strategic Lead: The Avengers may deal with cosmic gods, but Matt makes the most sense to head up an organized opposition to Wilson Fisk. His legal brilliance, his “human lie detector” talent, and his tactical expertise make him the MCU’s connection from the city’s merciless truth to its sky-high heroics.
Mentoring Spider-Man: This is the partnership that everyone is eager to see. Following their short encounter in No Way Home, Matt now has the perfect place to show Peter Parker that you can’t just win every war with webs. He is the mentor Peter needs to survive in a world where the bad guy (Fisk) has a law degree and a mayor’s office.
The “Grounded” Anchor: Amid a world of magic and aliens, Matt ensures the stakes stay Earth-bound. He lets us know that though the galaxy is locked down, the block still might be rotting from within.
Matt Murdock isn’t just a supporting character now — he’s the head of a spin-off narrative arm that delves into corruption, systemic breakdown, and what it really means to be a “neighborhood” hero in a world buzzing with superheroes.
Read more:- The Green Lantern’s Guy Gardner Became the Heart of James Gunn’s New DC Universe
Ultimately, Matt Murdock’s story is not just about a hero returning: it’s about him coming home as the MCU’s streets’ cornerstone. He’s graduated from being a “neighborhood outlier” on Netflix to the moral compass of the entire franchise.
The cameos were the warm-up, Daredevil Born Again is the headliner. It is a definitive declaration that the Man Without Fear is exactly where he belongs right in the middle of the battle for the soul of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
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Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 “The Hateful Darkness” delivers a darker, gritty Netflix era with shocking returns, deaths, and major MCU Phase 6 stakes.
Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7, ominously titled “The Hateful Darkness,” just dropped on Disney+, and it didn’t just shift the chess pieces on the board for next week’s blockbuster finale — it upended the whole table. Upending despairing character deaths with triumphant returns to the courtroom, this penultimate episode was essentially a love letter to the gritty Netflix era, padded out by the larger, high-stakes politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe Phase 6.
As Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) limps toward an explosive showdown with Mayor Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio), the showrunners packed this hour so full of lore, comic-book history and sly callbacks that you almost certainly missed a few while shouting at your tv.
Let’s dive deep into the streets of Hell’s Kitchen in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 for a darker finale.
Let’s start with the loudest moment of Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7. The final image of Matt Murdock, injured and hopeless, praying in the red-lit pews of Clinton Church was cinematic perfection. But then, Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones emerges from the darkness. It is the jaw dropping moment for everyone.
But the true Easter egg is in the dialogue at the beginning of the episode. When Mr. Charles is talking about Jessica’s case, we get explicit mention of her husband, Luke Cage, and the fact that she has to shield her daughter, Danielle.
Danielle, a daughter of Luke Cage and Jessica Jones and named in honor of his fathers’s best friend Danny aka Iron Fist. This isn’t some throwaway name-drop for laughs, it solidifies the lives of our street-level superheroes after the Defenders as canon.
It makes clear that as Matt has been struggling on his own in a one-man battle, the other members of the Defenders have been establishing families. It escalates the stakes for Jessica’ return and she’s not just battling for New York any more, now she’s fighting for her kid.
We’ve observed Matt working under the cover of darkness for nearly a full season, watching as his alter ego, the vigilante, dominated, while Matt Murdock, Attorney at Law, played second fiddle. But when Karen Page (Deborah Ann Woll) is tossed into the legal meat grinder by the Anti-Vigilante Task Force (AVTF), Matt at last emerges into the light.
Making his way into the courtroom this time as co-counsel with Kirsten McDuffie (Nikki M. James) was a huge full-circle moment. It’s a direct thematic callback to his charming, sunlit cameo in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law. But here, the tone is reversed. There’s no wacky super power law puns. This is the dark, stifling legal rot in Fisk’s New York.
It perfectly echoes his defense of Frank Castle (The Punisher) in Netflix’s Season 2. Matt turns the courtroom not only to defend his client but to also use it as a platform from which to try the system itself.
Maybe the most soul-sapping sequence in “The Hateful Darkness” is Matt’s fraught chat with Benjamin Poindexter, a.k.a Bullseye (Wilson Bethel). Matt frees his mortal adversary, exhorting him to perform “one good deed” to balance the cosmic scales — by rescuing Governor McCaffrey from assassination.
In that exchange Matt specifically mentions the killings of Foggy Nelson and Father Lantom. If you saw Season 3 of the original Netflix run, Father Lantom died after he took a baton to the chest that Dex threw at Karen. And the heartbreakingly tragic death of Born Again’s Foggy is the wound that still fuels every reckless choice Matt makes.
Matt telling his arch enemy how much he hates him but a shred of his Catholic soul wants to forgive him is lifted directly from the moral ambiguity of Frank Miller’s iconic comics. It’s Matt Murdock at his most self-destructive, placing the city above his own need for vengeance.
We need to pour one out for Daniel Blake. Michael Gandolfini has been putting in incredible work this season as the ambitious, swaggering administrator who got way too deep into Fisk’s regime. But in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7, his luck finally runs out.
Daniel is savagely clubbed and then killed by the cold-blooded Buck Cashman (Arty Froushan) for deciding to shield BB Urich (Genneya Walton). BB’s last name is Urich. Like, Ben Urich — the tenacious reporter who was viciously garrotted by Wilson Fisk in Season 1 of the Netflix show.
Daniel being killed while defending an Urich from Fisk’s enforcers is a vicious rhyme in the Daredevil poetry. It is a reminder that even though the corporate branding of Fisk’s empire has changed, it still eats anyone who tries to protect the truth. The common mob-movie trope of a gangster “digging his own grave” was completely turned on its head here; Daniel got his soul back right before he lost his life.
When Cherry (Clark Johnson) discloses he has an “inside man” who is watching over Karen Page up at the precinct, fans who have been around since the beginning took a collective breath-hold. And the show delivered: it was none other than Detective Brett Mahoney (Royce Johnson).
Brett Mahoney has been the unsung hero of the street-level MCU since the beginning. He’s a repeat helper in Daredevil, Jessica Jones and The Punisher.
Watching Brett sneak Karen out the back door for a secret rendezvous with Matt reminds us that for all Fisk’s AVTF, and the pervasive corruption in the NYPD, the OG Hell’s Kitchen good cops still want to be your sweethearts. It anchors the over-the-top superhero spectacle in believable, procedural fealty.
Let’s talk about cinematography and Catholic guilt—the pillars upon which Matt Murdock’s whole being rests.
After moving vigilantly through a parking-garage slaughterhouse, Matt is shot in the leg and barely manages to crawl to Clinton Church. He pleads with the Seminarian to pray to Saint Jude for “courage in my cowardice and consolation for my tribulations.”
Saint Jude is the advocate for the hopeless and things are indeed hopeless now. You just can’t get a better metaphor for Matt’s crusade against Fisk these days.
As Matt is bowed in prayer, the shot is awash in a thick, bloody, neon red light. That’s not an accident. It’s a very visual reference to the quintessential hallway battles and shadowy lighting of the first Netflix series. It informs viewers, with no need for a word of conversation, that Matt has been driven to the ends of his bodily and soul limits.
Wilson Fisk is a man of impeccable discipline, frightening regimens and violent rages. The first few seconds of Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 depict Fisk getting dressed, and he sees that one of Vanessa’s earrings has gone missing.
It sounds like it’s just a tiny continuity nod. But for Fisk, Vanessa is his tether to his own sanity. In Netflix’s Daredevil Season 1 and 3, whenever Vanessa found herself in peril, was absent or figuratively compromised, the polished Fisk mask would crack, revealing the monstrous “Kingpin” beneath.
When the director dwells on the missing earring, it signals to the viewers that Fisk is slipping in terms of control. His later conversation with Karen in her cell where he chokes her while telling her he is “bringing back order” — establishes that the missing earring is a sign of his quickly disintegrating mind.
Daredevil: Born Again takes place on the streets of New York, but Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 made it clear we’re solidly in Phase Six of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
In a conversation, Mr. Charles drops a titanic global bomb: The U.S. government does not consider Mayor Wilson Fisk to be a “useful ally.” This clears the path for Governor McCaffrey (Lili Taylor) to come in and try to oust Fisk.
The MCU is currently navigating a fraught political climate, with actors like President Ross, the Thunderbolts, and the Department of Damage Control holding the board. In this context, it’s natural the government would view a strong, authoritarian NYC mayor who goes after vigilantes as a threat. Fisk just got over the line too much, and now these government bodies are at last getting involved.
The parking garage ambush was easily the the most exciting action set piece of the Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7. The Anti-Vigilante Task Force (AVTF) attempts to eliminate Matt and Kirsten, but are defended by Cherry and Angie Kim (Ruibo Qian), the “unspoiled” cops of the precinct.
This is more than just a neat fight scene; it’s a thematic extension of the narrative strand that began way back in 2015. Daredevil has always been intrigued by the war for the soul of the NYPD.
From Detectives Blake and Hoffman being on Fisk’s payroll in Season 1, to the FBI being completely infiltrated by Kingpin in Season 3, this franchise loves to examine systemic corruption.
The garage scuffle was raw, unrefined and intimate, and it was great to see the stunts that brought fame to this franchise in the first place.
Daredevil episodes don’t often have throwaway titles, they’re usually heavily thematic or taken directly from comic book arcs.
The ‘Hateful Darkness’ is the space Matt Murdock now finds himself in. He’s turned his friends into enemies, allied himself with his greatest enemy (Bullseye), and watched the city decay all around him. The “darkness” is not just Fisk’s regime; it is the hate that festers within Matt himself.
Kirsten McDuffie in her opening statement in court (explaining what the real definition of vigilante is to ADA Hochberg) exemplifies this perfectly. Matt is trying to battle the darkness, but his “self-defeating brand of heroism” (as critics have rightly pointed out) continues to drag his friends into the line of fire. Daniel Blake dies, Karen is beaten in a cell, and Matt bleeds in a church. The dark hatred is winning.
If Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 served as the table setting, Season 2 finale will be an absolute earth-shattering event. Now we have Matt Murdock and Jessica Jones back together and ready to go to war. We have Bullseye on the loose with a warped mission for “redemption.”
We have Kingpin pushed into a political corner, his mayoral mask slipping away to reveal the full-blown mob-boss brutality beneath. And we have Karen Page at the heart of it all, poised to see if the legal system will rescue her or destroy her.
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Daredevil: Born Again hasn’t just made it through the jump to Disney+ with episodes like “The Hateful Darkness” it has shown that it can pay homage to its Netflix roots while crafting an adult, shatteringly tragic, and deeply engrossing new narrative. With these gritty moments of Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Ep7 shows Marvel Cinematic Universe is headed to Phase 6.
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