Synopsis
Matt Murdock, a blind lawyer with heightened abilities, is fighting for justice through his bustling law firm, while former mob boss Wilson Fisk pursues his own political endeavors in New York. When their past identities begin to emerge, both men find themselves on an inevitable collision course.
Community Reviews
Daredevil: Born Again has been met with mixed reactions, capturing the essence of the original series with its engaging storytelling and strong performances, particularly from Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio. While the series starts strong, some episodes feel lackluster with unnecessary fillers and a deviation from key themes like Murdock's religious aspect. However, it redeems itself in the final episodes, promising an exciting setup for the next season.
👍 Strong performances and engaging storytelling.
👎 Some episodes may feel lackluster with unnecessary fillers.
Trailer
Reviews and Comments
17 reviewsJust finished watching the Daredevil born again season 2 last episode and i can say that it finally hits that level where everything just clicks. The tension isn’t just there—it builds, stretches, and then snaps in the best possible way. You can feel the weight of everything that’s been building all season(it also includes the initial ones since everything matters) come crashing down. And that courtroom stuff? That’s the heart of it. Watching Matt Murdock back doing what he does best—calm, precise, completely in control—it just feels right. This is who he is at his core. Not just Daredevil, not just the guy in the suit, but a man who still believes the system can work… even when it keeps failing him. At the same time, Wilson Fisk is just unreal here. Every scene with him carries so much presence and quiet menace. You don’t even need big moments—he is the tension. The writing is tight, nothing feels wasted. The performances? Everyone’s locked in. And the payoff actually lands, which is rare. It doesn’t just meet expectations—it earns them. If this is the level they’re closing the season with… yeah, this is dangerously close to perfect.









