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Daredevil
Resurrection
Season 3
Episode 1
Editor's note
Photo: Cara Howe / Netflix
Many things have changed in two and a half years, but Daredevil do not have it.
In some ways, it's not such a big problem. One of the most remarkable things about Daredevil It is that, despite seven full seasons of Marvel / Netflix television at his side in the gap between his last season of it, it is still quite singular. Although he belongs to a series of shows designed to create a superhero crossover, Daredevil is the only one to worry about the traps of superheroics, even if they are resolutely of the more sinister and grounded kind that hardly suggests that the titular hero is superhuman.
But quite obviously from the posters, trailers and teasers that Netflix marketed for the third season, Daredevil shows his age. There seem to be three concerns for Matt Murdock this year: 1) darkness, 2) Catholicism and 3) charismatic foils. Matt Murdock is dead, Long live the devil of Hell's Kitchensaid the show. Oh, and notice the "devil" part of "Daredevil?" You probably do not have,? But hey, Wilson Fisk is back.
This is to say that the bridge is stacked against Daredevil, and the show does not seem to realize it. His first new episode is basically a long pity party for Matt Murdock. Pick up immediately after the end of The defendersMurdock is presumed dead and after discovering his presence, he is gathered by the clergy of his old parish and found in good health in the orphanage that raised him. Under the care of Father Lantom and Sister Maggie, Murdock wallows in despair.
All these sinister and overworked things that could make you fear? It's here. You will watch Matt (briefly) become deaf in one ear, effectively blinding his superhuman senses. You will see Father Lantom trying to convince Matt to return to faith, while Matt will evoke the story of Job, the biblical story almost entirely devoted to the suffering of a man. And then, as it should, Matt will fall back to the ground and start training again, dragging into the basement of the church, getting back into the pumps thoroughly, cleaning his super-senses with a neti pot.
All this results in Murdock taking back his original black suit of fortune to go out into the night, seeking the wrongs he lacks – not because he feels obliged to protect people, but because he has a death wish.
That's about 80% of that first 52 minutes and it's pretty boring. Karen Page and Foggy Nelson appear in a few brief scenes – the first suggests that Matt may still be alive and keep the rent paid on his former home; the latter has evolved. The only real movement of the episode will not happen before its last 10 minutes, when the show will turn around the world of Matt to introduce us the special agent Rahul Nadeem.
The agent Nadeem is a family man with bills to pay, stuck in a terrible feedback loop in which he can not get an increase and where his supervisor does not promote it, because the policy of the Office does not promote it. not allow agents with excessive debts too high in the ranks, lest they become mature targets for compromise. He is tired and desperately looking for a break. And, to everyone's surprise, he finds one.
During a routine visit to prison, Nadeem is in luck. Wilson Fisk, after months of confinement and not saying anything, is ready to make a deal – and Nadeem happens to be the guy on the spot to negotiate it. And although it's far from certain, it seems that Fisk is taking his first steps in the real world and, of course, in Murdock.
As for the suspensions of cliffs, it's quite confusing. Nothing in particular comewe are only meeting Fisk – Nadeem's means of escape – and the means by which he is ripe for manipulation. The return of Fisk to Daredevil is not a surprise either; that's why people could come in first. It's a preamble that actually only sheds light on the idea that maybe you should start the third season with the second episode.
I must note that as hard as it may seem, I'm still very interested in DaredevilThird season, and for some reason, I do not fear the next episode. There is something soothing about DaredevilThe heaviness: like many Netflix events, it's good to be discreet and frictionless, empty calories delivered with a touch of style.
It should also be remembered that even though there is not much action in this episode, Daredevil always has the best combat choreography of the five Marvel / Netflix shows. Between Charlie Cox, his double, and the choreographers of the series, Daredevil often manages to organize exceptionally good fights in storytelling; they never lose sight of the obstinate despair and desire for penance inherent in Murdock's character. A big Daredevil battle scene is an argument for why you should worry about Matt in the first place, and you might see a version of this episode in which we dwell less on self-imposed exile of Matt and let all his disgust hit us when he puts on his mask again, but the subtlety is not really DaredevilGame.
Once again, that's fine. DaredevilTell me where he's heading with strobe lights and subwoofers, blasting Jock Jams and calling the Kiss Cam. And even if he missed his entrance, I still want to see where he's going.
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