Marvel's Daredevil



Marvel's Daredevil is a 2015 Netflix exclusive series starring Daredevil set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. After an excellent reception it was greenlit for a second season, which premiered in March 2016.

Season 1 opens with Nelson and Murdock taking the case of Karen Page, a secretary accessed of murder after being found covered in blood standing over a dead body while clutching a knife. Alerted by Nelson's childhood friend cop as a potential case for Nelson and Murdock. Sensing a Revealing Coverup Murdock decides that their new take the case (over Nelson's objections that Page can't afford to pay them). Murdock is correct and the three find themselves deep in a plot by organized crime.


 * Almost-Dead Guy: In season 2 a nameless criminal left impaled on a meat hook lives long enough to tell Daredevil the massacre was done by one man.
 * Always Murder: Unusually for a rookie firm, Nelson and Murdock take nothing but murder cases and do rather well despite their inexperience.
 * Confessional: A recurring scene from the catholic Murdock.
 * Disability Superpower
 * Friends Rent Control: Justified for Murdock's apartment: there's a billboard right outside the window which deterred any renters but Murdock, being blind, is not bothered by, and shows that while big, it's very spartan as the blind man doesn't care much for visual aesthetics.
 * Gory Discretion Shot: Several parts of fight scenes are off-screen, with auditory cues (which indicate far more violent things than shown on screen) plus stuff and bodies flying into the camera's view to give ideas of what is happening. In Season 2 The Punisher buys a stolen police radio from a shady pawnshop and just as he's about, surprisingly enough, leave without violence after buying the radio, the surveillance tape and shells from the guy's shotgun when the guy tries to sell him child porn: Cue Frank picking up a bat and approaching him before a screen transition.
 * Good Lawyers, Good Clients: Matt Murdock wants to be this, but Foggy Nelson correctly asserts that innocent until proven guilty renders this ethically wrong on top of being completely unworkable from a financial prospective.
 * Generic Ethnic Crime Gang: A dream team of them in season 1
 * The Mafiya
 * Yakuza
 * The Triads and the Tongs: The leader of which is some cult leading supernatural entity, able to vanish without a trace who manages to escape unharmed. Implied to one of Iron Fist's antagonists.
 * Various ones show up in season 2 to be massacred by Frank
 * The Irish Mob: Gunned down at a family meeting
 * The Cartel: Left for dead attached to meat hooks
 * All Bikers Are Hells Angels: Killed just off screen
 * Multinational Team: Russians, Yakuza, Triad and more seemingly enemy criminal groups have allied for Kingpin's plans.
 * Not Wearing Tights: Most of the first season has Murdock fight crime in a hat pulled over his eyes while the nearest thing to a superhero name he has is the newspaper given nickname "The Devil of Hell's Kitchen"..
 * Race Lift: Ben Urich. Weird as in the comics Ben is Those Two Guys with Robbie Robertson, who was always black and and the character here is closer to Robertson than Ulrich.
 * Elektra is Asian instead of Greek in season 2. The not being Greek part was presumably mandated by the Greek bankruptcy during production.
 * Blake Tower is black in season 2. Unusually the black version has gotten more screen time than the original did for decades despite an adaption demotion to ADA.
 * Revealing Coverup: A guard is blackmailed into trying to murder Page, which is suspicious enough the police just go along with Nelson and Murdock's demands they release her.
 * You Have 48 Hours: The holding limit version is invoked by Nelson and Murdock as why they need to release Page at the start.