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Daredevil: Born Again Crosses Over "A Lot" with MCU; Not Original Plan
Daredevil: Born Again stars Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio on crossing over "a lot" with the MCU and how that wasn't the original plan.
Aside from the title, Marvel Studios' Charlie Cox (Matt Murdock/Daredevil) and Vincent D'Onofrio (Wilson Fisk/Kingpin)-starring Daredevil: Born Again is looking a lot less like how it was originally planned and a whole lot more like the Netflix series. From a casting standpoint, we have Cox, D'Onofrio, Jon Bernthal's (The Walking Dead) Frank Castle, aka The Punisher, Deborah Ann Woll's Karen Page, Elden Henson's Franklin "Foggy" Nelson, and Ayelet Zurer's Vanessa Marianna-Fisk on board. Thanks to this week's Upfronts presentation for the media and potential advertisers, Disney confirmed that the nine-episode (not 18 episodes – though we think that was a different kind of mistake) series would be hitting screens in March 2025. It was also during that event that we learned from Cox and D'Onofrio that while the series will crossover with the MCU ("A lot": Cox), that wasn't the original plan in the first, now abandoned take on the series – with D'Onofrio sharing with TV Insider, "It originally wasn't going to be at all, but now it's a lot."
Daredevil: Born Again – What We Know So Far…
Joining Cox, D'Onofrio, Bernthal, Woll, Henson, and Zurer (either confirmed or reported) are Margarita Levieva, Michael Gandolfini, Nikki M. James, Genneya Walton, Clark Johnson, Arty Froushan, Zabryna Guevara, Wilson Bethel, Michael Gaston, Marc Geller, Lou Taylor Pucci, and Harris Yulin. Dario Scardapane (Netflix's The Punisher) serves as showrunner, and the co-directing team of Justin Benson & Aaron Moorhead (Loki) are helming the remainder of the season the first season.
Previous set images/videos featured someone sporting the Punisher's skull – though not Bernthal. That added fuel to the fire that the season will include a storyline about rogue cops perverting the Punisher's cause & symbol to justify their crimes. Someone dropping a whole lot of fuel onto that theory was none other than Bernthal – who took to Instagram to post an image of the cover of One Batch, Two Batch. Yup, Lisa Castle's favorite book before going to sleep – the one that contains "One Batch, Two Batch, Penny and Dime" (which we learn in Netflix's Daredevil S02E04: "Penny and Dime"). Could we be getting a backstory revisit as a reminder of how the Punisher came to be? Here's a look at the post:
Daredevil: Echo Post-Credits Scene Gives New Meaning to "Born Again"?
Without giving away too much, the final showdown between Maya Lopez (Alaqua Cox) and Kingpin finds Maya using the powers of her Choctaw ancestors to venture into Kingpin's mind to rid him of the pain & rage that's fueled him for so long. Okay, got that? Good… because that leads us to the mid-credits scene. Making a getaway to greener pastures on his private jet, a news report about the New York City mayoral race catches his attention. While the reporter discusses how the city is looking for someone who will fight for them, we see a look on Kingpin's face that says that he believes he could be the answer to NYC's problems. For those of you who are comics fans, you know that Fisk has already recently gone down that route post-"Secret Empire" in a storyline that saw Matt Murdock as deputy mayor and Luke Cage running for office (yeah, there was a lot going on).
But why is this situation so different? Because we don't know which Wilson Fisk wants to be mayor heading into Daredevil: Born Again. We knew what Kingpin we were dealing with pre-Echo, so it would be easy to write this off as just a mad power grab on Kingpin's part. But if all of that pain and rage is now gone, who are we dealing with now? Because "Born Again" takes on a totally different meaning if we're dealing with Fisk legitimately believing he can do right by NYC – that he can be his savior. Throw into that mix the possibility that what Maya did may not stick – maybe Fisk's pain and rage are just too great to stay gone forever. And now that we're thinking about it, having Matt Murdock not believing that Fisk has changed and continuing to target him could also be an interesting way to push Fisk back to his old, big-bad ways.