Daredevil (season 4)

Daredevil: Born Again
Genre
Based on
Starring
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producers
ProducerRudd Simmons
Production locationNew York
Cinematography
  • Pedro Gómez Millán
  • Hillary Spera
Editors
  • Cedric Nairn-Smith
  • Melissa Lawson Cheung
  • Stephanie Filo
Production companies
Original release
NetworkDisney+
Related

Daredevil: Born Again is an upcoming American television series created for the streaming service Disney+, based on the Marvel Comics character Daredevil. It is intended to be part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) produced by Marvel Studios, sharing continuity with the films of the franchise, and will be the second series centered on the character following Daredevil (2015–2018) by Marvel Television and Netflix. Dario Scardapane serves as showrunner, with Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead as lead directors. The series is also produced by 20th Television.

Charlie Cox reprises his role as Matt Murdock / Daredevil from Marvel's Netflix television series and prior Marvel Studios productions, with Vincent D'Onofrio, Jon Bernthal, Margarita Levieva, Michael Gandolfini, Sandrine Holt, Nikki M. James, Genneya Walton, Clark Johnson, Arty Froushan, and Zabryna Guevara also starring. Development of the series began by March 2022 and the hiring of Matt Corman and Chris Ord was revealed that May. The series' title and original episode count were revealed in July. Filming began in early March 2023 in New York before it was suspended in June due to the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike. Michael Cuesta joined the series by the start of filming, with Jeffrey Nachmanoff, Clark Johnson, and David Boyd also set as directors. Marvel Studios decided to overhaul the series by late September 2023 after less than half of the first season had been filmed, releasing Corman, Ord, and the directors. Scardapane, Benson, and Moorhead were hired the following month. Filming is expected to resume in early 2024.

Daredevil: Born Again will be part of Phase Five of the MCU. A second season is planned.

Premise

Matt Murdock and Wilson Fisk try to put their rivalry and darker alter-egos aside to help the people of New York, only for their pasts to "catch up to them".[1]

Cast and characters

Additionally, Michael Gaston,[7] Marc Geller,[10] and Harris Yulin have been cast in undisclosed roles.[11]

Episodes

The first season was originally expected to consist of 18 episodes,[12] with Michael Cuesta directing the first.[7] After a creative overhaul of the series, the number of episodes for the season is unclear. Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead were hired to take over directing for the remainder of the season.[13]

Production

Background

Daredevil, from Marvel Television and ABC Studios, premiered on Netflix in April 2015,[14] and lasted for three seasons until its cancellation in November 2018. Netflix said the three seasons would remain on the service, while the character would "live on in future projects for Marvel". Deadline Hollywood noted that, unlike some of the other Marvel series on Netflix that were also cancelled, "the door seems to be wide open" for the series to continue elsewhere, potentially on Disney's streaming service Disney+.[15] However, The Hollywood Reporter felt this was unlikely,[16] especially since, as reported by Variety, the original deal between Marvel and Netflix stipulated that the characters could not appear in any non-Netflix series or films for at least two years following the cancellation of Daredevil.[17] Kevin A. Mayer, chairman of Walt Disney Direct-to-Consumer and International, said there was a possibility that Disney+ could revive the series but this had not yet been discussed.[18] Hulu's senior vice president of originals, Craig Erwich, said his streaming service was also open to reviving the series.[19]

Star Charlie Cox was saddened by the cancellation, explaining that he was excited by the plans for a fourth season which he and the rest of the cast and crew had expected to be made. He was hopeful there would be an opportunity to portray Matt Murdock / Daredevil again in some form.[20] Amy Rutberg, who portrayed Marci Stahl in the series, said the cast and crew had expected it to last for five seasons, with a new antagonist being introduced in the fourth before a final showdown between Daredevil and Wilson Fisk / Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio) in the fifth.[21] In June 2020, Cox was contacted by Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige about reprising his role for Marvel Studios' Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) productions,[22] with Feige confirming in December 2021 that Cox would reprise the role for Marvel Studios.[3][23] He first did so in the film Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), and D'Onofrio first reprised his role as Fisk in the Disney+ series Hawkeye (2021).[24] Daredevil was moved from Netflix to Disney+ in March 2022 after Netflix's license for the series ended and Disney regained the rights.[25][26][27]

Development

Initial work

Cox discussed a potential reboot in March 2022, believing it should begin a few years after the end of the previous series and be "re-imagined" rather than continue from where the Netflix series' third season ended.[28] He also discussed a new series potentially not being rated TV-MA as the Netflix series was, stating that he believed Marvel Studios would be able to create a faithful version of the character with those restrictions even though he personally found the comics "more exciting, readable, relatable when it lives in a darker space" such as Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev's run on the comics. Additionally, he felt important attributes of the character such as his age, Christian guilt, and history with women were more mature subjects.[29] Cox was hopeful that a new series could have a more faithful adaptation of the "Born Again" storyline, from the comics by Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli, than the original series which had taken inspiration from that storyline for its third season.[2][28][29] He described the storyline as "kind of a PG comic" and a guide for how the series could work with that rating.[29]

Later in March, Production Weekly included a Daredevil reboot in their report of upcoming projects in development. Feige and Chris Gary were listed as producers.[30][31][32] The series was confirmed to be in development for Disney+ in late May, with Matt Corman and Chris Ord attached as head writers and executive producers.[33] The Hollywood Reporter said it was the first of the Marvel Netflix series to "get a new but continued series",[34] later stating it would "technically be its fourth season".[35] Deadline Hollywood also described it as a fourth season.[36] During the 2022 San Diego Comic-Con in July, the series was announced as Daredevil: Born Again and revealed to have 18 episodes for its first season.[12] Cox said an 18-episode series was a "huge undertaking", but he felt Murdock being a lawyer allowed for many story possibilities and that was one of the reasons that the larger number of episodes was chosen.[3] Christian Holub at Entertainment Weekly believed the title was a reference to the character "literally being 'born again' into the official MCU" rather than the series being an adaptation of the "Born Again" storyline.[37] Cox described Born Again as a "whole new thing" and not a fourth season of the Netflix series, which he felt was "the way to go. If you are going to do it again, do it differently."[38]

Michael Cuesta was revealed to be directing the first episode of the series in March 2023. Additional directors were expected to direct blocks of episodes.[7] D'Onofrio revealed at that time that they were working on two seasons of the series, and said there would be "gigantic payoffs" during the second season. He reiterated that they were approaching the new series differently from the Netflix series.[39] Jeffrey Nachmanoff and Clark Johnson—who was previously a director on the Marvel Netflix series Luke Cage (2016–2018)—were revealed as additional directors in May, with Johnson hired to direct two episodes.[40][9] David Boyd was also set to direct.[41]

Creative overhaul

By late September 2023, after fewer than half of the first season's episodes had been filmed, Marvel Studios decided to overhaul the series with a new creative direction. Corman and Ord were let go as head writers, as were the directors for the remainder of the series. The studio began searching for new writers and directors. The Hollywood Reporter reported that Marvel Studios executives had reviewed the footage so far and realized that Born Again "wasn't working". Corman and Ord's episodic take on the series was said to be a large divergence from the Netflix version, including that Cox did not appear in costume as Daredevil until the fourth episode.[42] Marvel planned to retain some elements that had been shot, add new serialized elements, and move closer to the tone of the Netflix series.[42][13] Corman and Ord were expected to still be credited as executive producers.[42]

Dario Scardapane, who worked as a writer on Netflix's Daredevil spin-off series The Punisher (2017–2019), was hired to serve as showrunner for Born Again in October 2023.[13] This came after Marvel changed its approach to television production to have more traditional showrunners rather than head writers.[42] Scardapane was set to write new episodes as well as new scenes to fit with the pre-existing footage. Filmmaking duo Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, who previously worked on the Marvel Studios series Moon Knight (2022) and the second season of Loki (2023), were hired to direct the remaining episodes of the first season. It was unclear how many episodes would be included in the overhauled season.[13] The following month, Benson and Moorhead said they were reviewing the existing footage and looking to prior Daredevil content, including the Netflix series, to inform the foundation of their direction.[43] They said they were fans of Miller's "Born Again" run, and Benson said he was a fan of Daredevil as a child despite not being "a huge comic book guy".[44] Executive producers include Marvel Studios' Feige, Louis D'Esposito, Gary, and Sana Amanat,[32][45][41] alongside Corman and Ord.[33][42] Rudd Simmons serves as a producer.[46] 20th Television also produces the series.[45][additional citation(s) needed]

Writing

Original writers for the series included Grainne Godfree, Jill Blankenship,[47] Aisha Porter-Christie, David Feige, Devon Kliger, Thomas Wong, Zachary Reiter,[48] and Molly Nussbaum.[49] Cox believed the series would be dark but not as gory as the Netflix series, and wanted to take what worked from Daredevil and broaden it for Born Again to appeal to a younger audience.[50] D'Onofrio said the Marvel Studios series Echo would lead into the events of Born Again,[51] and that Born Again would have a similar tone and feel to Echo, believing it would be part of the "Marvel Spotlight" banner.[52] Feige said the studio was hoping to experiment with more episodic, "self-contained" episodes with the series, unlike some of their Phase Four series that had a larger story split across multiple episodes.[53] The initial take on the series was described as a legal procedural,[42] but serialized elements were set to be included in the episodes following the series' creative overhaul.[13]

Casting

In June 2022, Variety reported that Cox and D'Onofrio were expected to return for the series.[54] Their casting was confirmed a month later at San Diego Comic-Con.[2] Cox was notified by Marvel Studios in early 2022 that they were looking to feature the character in another project following his appearances in No Way Home and the Disney+ series She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022), and learned that it was Born Again shortly before the series was formally announced at Comic-Con.[3] In December, Michael Gandolfini,[55] Margarita Levieva, and Sandrine Holt were cast in undisclosed major roles.[56] Deadline Hollywood stated that Gandolfini was potentially portraying "an ambitious guy from Staten Island" named Liam,[55] and that Levieva and Holt were reportedly playing love interests for Cox and D'Onofrio;[56] Holt was later revealed to be playing Vanessa Fisk,[7] who was portrayed by Ayelet Zurer in Daredevil.[8] By January 2023, Nikki M. James was cast in an undisclosed role.[57] In March, Jon Bernthal was revealed to be reprising his role of Frank Castle / Punisher from the Netflix series for Born Again.[6][58] At that time, additional cast members from Daredevil, such as Deborah Ann Woll (who played Karen Page) and Elden Henson (Foggy Nelson), were not expected to return, and it was unclear if those characters would make appearances in Born Again.[6] It was also revealed that Michael Gaston and Arty Froushan were part of the cast,[7][59] with Froushan in a major role that was reported to be an associate of Fisk's named Harry.[59] Set photos the following month indicated that Harris Yulin was part of the cast.[11] Clark Johnson was revealed to be cast in a recurring role in May, reported to be named Cherry.[9] Marc Geller has been cast in an undisclosed role.[10]

In September 2023, a United States Copyright Office filing for the series revealed several roles: Levieva as Heather Glenn, Gandolfini as Daniel Blade, James as Kirsten McDuffie, Johnson as Cherry, Froushan as Buck Cashman, Genneya Walton as BB Urich, and Zabryna Guevara as Sheila Rivera.[1]

Design

Emily Gunshor serves as the costume designer for the series.[60]

Filming

Picketers participating in the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike on May 10, 2023, at the series' set.[61] This and other continuous picketing resulted in production being suspended on June 14.[62]

Cuesta directed the first episode of the series,[7] with Nachmanoff, Johnson, and Boyd also directing episodes.[40][9][41] Principal photography began on March 6, 2023, in New York,[63] under the working title Out the Kitchen.[64] Pedro Gómez Millán and Hillary Spera served as cinematographers.[46][65] Filming took place in Yonkers outside the city mayor's office from March 7 through March 10.[66] The production then moved to New York City, filming in Harlem, Manhattan, on March 13 and 14,[67][68] and in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and at the Manhattan Municipal Building on March 15;[69][70] Williamsburg was previously used as a shooting location for Daredevil.[69] Filming took place at the New York County Courthouse on March 17.[71]

Soundstage work occurred at Silvercup Studios East in Queens.[72] Filming was set to take place at Silvercup East on May 8, when picketers participating in the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike caused production to shut down with no filming occurring. Filming was planned to resume the following day. Because of the strike, Corman and Ord were unable to be on set.[72] After further picketing on May 10 at the series' set in Brooklyn that once again shut down filming, production was paused for the remainder of the week.[61] Additional production shut downs because of picketing occurred in early-to-mid June at Silvercup East,[73][74] before being suspended on June 14 until after the strike concluded.[62] Filming had originally been expected to last for eight months.[72] Following the series' creative overhaul, Benson and Moorhead were set to direct the new episodes.[13]

In late December 2023, D'Onofrio revealed filming would resume "in a few weeks".[75]

Editing

Editors for the series include Cedric Nairn-Smith,[41] Melissa Lawson Cheung,[76] and Stephanie Filo.[77] Nairn-Smith previously worked on the Marvel Studios series Moon Knight and Ironheart,[41] while Cheung previously worked on Secret Invasion (2023).[76]

Release

Daredevil: Born Again will be released on Disney+.[78] The first season was initially expected to consist of 18 episodes.[12] A filing for the first episode with the United States Copyright Office indicated an approximate release in January 2025.[1] The series was originally scheduled to debut in early 2024,[12] but was removed from Marvel Studios' release schedule in September 2023 given filming had not yet been completed amid the ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.[78] It is expected to be part of Phase Five of the MCU.[12]

References

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