Born Again’ Makes One of Its Best Changes With This Character

Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again Episode 1 and 2.One of the advantages to Daredevil: Born Again being a soft reboot of its Netflix predecessor is that the MCU series gets to treat fans to long-overdue updates to our favorite characters. The show’s two-episode premiere already delivers a more comic-accurate depiction of Bullseye (Wilson Bethel) before Daredevil (Charlie Cox) tests if he can fly in Episode 1’s horrific opening. While the effects are a little awkward, this sequence also provides some iconic shots of the hero of Hell’s Kitchen swinging across rooftops, ushering in Daredevil’s proper entrance to the MCU by completing his visual transformation into a superhero. Still, one of the most welcome changes among the series premiere’s main cast has nothing to do with masks, and it feels most rewarding to watch the newly-minted Vanessa Fisk (Ayelet Zurer) embrace a more prominent role in Daredevil’s story.

Throughout the three previous seasons of Daredevil, Vanessa was by no means an accessory, but we never got to see the Kingpin’s (Vincent D’Onofrio) queen step into her own bloody spotlight. Vanessa begins in Season 1 as an art curator and is slowly immersed in the vengeful world of Wilson Fisk. After her boyfriend is imprisoned, the character is then safely stashed away throughout Season 2 but returns in Season 3 with a vengeance, insisting she be treated as an equal in Fisk’s criminal enterprise and ordering the tragic death of Agent Ray Nadeem (Jay Ali). While this ultimately comes back to haunt the newlyweds during Season 3’s ending, Vanessa’s growing agency and ambition injected some fresh momentum into a series that had come to revolve around familiar faces, making it all the more disappointing when Daredevil‘s cancellation meant fans wouldn’t get to see the rise of a perfect future villain.

‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Picks Up With the Vanessa Fisk Fans Were Promised

While the time period for the Disney+ series skips over Vanessa’s rise within the criminal underworld, the premiere nonetheless treats us to everything the Season 3 finale of Daredevil promised in terms of Vanessa’s character progression. Picking up where the previous series left off, Vanessa’s entrance during a meeting with New York’s Five Families lets us know immediately that this is a woman who has grown to wield power, resources, and seemingly as much loyalty as her husband commanded throughout the original series. Not only does Vanessa firmly settle a dispute between her subordinates, but Zurer also does a phenomenal job embodying the character’s cold sophistication and cunning demeanor, quickly establishing Vanessa as a force to be reckoned with in the world of Daredevil: Born Again.

While her husband’s sudden arrival does slightly undermine the authority she has clearly worked hard to cultivate, the premiere makes it clear that Vanessa is now the face of the Fisks’ darker dealings, and it’s honestly refreshing to see. Between being described as an “investment sorceress” by Cherry (Clark Johnson) for successfully fundraising for her husband’s mayoral campaign and making their entire criminal empire look legitimate, Vanessa has come a long way from being used as a bargaining chip multiple times throughout the original Daredevil. While the character hasn’t yet exposed herself to the bloody, street-level violence that also makes its debut in the mature MCU series, the character’s command over New York’s criminals makes it clear that she presides over New York’s carnage nonetheless, wearing the proverbial, sadistic pants of her relationship while her husband sheds his white suit for a more palatable public image.

‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Gives Us a Deeper Glimpse Into a Marriage Between Kingpins

Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio) and Vanessa (Ayelet Zurer) on the rooftop after his election in Episode 1 of 'Daredevil: Born Again.'
Image via Disney+

A welcome side effect of Vanessa’s evolution is that the power imbalance between her and her husband now seems to have closed significantly. Throughout the original Daredevil, it was impossible not to feel even slightly concerned for Vanessa’s well-being because of her constant contact with a man who, as the premiere recalls, very much did once decapitate a man with a car door. Even once Season 1 made it clear that Vanessa was just as cruel as her husband, she still lacked the sort of power base that could provide her with an equal standing with the man she loved. In both the time since Daredevil Season 3 and the time since Kingpin was last incapacitated by Echo (Alaqua Cox), however, Vanessa has more than filled her husband’s void. Her transformation into a criminal kingpin in her own right makes for a more balanced relationship, one which makes her screentime in Daredevil: Born Again even more of a delight.

We see the new dynamic between Vanessa and her husband multiple times throughout the premiere, but the best example is the rooftop scene directly following Kingpin’s election as mayor. This scene raises the possibility that Vanessa might have had an affair with an unknown character named Adam, but more importantly, this scene also demonstrates the updated nature of the pair’s relationship. No longer is Vanessa being excluded from her husband’s business, and rather than having to force her way into the Kingpin’s decisions, Vanessa is actively standing on her own merit.

These ideas are mostly communicated visually, with the shot of the pair standing side-by-side looking down at the city symbolizing their more balanced reign, but the circumstances surrounding this scene also make it clear that this moment represents a mutual triumph. While D’Onofrio’s character spends time shoring up votes and verbally sparring with Cox’s Matt Murdock, Vanessa spends the premiere mostly in the shadows, appearing sparingly enough not to be forgotten but not too much to make a target of herself. The result is a powerful screen presence for someone who has been waiting for three seasons of television to be recognized as a legitimate threat in her own right, one which doesn’t appear to be going anywhere anytime soon.

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Those ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Opening Credits Have a Deeper Meaning

The devil is in the details.

‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Is Setting Up a More Well-Rounded Arc for the Fisks’ Future in the Series

Vanessa’s expanded role as both a profitable criminal mastermind and wife is exciting because it promises to give fans a deeper understanding of someone who has been with the Daredevil cast since the beginning, and Daredevil: Born Again certainly appears to be embracing the character’s narrative potential. Aside from the character’s organizational savvy, the therapy session Vanessa and Kingpin attend with Dr. Heather Glenn (Margarita Levieva) at the end of Episode 2 is rife with storytelling possibilities. Not only will these sessions undoubtedly unveil hard truths about the happy couple, but Dr. Glenn’s relationship with Matt is also bound to produce a violent dilemma. If Vanessa and Kingpin find out about their therapist’s love life, Vanessa’s decisiveness is bound to test the limits of her husband’s new, supposedly lenient outlook on life.

None of these developments would be nearly as exciting or as harrowing if Daredevil: Born Again hadn’t doubled down on the biggest missed opportunity of Daredevil‘s cancellation. What’s more, by giving Vanessa more agency and depth, the series is also filling the void of strong female characters left in the wake of Elektra’s (Elodie Yung) Season 2 death in Daredevil and Karen Page’s (Deborah Ann Woll) early exodus to San Francisco. While Daredevil: Born Again makes a welcome addition with Nikki M. James‘ matchmaking Kirsten McDuffie, it’s much more rewarding to experience the growth of a character we know, even if Vanessa’s continued success may spell doom for Daredevil’s personal relationships.


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Daredevil: Born Again

Release Date

March 4, 2025

Showrunner

Chris Ord

Writers

Chris Ord

Franchise(s)

Daredevil, Marvel Cinematic Universe





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