← Back to Directory
Marvel's Daredevil
TV Series

Marvel's Daredevil

2015Action, Crime, Drama • 3 Seasons

Woke Score
2.5
out of 10

Series Overview

As a child Matt Murdock was blinded by a chemical spill in a freak accident. Instead of limiting him it gave him superhuman senses that enabled him to see the world in a unique and powerful way. Now he uses these powers to deliver justice, not only as a lawyer in his own law firm, but also as vigilante at night, stalking the streets of Hell's Kitchen as Daredevil, the man without fear.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

2.4/10

Blinded as a young boy, Matt Murdock fights injustice by day as a lawyer and by night as the superhero Daredevil in Hell's Kitchen, New York City.

View Full Season Analysis

Season 2

2/10

Dark forces are tearing Hell's Kitchen apart once again, but this time Daredevil may have to choose between the city and his friends.

View Full Season Analysis

Season 3

3/10

Missing for months, Matt Murdock reemerges a broken man, putting into question his future as both vigilante Daredevil and lawyer Matthew Murdock. But when his archenemy Wilson Fisk is released from prison, Matt must choose between hiding from the world, or embracing his destiny as a hero.

View Full Season Analysis

Overall Series Review

Marvel’s Daredevil is a dark, grounded exploration of vigilantism, morality, and institutional failure set in the decaying urban landscape of Hell's Kitchen. Across its three seasons, the series remains deeply invested in Catholic theology and traditional moral conflicts. The core narrative consistently pits Matt Murdock’s commitment to a higher, objective moral law against the chaos and corruption he faces. Whether battling Wilson Fisk’s organized crime empire or debating lethal justice with The Punisher, the drama hinges on Matt’s internal struggle to adhere to the rule of law while embracing necessary violence. The series maintains a relentless focus on character-driven, ideological conflict over surface-level identity politics. Female characters, including Karen Page and Claire Temple, are consistently portrayed as highly skilled and essential contributors to the fight against corruption, their competence earned through action and professional roles within the story’s framework. The central tension throughout is not about who the characters are, but what they believe: the necessity of systemic justice versus the temptation of personal, violent vengeance. Over time, the show deepens its exploration of institutional rot. While Season 1 established the threat posed by a singular crime boss, subsequent seasons broadened the scope to examine how corruption infects the legal system and even religious organizations. Season 3, in particular, focused on Matt's faith collapsing under pressure, forcing him and his allies—Foggy and Karen—to fight back using the very systems Fisk sought to control. Themes of redemption, friendship, and the possibility of finding transcendent truth even in moral murkiness anchor the story’s conclusion. In summary, Daredevil presents a cohesive vision of a deeply flawed city where justice is not found in easy answers but through brutal, personal sacrifice. It is a grim, faith-informed morality play centered on the exhausting effort required to impose order and defend objective truth against nihilistic self-interest, all while maintaining a commitment to gritty, street-level realism.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics2.3/10

Oikophobia2.3/10

Feminism3.7/10

LGBTQ+1/10

Anti-Theism3.3/10