…it definitely has to be Spider-Man. One day…I’m hoping. We’ll see if they ask me to do it. Kingpin lived in a world of Punisher, Daredevil and Spider-Man so that would be the one.
-Vincent D’Onofrio
While responding to a fan’s statement that a matchup between Kingpin and Spidey was needed “ASAP”, D’Onofrio stated in order for it to happen, Sony and Marvel would need to “get their shit together” over what he called a “complicated rights issue.”
If Sony and Marvel ever get their sh*t together maybe. It's a complicated rights issue. Hope so.
While Kingpin debuted in the pages of The Amazing Spider-Man #50, he has since become a primary Daredevil antagonist. D’Onofrio explained that because the character is technically “shared” between Marvel (Disney) and Sony, placing him in a Sony-produced Spider-Man film requires a level of legal acrobatics that hasn’t happened yet. In the past, D’Onofrio has noted that his current contract is firmly rooted in the Marvel Television side of things, so similarly to how Spider-Man won’t appear in a live-action Marvel Television series, Kingpin won’t appear in a live-action Marvel Studios film until a new deal is arranged.
Though it’s been sold in part as an adaptation of Marvel Comics Devil’s Reign, showrunner Dario Scardapane‘s inspiration for the narrative structure of Season 2 of Daredevil: Born Again came from a slightly more surprising source. With career criminal Wilson Fisk–Mayor Kingpin–having driven Daredevil, Karen Page and New York City’s other vigilantes underground, the synopsis for Season 2 paints Daredevil as “public enemy number one” and promises that Murdock will “fight back from the shadows.” Resist. Rebel. Rebuild. In promoting the new season, Scardapane has revealed that he envisioned the new episodes as “resistance story”, heavily inspired by French film noir, specifically the 1969 Jean-Pierre Melville masterpiece, Army of Shadows.
To tell a resistance tale with fidelity to the genre, Season 2 will need to put the Big Apple in a pressure cooker, examine the corruption inherent to absolute power, challenge the ideology of the resistance and force Murdock to not only make Daredevil a symbol or resistance but also force him, at some point, to bear the weight of sacrifice. Episode 1, “The Northern Star”, sets the stage for the escalation of the revolution teased in the Season 1 finale, immediately crossing the point of no return as the presence of Daredevil forces the scuttling of The Northern Star (keep that wording in mind for the finale).
Resistance is the through line of Season 2. There is opposition to the idea that Fisk won at the end of Season 1. This season is the pushback against his administration. This is the story of Daredevil becoming a symbol for the Resistance. The idea of Daredevil ascending to almost symbolic status was always part of the conversation.
-Dario Scardapane
In choosing to frame the new season as a resistance story, Scardapane turned a superhero story into an exploration of the volatile space between oppression and freedom, a deep dive into the psychology of power and the cost of change. Fortunately, sitting at center of it, is the Man without Fear. Smartly, the first episode establishes that Matt, Karen et al face a steep uphill climb to win the hearts and minds of the citizens of New York. In this regard, the BB Report continues to serve as a monitor of the pulse of the populace and as the new season kicks off, it ain’t too fuckin’ good as far as Daredevil is concerned. The Devil of Hell’s Kitchen is already an enemy of the state and Fisk attempts to leverage the scuttling of the Northern Star–a ship he’s using to smuggle weapons–to further his personal (V for) vendetta.
Though New Yorkers don’t see it quite yet, not Nelson, Murdock and Page are leading the charge against a state-sponsored occupation. Propaganda-littered streets, a secret police and abuses of office drive the resistance further underground while the Kingpin sits in his cold monolith of power, revealing a fundamentally broken system that, ironically, only the blind man and his closest allies can see. It’s a scenario so twisted that not even the representative of a higher authority can crack the shell, as Kingpin’s it’s-all-connected connections allow him to remain above the law even as Matthew Lillard‘s Mr. Charles power plays the Fat Man.
Brilliantly, just as it looks as though Matt’s efforts to resist will be extraordinarily short-lived, Scardapane reintroduces the classic Daredevil agent of chaos in the closing moments of the episode. Given Bullseye’s talents and tolerance, his intervention can practically be counted upon to disrupt both the regime and the resistance, especially given the reality that he has no skin in the ideological game being played by Fisk and Murdock. Bullseye’s intervention portends a rapid, disorder-driven deterioration not only of the structure of Matt and Karen’s revolution but also of Kingpin’s very ordered sense of things. Vive la Résistance!
Stephen Colbert has found his next calling. In an announcement made alongside Peter Jackson, Colbert–who is leaving The Late Show on May 21st–announced that he will join the forces of Middle-earth.
Colbert is co-writing a brand-new, live-action film tentatively titled The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past. It’s being framed as a direct sequel to the original trilogy that doubles as a “lost chapter” adaptation. Colbert’s specific pitch to Peter Jackson involves adapting the six early chapters of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring that were skipped in the 2001 film—specifically everything from “Three is Company” to “Fog on the Barrow-downs.”
The thing I found myself reading over and over again were the six chapters early on in The Fellowship [of the Ring] that y’all never developed into the first movie back in the day. It’s basically chapters ‘Three Is Company’ through ‘Fog on the Barrow-downs,’ and I thought, Oh wait, maybe that could be its own story that could fit into the larger story. Could we make something that was completely faithful to the books while also being completely faithful to the movies that you guys had already made?
-Stephen Colbert
The movie will be set 14 years after the death of Frodo and use that timeline as a framing device to revisit these untold stories, allowing the film to exist as both a sequel to The Return of the King and a mid-quel to the early days of the journey with the story reportedly centers on Elanor Gardner, the daughter of Samwise Gamgee. While her father and his friends Merry and Pippin set out to retrace the first steps of their original adventure, Elanor discovers a “long-buried secret” that suggests the War of the Ring was nearly lost before it even truly began.
Fourteen years after the passing of Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin set out to retrace the first steps of their adventure. Meanwhile, Sam’s daughter, Elanor, has discovered a long-buried secret and is determined to uncover why the War of the Ring was very nearly lost before it even began.
-Official synopsis for The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past
Colbert is writing the screenplay alongside his son, Peter McGee, and Philippa Boyens. Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh are on board to produce via WingNut Films, ensuring the original trilogy aesthetic remains untouched.
While casting is still under wraps, the synopsis practically begs for the return of Sean Astin, Dominic Monaghan and Billy Boyd. With the story focusing on their older selves retracing their steps, the timing for the original cast to return–now 25 years older in real life–couldn’t be more perfect.
Appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live! last night, James Marsden spoke openly about reprising his role as Cyclops in Avengers: Doomsday. He also admitted to lying about it previously to avoid “Marvel trouble.”
In doing so, Marsden joins elite company such as Charlie Cox, Andrew Garfield and Paul Rudd, all of whom have lied, denied and otherwise dissembled about their association with Marvel Studios projects.
Of course, the big takeaway isn’t just the return—it’s the suit. Marsden confirmed he is finally wearing the Jim Lee-inspired comic-accurate costume, moving away from the black leather era of the early 2000s. Since the suit was first leaked in 2025, fans have been excited to see it on screen and the first glimpse of it in one of the film’s short teasers delivered.
“To put this on felt very cool,” said Marsden, who said he also felt “heroic” and “authentic”, the latter of which fans have been craving and Marvel seems intent on giving them.
The DCU is about to get the mockumentary treatment. In a report first shared by Variety, DC Studios is officially developing a prestige true crime docuseries centered on Superman’s pal, Jimmy Olsen.
Following his breakout performance in James Gunn’s Superman, Skyler Gisondo is set to reprise his role for the HBO Max original. But this isn’t your typical superhero spinoff—it’s an investigative deep-dive into the criminal underworld of the DC Universe.
In what might be the most inspired creative pairing of Chapter 1, DC has tapped Tony Yacenda and Dan Perrault—the minds behind the Peabody Award-winning American Vandal—to write, showrun, and executive produce. The show is described as a grounded, noir-inflected mystery that focuses on Daily Planet staff members as they navigate a world of institutional corruption and metahuman conspiracies
The series is framed as a fictionalized true-crime investigation hosted by Jimmy. Season 1 will focus entirely on the criminal history of Gorilla Grodd. Reframing the iconic Flash foe as a subject for an investigative documentary allows the DCU to explore Grodd’s “layered psychological profile” and his path from scientific experiment to global threat through archival footage and “interviews”.
By moving the American Vandal duo into the DCU, Gunn is doubling down on his promise to diversify the “tone, scale, and format” of the franchise. This isn’t just a spinoff; it’s an experiment in genre-bending that could change how we view comic book villains forever.
Since its inception, Marvel’s streaming spin on Daredevil has been heavily inspired by Frank Miller; however, in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2, showrunner Dario Scardapane chose to lean into the theological elements that Miller–who was raised as an Irish Catholic–introduced into the character’s mythos. Indeed, under Miller‘s short-lived pen, Murdock’s Catholicism emerged as an architectural framework for the character.
Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.
Hebrews 11:1
It’s not just the gritty, noir-inspired spin on the character that Miller made famous that makes him synonymous with Daredevil. It was Miller‘s recognition that a lawyer moonlighting as a vigilante provided a perfect gateway to explore Matt Murdock’s inner-struggle laid the groundwork for the character’s turbulent internal conflict: is he a good man doing bad things or a bad man trying to break good? Miller, an Irish Catholic himself, believed that only a Catholic could manage to handle the contradicting duality that has come to define Daredevil. By leaning heavily into Hell’s Kitchen, a historically Irish-American enclave, Miller was able to build an entire theological scaffold around Murdock, and from it emerged the irony of a guilt-ridden Catholic dressing as the devil while fighting crime. By the time he wrote Born Again in 1986, Miller had codified Catholicism into Daredevil’s DNA. And though it is sometimes only in the subtext, Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 circumspectly examines one of the crucial contradictions that torments Matt Murdock: how does a man who believes in a merciful God go about living in a merciless world? And almost unbelievably, the season finale dares to answer that question.
Mercy. Grace. Justice not vengeance. Forgiveness. Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 balances and explores these and more key tenets of Catholicism but what’s most impressive is how strong writing allows them to emerge organically throughout the season as Matt Murdock, not Daredevil, begins to be reborn. Perhaps one of the show’s strongest elements is how those in Murdock’s orbit react and respond to him as he chooses mercy, forgiveness, justice and grace…and to whom he extends those blessings. In what seems an homage to Miller‘s Born Again, in which the final pages are noticeably brighter despite Matt losing everything, the final scenes of Season 2–which are far too spoilery to be discussed–are noticeably brighter as well, providing a sense of a man no longer at war with himself. As Fisk told Murdock, tragedy can transform a man, and the season finale certainly finds both men transformed. While production on a third season of Born Again is already underway, the Season 2 finale serves as a fitting denouement of the series that was originally announced at SDCC ’23.
I thought Daredevil was kind of cool because he couldn’t do anything. I mean, he’s blind. It wasn’t that he could fly. His major power was an impediment. So I was intrigued. When I took over he was kind of like Spider-Man lite, but I was able to project a lot of my Catholic imagery onto it. And I’d always wanted to do a crime comic.
-Frank Miller
Now fully in creative control, Scardapane deftly uses the second season to provide a definitive resolution to the wonderfully written diner scene from “Heaven’s Half Hour”, the first episode of the revival, in which a tense meeting over coffee ends with both men swearing they’ve left their alter egos behind them, slowly devolves into a pissing match between the better angels of their natures. In it, it is revealed that both of them believe they can transform both themselves and the city they love; however, Season 2 reveals that neither of them is remotely capable of such a change. The new season makes good on the parallel paths of the pilot, bringing them back to confront each other and themselves. Both Murdock and Fisk believed they could save the city, yet their resulting feud set it on fire.
I was raised to believe in grace. To be touched by the divine and transform. So if you say to me you’re a new man, I say fine. But you should know I was also raised to believe in retribution. So if you step out of line…I will be there.
Calculatedly, the new batch of episodes resonate thematically with each of the seasons of Netflix’s Daredevil without exploring those beats through the same lenses. Even as one episode spends significant time doing some retconning in a flashback set during Season 1 of Daredevil, the writers take every opportunity to subvert expectations, challenging characters in scenarios fans would expect other characters to face. As a second season, those challenges and their repercussions allow for character arcs to evolve and resolve and, for some, those resolutions are quite final. The series key players all have agency to make choices without the constraints of external forces, though it’s the choices made by Murdock and Fisk that will reverberate the loudest.
I cannot see the light. So I will be the light. I am Daredevil. And I am not afraid.
-Matt Murdock, Daredevil #612
Built on a narrative framework that honors the heavyweights who created The Man Without Fear, the new season delivers the MCU’s definitive devil, fearlessly ferocious and soaked in equal measures of blood and grace. Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 shrewdly shares the duality of its title character, dressing itself as its Netflix predecessor while continuing to make bold choices that distance it from the original series. The eight episodes crescendo with the final three standing as perhaps the finest of any season, culminating in a finale that is both unpredictable and astonishing. Truly, Daredevil is born again.
As has always been the case in the comics, the supporting cast comes and goes, roles shrink and grow and new players join the game. Of the latter, none are more captivating than Matthew Lillard‘s Mr. Charles, a kingmaker and lynchpin with ties to the MCU’s ongoing narrative and a couple of fan-favorite Defenders. Indeed, it’s once again all connected and the product is truly better for it. Krysten Ritter returns as Jessica Jones, in a role similar in size and impact to Jon Bernthal‘s Season 1 turn, and immediately returns to form, doing significant heavy-lifting, physically and narratively, in a short time. This is representative, perhaps, of Scardapane‘s best decision with Daredevil: Born Again: cutting to the chase with fast-paced episodes that are absent the distended dialogue-heavy scenes that often weighed down the original series.
We knew the hype was real, but the numbers coming out of Sony and Marvel are staggering. According to a fresh report from Variety, the marketing campaign for Spider-Man: Brand New Day has achieved something no other film in history has: it has crossed the 1 billion views threshold across its collective trailer materials in record time.
The main teaser alone didn’t just break the record; it obliterated it.
While Deadpool & Wolverine held the previous 24-hour record with 365 million views aided heavily by a Super Bowl spot, the Brand New Day trailer hit 718.6 million views in its first day. Proving the Spidey-Sense is a global phenomenon, the trailer surpassed Deadpool & Wolverine’s all-time record in just eight hours, clocking 373 million views before most of the West Coast had even finished their morning coffee.
It has been nearly five years since the world saw Tom Holland’s Spider-Man. The pent-up demand for a rebooted Peter Parker in a world that has forgotten him is clearly higher than anyone anticipated. By turning a simple trailer drop into a record-shattering global event, Sony and Marvel have sent a clear message: the MCU’s slump is officially over and 2026 will be a huge year.
Frank Castle won’t be appearing in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 but he won’t be far behind. Ahead of the streaming debut of the sophomore season of the Daredevil revival, Marvel has announced the release date for The Punisher Special Presentation along with an official title.
The Punisher: One Last Kill will drop on Disney Plus on May 12th, the same day as the Season 2 finale of Daredevil: Born Again.
Co-written by star Jon Bernthal and Reinaldo Marcus Green, the feature will follow Castle and see him take on Ma Gnucci, the head of the Gnucci crime family. In terms of MCU Punisher continuity, Ma Gnucci makes quite a bit of sense as an antagonist for the project given that Frank wiped out several members of the Gnucci Crime Family, including her son Tony, in Episode 1.01 of The Punisher, “3 AM.“
As Frank Castle searches for meaning beyond revenge, an unexpected force pulls him back into the fight.
-Official synopsis for The Punisher: One Last Kill
Frank Castle returns in A Marvel Television Special Presentation: The Punisher: One Last Kill May 12, only on @DisneyPlus. pic.twitter.com/4I3H10grXz
Ma Gnucci tried to take Frank Castle out in Volume 5 of The Punisher, written by Garth Ennis. The 12-issue arc, known as “Welcome Back, Frank”, launched Ennis’ 49-issue run with the character and has long been hailed as a classic Punisher tale. Harboiled and gruesome, “Welcome Back, Frank” took the character back to his roots and allowed him to do what he does best: kill bad guys with extreme prejudice…and a flamethrower. If the Marvel Television Special Presentation takes any inspiration from Ennis’ arc, fans should prepare for an extraordinarily violent hour or so.
It’s going to be dark; Frank has no interest in breaking out the darkness. It’s not going to be easy. I don’t know if that’s the Netflix tone then that’s what it’s going to be. It will not be Punisher-lite, I promise you that.
It looks like Simon Williams isn’t ready for his final bow just yet. Despite being originally billed as a miniseries, Marvel Studios has officially greenlit a second season of Wonder Man for D+.
The news was revealed by the studio via social media and confirmed that both Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Sir Ben Kingsley are set to return for the sophomore season.
Simon Williams and Trevor Slattery will return for Marvel Television's #WonderMan Season 2, co-created by Destin Daniel Cretton and Andrew Guest, coming to @DisneyPlus. pic.twitter.com/XnOBYrYHaA
While Season 1 was produced under the Marvel Spotlight banner— reserved for more grounded, standalone stories—the series became an immediate breakout hit. It still sits as the #1 show on Disney+, with fans praising its “acting nerd” charm and the undeniable chemistry between its two leads.
Executive producer Brad Winderbaum previously said Season 1 concluded a trilogy for Trevor Slattery (following Iron Man 3 and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings). A second season means the MCU’s greatest actor is officially entering a new, unscripted chapter of his life.
Showrunner Andrew Guest has already been dropping hints about the potential direction of a second season, telling The Direct back in January that if it happened, he’d want to explore “the deal to be worked out” between Simon’s burgeoning superhero status and the restrictive “Doorman Clause” of Hollywood.
Marvel is clearly listening to the fans. Wonder Man was a gamble—dramadey about the craft of acting set in a superhero world—but its success proves there is a massive appetite for character-driven stories.
The Spider-Man: Brand New Day trailer didn’t just give us our first look at Peter Parker’s post-memory-wipe life; it gave us a voice that has been haunting the fandom since the drop. While the footage was a whirlwind of Scorpion, Punisher, and Hand Ninjas, the most compelling story was hidden in the narration.
Fans believe that the gravely, authoritative voice narrating part of the trailer belongs to Keith David and have begun to theorize that he isn’t just lending his legendary pipes to a trailer; he’s playing the man who will finally bring the Clone Saga to the MCU: Dr. Miles Warren.
The trailer is anchored by a monologue that sounds less like a superhero speech and more like a lecture from a world-weary biologist.
Spiders have three life cycles. When between cycles, it can leave the spider vulnerable to threats. And for those spiders who make it through… it amounts to a kind of rebirth.
This isn’t just flavor text. It’s a clinical observation of Peter’s glitching DNA. In the comics, Miles Warren, aka The Jackal, is an evolutionary biologist and professor at Empire State University. The way David delivers those lines—with a mix of clinical fascination and cryptic warning—fits the profile of a man who sees Peter Parker not as a hero, but as a biological specimen.
As noted earlier this week, director Destin Daniel Cretton is leaning heavily into the 90s animated series. In that show, Miles Warren was the man Peter turned to when his mutation went out of control. Having Keith David—a veteran of that same animated universe—play the live-action Warren would be serendipitous meta-casting.
The trailer shows Peter’s neogenic nightmare is already in full swing. In the comics, Warren’s obsession with Peter’s DNA is what leads to the creation of clones. If Peter’s body is already “between cycles,” he would provide the perfect target for a Warren…who would likely be a colleague of Bruce Banner at ESU, allowing him to potentially get his hands on Parker’s test results and DNA. If the film ends with Peter overcoming his biological breakdown, Miles Warren is the guy holding the vial of DNA that leaves the door open for the new trilogy to adapt the Clone Saga, one of the most controversial arcs in the history of Marvel Comics.
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