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Everything to Know About Daredevil: Born Again

Matt Murdock returns to TV in an all-new Disney+ series

Phil Owen
Charlie Cox, Daredevil: Born Again

Charlie Cox, Daredevil: Born Again

Giovanni Rufino/Marvel

In the wake of Avengers: Endgame, the Marvel Cinematic Universe buried us under a massive deluge of content that was simultaneously overwhelming and underwhelming. While the biggest entertainment franchise on Earth was still printing money, this era produced the MCU's first box office bombs — let's pretend The Eternals never existed — and a bunch of seasons of TV that have largely already been forgotten. In 2024, the MCU took a little bit of time for a reset, with only one movie and one TV show — but 2025 will bring us back to Marvel's version of normal with three movies and six TV shows, starting with Daredevil: Born Again, the revival of the series about blind lawyer Matt Murdock who fights crime as an acrobatic vigilante.

It's been quite a journey for this revival of the Daredevil series that ran on Netflix a decade ago. While the series was always ostensibly a part of the MCU, it stuck to its own little New York City shared universe with Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, The Punisher, and Iron Fist, and never directly interacted with any other part of the franchise. But that's all changed more recently, with this existing version of Daredevil making his big screen debut with a cameo in Spider-Man: No Way Home, and with his nemesis Kingpin popping up in both the Hawkeye and Echo shows.

This Daredevil revival is, unsurprisingly, one of the more anticipated pieces of the MCU in 2025. Let's take a look at everything we know about it thus far.

Daredevil: Born Again premiere date

Daredevil: Born Again Season 1 is currently scheduled to premiere on March 4, 2025 on Disney+, with the season consisting of nine episodes overall. A second season of nine additional episodes is already in the works, but we have no idea when that will drop.

Daredevil: Born Again trailer

We don't yet have a trailer for Daredevil: Born Again, but the Disney+ 2025 sizzle reel gave us a glimpse of what's in store. Check it out.

What is Daredevil: Born Again going to be about?

Daredevil: Born Again will take place a number of years after the end of Daredevil Season 3 — it will have to be enough time for half the population to be snapped away in Infinity War and then returned in Endgame, so we're talking more than five years. After his shenanigans during the events of Hawkeye and Echo, the Kingpin returns to New York from his exile a somewhat changed man who plans to run for mayor. Matt Murdock, meanwhile, has given up his Daredevil persona and fights injustice in the courts. Somehow, this situation will lead to the two of them having a fistfight that will probably be fun to watch.

Daredevil: Born Again behind-the-scenes drama

When Daredevil: Born Again began production, it was intended to be a standalone reboot that would keep Charlie Cox's Matt Murdock and otherwise not talk about anything that had happened on the Netflix series. After six episodes had been filmed, the powers that be at Disney/Marvel changed their minds about what they wanted the series to be, and canned all the creatives who had worked on it. They then hired Dario Scardapane, a writer on the excellent The Punisher series, to take over as showrunner, with indie horror directors Justin Benson and Aaron Morehead to direct the remaining episodes and also reshoots for the ones that had already been filmed. Benson and Morehead previously directed four episodes of Loki Season 2 for Marvel.

What changed after this shakeup? Reportedly, this new Daredevil series is now much more like a sequel to the original Daredevil series than a reboot, with all the major cast members returning and a story that will follow up directly on those past events. Is it wise to take the shell of one story and try to use it to tell a different story? Probably not, but that's pretty much just Marvel's standard operating procedure these days, and sometimes it works in spite of itself.

Daredevil: Born Again cast

Deborah Ann Woll, Charlie Cox, and Elden Henson, Daredevil: Born Again

Deborah Ann Woll, Charlie Cox, and Elden Henson, Daredevil: Born Again

Giovanni Rufino/Marvel

While the original plan was to leave almost everyone from the Netflix series behind, you can expect to see just about every remaining living major character. Not all of them, but they got most everybody who matters. And there's also one crossover character we know about: Yusuf Khan, the father of Kamala Khan, will pop up at some point. Arty Froushan will play one of Daredevil's comic nemeses, the corrupt government agent known as Bullet.

What about the other Defenders, like Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and Danny Rand? There's been no word about them popping up, but Cox has promised that there will be some fun cameos we don't know about, and all three of them are prime candidates.

What to watch before Daredevil: Born Again

While Charlie Cox's version of Daredevil has been around the MCU for a long time, it has no meaningful connections to the rest of the franchise currently. Matt Murdock has made a couple cameos in things — She-Hulk and Spider-Man: No Way Home — and Kingpin was the secret villain at the end of Hawkeye and the main villain in Echo. The inclusion of Jon Bernthal's Punisher indicates that character's spinoff series may be relevant as well. 

But there's no reason to expect that Daredevil: Born Again will be a part of the "main plot" of the MCU, so the most relevant stories will just be the ones that these characters were in before: the Daredevil series, the Punisher series, Hawkeye, and Echo. That's a lot of TV, so a full rewatch probably isn't necessary, but you'll at least want to refresh your memory on those events before firing up Daredevil: Born Again in March.

And while Captain America: Brave New World is hitting movie theaters just three weeks before Daredevil premieres, Marvel rarely connects two new things released so closely together unless the reason for doing so is extremely obvious — such as when it needed to introduce Captain Marvel in her own movie six weeks before she played a key role in Avengers: Endgame. But there won't be any such connection between this Daredevil series and the third Captain America movie.