Daredevil: Born Again Is Definitely Some Content
Photo by Giovanni Rufino, courtesy of Disney
Daredevil: Born Again starts to hit its stride about eight episodes in. That’s a problem, because this is a nine episode season. But when, during its last hour, Frank Castle, aka The Punisher (played by Jon Bernthal), brutally fights an official NYPD squad that wears his skull logo as an homage—an “anti-vigilante task force” that goes so far as to kill looters dead and plant masks on their faces to justify it—Daredevil: Born Again arrives at something resembling an actual political statement, which isn’t really something you expect from Disney or Marvel. Sure, these cops are working for New York City’s new mayor, Wilson Fisk, the former crime lord known as the Kingpin, and thus there’s room for debate if Born Again is actually going ACAB or hedging its bets, but the only definitively “good” cop on the show is a burnt out retiree who hates what the force has become, so I think we can begrudgingly give them credit for this one.
Born Again doesn’t suddenly become anti-cop eight hours in, but that is when it starts to overtly reference the real-world phenomenon of law enforcement using the murderous comic book vigilante The Punisher as some kind of inspiration. And given Disney’s past reluctance to protect its Punisher trademark from being co-opted by law enforcement and right-wing groups, it’s surprising to see a Disney-made show portray the police as unquestionable villains who are unquestionably influenced by a Marvel antihero. It’s only a side note to the series—the focus is squarely elsewhere throughout all nine episodes—but it’s still commendable. Now only if the rest of Born Again showed the same clarity.
Disney’s revival of the popular Netflix series is primarily interested in exploring power and the masks worn by people who use or pursue it—both masked vigilantes like Daredevil (played, again, by Charlie Cox) and businessmen-turned-politicians (and, um, comic book criminal masterminds) like Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Vincent D’Onofrio). It’s a topic that superhero comics have exhausted over the last 40 years, and that also drove basically every dude-approved cable TV series made between The Sopranos and Breaking Bad. That’s to say it’s old hat by this point, and Born Again doesn’t really blaze any new trails in this latest gritty interrogation of power.
Even the parts that made this package reliably consistent in the Netflix era wilt in this revival. Cox’s innate charm is muffled by Matt Murdock’s punishing Catholic guilt and constant self-doubt—which, yes, have been Daredevil’s whole deal since going through the Frank Miller wringer in the comics, but the Netflix show at least gave us some relief from that self-seriousness through Daredevil’s balletic (if gruesome) violence. Beyond a sprawling fight scene with the villain Bullseye (Wilson Bethel) in the opening moments of the first episode, though, Murdock doesn’t wear Daredevil’s suit until two-thirds of the way through the season, almost Surf Dracula style. It’s all sad sack stoicism and indignation until then, with little of the levity or likability Cox showed in his She-Hulk cameo. Meanwhile D’Onofrio, a fine actor who was rightfully acclaimed for his portrayal of Fisk in the past, has become too mannered. He aims for nuance by keeping Fisk steady and reserved outside of brief glimpses of his inner emotions, but those expressions are so telegraphed, so big, so acting! that they undermine his entire approach. It doesn’t help that he speaks in a gruff monotone; clearly D’Onofrio honed in on Fisk’s “I am not a crook” demeanor, because he basically does a one-note Nixon voice the entire season.
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