Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Elektra, Punisher hit Hell’s Kitchen

New characters join the cast of heroes, anti-heroes and villains in the second season of Daredevil

- DAVID BETANCOURT ·

HEADING into the second season of Netflix’s Daredevil, new producers Doug Petrie and Marco Ramirez knew they were working with an impressive­ly stacked roster of superheroe­s.

Under producer Steven DeKnight, Daredevil’s much-lauded first season worked at a slow and steady pace as it built toward the transforma­tion by Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) into the title hero.

That change concluded with Daredevil’s battle against Kingpin for the soul of the Hell’s Kitchen setting – a showdown that occurred in the season’s final episode.

Now, as season two of the Marvel/Netflix series starts, Daredevil has become comfortabl­e in his role as his city’s nightly masked guardian – as well as with the reality that he’s not the only one running on the rooftops and making his own rules.

Joining Daredevil this season are old flame/martial-arts expert Elektra (Elodie Yung) and the heavily armed Frank Castle, aka the Punisher (Jon Bernthal). In Marvel’s larger world, Elektra and the Punisher have both starred in movies that were less than successful prior to the current wave in Hollywood – which explains why the rights for their use have reverted back to Marvel.

“This season, from day one, we know we have Matt, we have Elektra and we have Frank Castle, so what story does this want to be?” Ramirez said. “So it wasn’t like we actively walked away from the other version of season one. It just felt like: what story do these characters want to tell?”

Petrie said adding two characters to the mix wouldn’t be possible if this were a superhero movie. This only works, he said, because the Netflix format gives them almost more than a dozen hours of storytelli­ng to work within.

“I think we would have been much more leery if Marco and I had been put in charge of a twohour Daredevil movie and given (Elektra and the Punisher). I think we would have really questioned that,” Petrie said. “Whereas (with Netflix), you have 13 hours of flowing real estate. The flow of introducin­g (the new) characters and keeping it through Matt’s perspectiv­e and just (thinking): how can we hammer this guy who is already torturing himself in terms of his conscious and his self- imposed responsibi­lity?

“To have 13 hours to lay the cards down in the order you like – I wouldn’t say it’s a luxury, but I will say it is awfully nice. We never felt cramped.”

Despite all that time to craft Daredevil’s second season, the producers said they had to consistent­ly remind themselves this was Daredevil’s story. Elektra and the Punisher are so fun to dramatise they can overtake an episode.

“We had to discipline ourselves to not let the story become the Elektra or the ( Punisher) story,” Ramirez said. “We had to constantly remind ourselves and the writers’ room that this is the Matt Murdock show.

“In comic book movies, specifical­ly where it’s a person going up against seven villains, you’re like: who the hell is this (story) even about anymore? With us, it was imperative every day at work that we’re telling a Matt Murdock story and yes, we happen to be able to use (The Punisher) and Elektra to get him where we want to get him.”

Petrie and Ramirez call themselves longtime comic-book fans, and Petrie said having three classic Marvel characters could have been a complicati­on if the producers had allowed their fandom to take over their decision-making process. “You’ve got three incredibly powerful, rich, motivated, complicate­d human beings (in these three characters) who are acting out on this very dramatic New York backdrop, operatic stage,” Petrie said.

“And in terms of being a straight-up nerd... you want to see that. And I think that’s actually a pitfall that storytelli­ng sometimes falls into. And we have to be aware of giving the audience what they want to see from these characters, what we want to see from these characters and yet always, how can we torture our Catholic Matt today, and what can he learn from the world coming to him.”

And then there’s the costuming. One major decision was to upgrade Daredevil’s suit. Fans will notice that the look of Murdock’s suit, especially the mask, is much more aligned with the look in the comics.

Yet giving Daredevil a new mask wasn’t going to be as simple as Matt Murdock asking his costume designer for a new look. Murdock was going to have to earn the new look with a baptism by gunfire, courtesy of the Punisher.

“We knew that we wanted the appearance of the Punisher on the show to change Matt forever. And what better way to do it than to literally have (the Punisher) shoot (Daredevil) between the eyes at the end of the first episode,” Ramirez said. “Eventually (Daredevil gets) the new (mask).”

Among other challenges for the new producers: Daredevil’s first season had a PG-13 rating. In inheriting the Punisher – a character who has received R-rated treatment in film – the producing duo handled the Punisher’s requisite violence as best they could. “As you’ll see in the first couple of episodes, (the Punisher) appears the way the Terminator or Michael Myers appears. He comes in and he’s a horrific kind of new player in the game,” Ramirez said. “The Punisher can get really, really dark.”

“We never really pushed it in a certain direction to be more violent,” Petrie added. “Frank is about getting a job done, and he dehumanise­s people to a degree that we want to be horrifying and complicate­d.”

Daredevil now has three love interests. “He’s got Karen. He’s got Elektra. He’s got New York City,” Ramirez said. “And those three vixens are calling him at all times. His love life is his past and his future. Elektra represents one side of who he is and who he can become, and Karen (Page) represents the other half of who he is and what he can become.”

And Daredevil’s identities tug hard on him this season. The more success he has with one half of his life, the more the other half suffers. “I think that duality was a big theme for us this year. Matt is Matt Murdock and he’s a guy with a mask. He’s a lawyer and then a lawbreaker. And a homicidal lawbreaker, by the way. He breaks bones. He’s very scary in that regard,” Petrie said.

“Elektra in some way represents a freedom and an idea that he loves, but is afraid of. And Karen is a much healthier avenue, but he’s not settled within himself yet. He’s still figuring out these two sides of himself. And given two big avenues to pursue with New York City being his truest, deepest love, perhaps.

“Were we trying to torture him? Absolutely. We love torturing Matt Murdock.”

And the producers note that one of the highlights for them was watching Cox and Bernthal create a classic Marvel battle. “The fact that Matt feels responsibl­e for the Punisher – the fact that the Punisher sees a little bit of himself in Daredevil, but there’s a goodness in Daredevil that he’ll never be able to have again,” Ramirez said. “It’s the relationsh­ip between the characters that makes all those scenes pop in a great way.” – Washington Post

 ?? PICTURES: NETFLIX/ MARVEL ?? BAD COMPANY: In the second season Daredevil (Charlie Cox, chained) has become comfortabl­e in his role as his city’s masked guardian – as well as with the reality that he’s not the only one running on the rooftops and making his own rules. Here, he...
PICTURES: NETFLIX/ MARVEL BAD COMPANY: In the second season Daredevil (Charlie Cox, chained) has become comfortabl­e in his role as his city’s masked guardian – as well as with the reality that he’s not the only one running on the rooftops and making his own rules. Here, he...
 ??  ?? AMERICAN NINJA: Charlie Cox as Daredevil.
AMERICAN NINJA: Charlie Cox as Daredevil.

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