Set photos from the production of Daredevil: Born Again season 3 have surfaced showing Elodie Yung back in the role of Elektra. The images arrive after season 2 concluded with Matt Murdock’s identity exposed and the character sentenced to prison. In the comics, such moments have occasionally led to temporary replacements wearing the Daredevil mantle, and Elektra’s return raises similar possibilities on screen.
Elektra has been a recurring figure in Matt Murdock’s story since her debut in the early 1980s Daredevil comics. Her complicated relationship with the protagonist, marked by violence, redemption attempts, and repeated deaths and resurrections, makes her a natural candidate for narrative twists. The Netflix-era Defenders series previously positioned her as the Black Sky, ending with an ambiguous fate after a confrontation involving the Hand. The absence of a confirmed corpse left room for future appearances, a common storytelling device in superhero properties where characters rarely stay gone for long.
The timing aligns with comic arcs in which Elektra steps into the Daredevil role during Matt’s incarceration. In those stories, she assumes the identity partly out of frustration with his choices and partly from a desire to find purpose. Bringing that dynamic to the Disney+ series could explore themes of legacy, moral ambiguity, and the personal cost of vigilantism. Yet the show must also navigate its ensemble cast. Earlier set photos suggested Finn Jones returning as Iron Fist, opening the door to Danny Rand potentially filling the void in Hell’s Kitchen. The prison storyline echoes older comic plots where allies donned the costume to protect the city or clear Matt’s name.
This development fits into Marvel’s broader strategy of weaving Netflix characters back into the MCU fold. Vincent D’Onofrio’s Wilson Fisk, Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones, and Mike Colter’s Luke Cage have already reappeared. Reintroducing Elektra adds continuity while offering fresh conflict. At the same time, relying on resurrection tropes risks diminishing stakes. Audiences have grown accustomed to characters returning with minimal explanation, which can weaken emotional investment over multiple seasons.
The Hand’s lingering influence and potential prison break elements teased in related trailers suggest larger action sequences ahead. Whether Elektra appears in flashbacks, as a rival, or as a direct successor remains unclear. Her comic evolution from assassin to occasional hero provides rich material, but translation to television requires careful pacing to avoid feeling contrived. The series has already balanced street-level grit with larger MCU connections, and season 3 will likely continue that approach.
Daredevil: Born Again season 3 is expected to arrive in 2027. The inclusion of Elektra offers opportunities to deepen Matt Murdock’s world and examine what happens when the devil’s mantle passes to someone equally haunted by their past. It also highlights ongoing challenges in long-form superhero storytelling: how to honor source material while delivering surprises that feel earned rather than inevitable.
