Daredevil: Born Again Season 1 is exactly what the character needed: a grounded, character driven return that respects the legacy of the original series while carving out a fresh identity of its own. It’s not a reboot, not a retread, and not a watered down MCU version, it’s a genuine rebirth, one that puts Matt Murdock back where he belongs: in the shadows of Hell’s Kitchen, fighting battles no one else will. While he was fine in She-Hulk, it definitely felt off with his yellow suit. This Matt is a return to form.
Charlie Cox Is Still the Only Daredevil
Charlie Cox once again proves why he is Daredevil. His performance this season is more mature, more introspective, and more emotionally layered than ever. Matt isn’t just wrestling with criminals, he’s wrestling with himself, with the cost of his choices, and with the weight of trying to rebuild a life that’s been torn apart more than once. Cox plays all of it with a quiet intensity that makes even the smallest moments feel meaningful.
Wilson Fisk Remains Marvel’s Best Villain
Vincent D’Onofrio’s Wilson Fisk remains one of the best villains Marvel has ever put on screen. Season 1 gives him room to evolve, and D’Onofrio takes full advantage of it. Fisk is colder, more calculating, and more politically dangerous than before. His presence hangs over every episode, even when he’s not on screen, and the show smartly uses him as the emotional and thematic counterweight to Matt’s journey.
The Action Feels Raw and Real
The action is a highlight once again, not because it tries to outdo the iconic hallway fights, but because it understands why those scenes worked. The fights in Born Again feel raw, desperate, and exhausting. Matt takes hits. He bleeds. He struggles. The choreography leans into realism and physical storytelling, making every confrontation feel like it matters.
What really elevates Season 1 is its tone. It’s darker and more grounded than most MCU projects, but it never feels grim for the sake of it. The show trusts its characters, trusts its audience, and takes its time building tension, relationships, and emotional stakes. It’s a slow burn in the best way: confident, deliberate, and focused on character over spectacle.
The Supporting Cast Adds Real Weight
The supporting cast shines too, giving Matt a world that feels lived in and emotionally rich. Whether it’s allies trying to pull him back from the edge or enemies pushing him toward it, every relationship adds weight to the story. The most heart breaking relationship is with Foggy. While not featured heavily this season, he is the reason why Matt steps away from being Daredevil in the beginning, but also the reason he returns. Matt isn’t the only hero to return in this adventure though. Jon Bernthal shines as the returning Frank Castle, AKA The Punisher. Rounding out the heroes is Jacques “Jack” Duquesne, AKA the Swordsman who makes a few appearances throughout the season.
Is Daredevil Born Again Season 1 Worth Watching
In the end, Daredevil: Born Again Season 1 succeeds because it remembers what made Daredevil special in the first place: a flawed hero, a terrifying villain, a city worth fighting for, and a story that isn’t afraid to get messy. It’s a strong, compelling return that proves Marvel can still deliver grounded, prestige level storytelling when it commits to it.
If this is the foundation, not only is Daredevil’s future on television looking brighter, Marvel television as a whole looks brighter than ever.
