When Marvel Studios announced Daredevil: Born Again, fans were immediately divided. Would this new version of Matt Murdock live up to the legacy of Netflix’s revered series? Would Disney+ deliver the same brutal, emotionally complex storytelling that made the original series iconic? After a rocky road through nine uneven episodes, we’ve finally arrived at the season finale, and while the journey has been anything but smooth, this last chapter delivers an emotional gut-punch, teases a bloodier war to come, and reaffirms why Daredevil remains the heart and soul of street-level Marvel storytelling.
But make no mistake — this isn’t a flawless victory.
Daredevil: Born Again
To understand the weight of the finale, we have to contextualize how Born Again struggled from the outset. Originally envisioned as a soft reboot, the show began with an almost sanitized tone, alienating long-time fans of Charlie Cox’s tortured, brooding Daredevil. Episodes meandered through plotlines that often felt disconnected, introducing new characters that never truly clicked and pacing that robbed the show of its gritty momentum. The mid-season slump — particularly the filler bank robbery episode — nearly derailed everything.
But in its final hours, Born Again seems to remember who it is. Or at least, who it wants to be.
The finale doesn’t just rely on nostalgia — it builds on it, weaponizes it. Returning characters like Frank Castle (Jon Bernthal) and Karen Page (Deborah Ann Woll) don’t feel like cheap fan service. They are vital parts of the climax, grounding the chaos and anchoring Matt’s return to form. It’s not just about bringing the gang back together — it’s about reminding us what made these relationships resonate in the first place.
Jon Bernthal’s re-entry into the MCU as Frank Castle is nothing short of a revelation. Stripped of the gruff beard and wearing the classic Punisher vest, Bernthal brings a ferocity and emotional complexity that few characters in the MCU can match. Frank is not just here to shoot up bad guys — although there’s plenty of that — he’s here to challenge Matt morally and ethically. Their dynamic, rooted in philosophical debates about justice, continues to be the show’s emotional backbone.
Frank’s disdain for the new breed of vigilantes — those who bastardize his iconography — makes his arc in the finale especially poignant. His brutal takedown of a rogue Punisher cult and his confrontation with a twisted admirer are some of the most memorable moments in the episode. These scenes aren’t just cathartic — they’re thematic. They underscore the show’s recurring question: what does it mean to do the right thing in a world of moral gray?
Vincent D’Onofrio once again proves why he’s one of the best villain actors in the MCU. His portrayal of Wilson Fisk, now Mayor of New York, transforms from simmering menace to outright tyrannical despot in the span of one episode. By the time he executes Police Commissioner Gallo (Michael Gaston) in broad daylight, any ambiguity about his character is gone — Fisk is full supervillain now.
The death of Gallo is shocking not just for its brutality, but for how it’s framed. This is a statement kill, performed in front of loyalist cops, designed to send a message to the entire city: there is no law but Fisk’s. The parallels to real-world authoritarianism are unavoidable. It’s this willingness to go dark, to lean into the uncomfortable, that makes Born Againstand out in an increasingly sanitized Marvel universe.
The heart of the show, of course, is Matt Murdock. Charlie Cox plays the lawyer-turned-vigilante with the same wounded charisma that made fans fall in love with the character nearly a decade ago. In the finale, Matt is literally and figuratively broken — recovering in a hospital bed after being shot by Bullseye (Wilson Bethel), grappling with the betrayal of Vanessa Fisk (Ayelet Zurer), and forced to once again choose between violence and justice.
The show’s decision to put Matt back in the moral crucible is smart. This is not a hero who punches his way to victory. Daredevil is a character defined by suffering, by sacrifice. Seeing him reunite with Karen, patch things up with Frank (to the extent that’s even possible), and face Fisk’s new regime reminds us of the stakes — not just for Matt, but for the soul of the city.
Deborah Ann Woll’s Karen Page has always been a beacon of emotional honesty in the Daredevil universe. Her return is more than welcome — it’s necessary. Karen provides the emotional ballast that Matt often lacks, and in the finale, she shines. Her investigative work, her fierce defense of Matt’s ideals, and her own willingness to put herself in harm’s way remind us why she’s such an integral part of this story.
Unlike many MCU love interests, Karen isn’t just a support character — she’s a protagonist in her own right. Her relationship with Matt isn’t neat or tidy. It’s painful, complicated, and real. Their reunion here doesn’t erase the past, but it does suggest that maybe, just maybe, redemption is possible.
Wilson Bethel’s Bullseye remains one of the show’s most unpredictable elements. While his screen time in the finale is limited, his impact is massive. From nearly killing Matt to inadvertently advancing Vanessa’s secret agenda, Bullseye remains a wildcard whose motives remain shrouded. If Season 2 leans harder into his descent into madness, we could see a villain arc that rivals even Fisk’s.
If Born Again Season 1 was about rediscovery, Season 2 looks poised to be about retaliation. The finale ends with Fisk triumphant — at least for now. His consolidation of power, his militarization of the NYPD, and his targeting of all vigilantes signal a war on the horizon. The implications are massive, not just for Daredevil, but for other street-level heroes like Spider-Man and The Defenders.
Yet in this darkest hour, there is hope. Matt Murdock is still standing. Frank Castle has escaped. Karen is at his side. And New York, though bloodied, has not yet fallen.
Does the finale redeem the missteps of earlier episodes? Not entirely. The structural problems of the season — too many characters, disjointed pacing, undercooked side plots — are still present. But they’re easier to forgive when the final chapter lands with this much impact.
Daredevil: Born Again is a show still in search of itself. But by the end of Season 1, it feels like it’s finally remembered what it’s supposed to be: raw, moral, violent, and deeply human. If the finale is any indication, Season 2 could be something truly special.
Despite its uneven first half and questionable narrative choices, Daredevil: Born Again finishes strong, offering an emotionally charged, action-packed, and thematically rich finale that breathes new life into one of Marvel’s best characters. It’s not perfect — but then again, neither is Matt Murdock. And maybe that’s exactly the point.