Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: What up, everybody? Welcome back to another episode of the Nerd J Report. I'm your host, Pablo, and joining me, as always, is Mr. Brian Schultz. We're gonna be getting into Daredevil.
[00:00:10] Speaker B: A.
[00:00:10] Speaker A: Show that we've been waiting for for quite some time. In the beginning, we heard some scary things about what this show was about. At first, the excitement was 18 episodes. That's a lot, right? And not that we didn't want it, but at that point, anything Daredevil, we were willing to take a look, and then we heard the tone and that Kevin Feige thought it was. Didn't like it and needed to re redo the whole thing. And so we're here now. Been waiting for this. What this redo was. Thank you to Kevin Feige.
And it's here. And I have to say, I washed it early morning so that my brain is so that the. Whatever the chemicals are active on peak. Right.
Coffee. Watched it and I watched both episodes, and I have to say, I really, really felt like this was the continuation of season three.
The actors did what we were hoping they would do in terms of their performances. Charlie Cox is, I think, is amazing. Kingpin is amazing.
But there was one thing I didn't like, and I'm. I'm waiting. I'm not going to say I want to hear what Brian has to say about what he thought about the show, but I loved it. I love the show, except for one thing. And this is not a picky. Me being picky. This is a blatant. Like, this is different, and I didn't enjoy it. But, Brian, what did you think of the show Born Again?
[00:01:56] Speaker B: Okay, so I think you like it more than I did. I think for me, it's in the category of good, not great. And I'm. I think I left episode two more nervous than hopeful for the rest of the season. And I think, with one notable caveat, I am of the opinion you actually can't watch this without having seen oh Netflix show so well. But this is the point, because I think if you haven't seen the Netflix show and this is the very first two episodes you've ever watched of anything, you know, Daredevil.
[00:02:37] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:02:38] Speaker B: I think in some ways you'll like it more, even if you're a little confused as to what's going on. I really do. And I say that because I just told you before we started taping, I. I went back and I watched the beginning of the Netflix show right after I watched Born Again, and now I'm watching the Netflix season one. I'm kind of hooked again, but it's giving me the side by side. And so I feel like when you do that, when you have history with the Netflix show, you come at some of what you see in Born Again with a different lens. Versus if I try to imagine that I've never seen some of the stylizing before, some of the characterizations before, how I would think about it, I think I get to a slightly different place. So for me, I'm in the good, not great. And I'm a little bit net nervous going forward. But I actually think if it's the first thing you've seen, I think you would be on the whole pretty impressed that this was a Disney Marvel TV show relative to some of what else you've been seeing out of Disney Marvel the last couple of years.
[00:03:39] Speaker A: What was it about the show that sort of.
I mean, because I like the performances. I like the.
I like Kingpin. He sort of come. The different man, became a different man after the echo situation. Right?
Kind of. And so has Murdoch. Obviously. Things have changed, especially after that episode one.
Things had changed. I don't know how far into the future that was, that moment. Was it a year?
[00:04:15] Speaker B: It's a year that he stopped being Daredevil.
[00:04:17] Speaker A: We get in that first episode, Foggy, right? He bit. He, he, he, he caught. He caught it.
[00:04:23] Speaker B: Right? Long rumored that when they brought back Ellen Henson and Devran Wall, one of them would be taken off the board early in the show. Yeah, it turned out to be the first scene.
[00:04:34] Speaker A: What I'd have to say, Brian, is that things that took place, I was liking everything up until they started the actual fight scenes, up until he changed into Daredevil and we saw what he was doing with the rooftops and all the other stuff.
That money was spent incorrectly, man.
Meaning they used fancy vfx. That was. You can see that it was vfx, right? It take like in the first season one to all those seasons in Netflix. You weren't taken away like, oh, that was a cg. You weren't. You were there for everything that happened. And that was one of the things that made that show so great.
This show, however, you can see that they were trying to amplify the action sequences with cgi and you can see it.
And that took me away from that aspect of it. I didn't. That's one. That's the one thing I didn't like was the action sequences and the fact that they had to use CGI instead of using the money to get the best choreographers to make it look as real as possible. This is supposed to be grounded, right? This is supposed to be real, right? But yet you took us out giving us some.
There were some shots that were dope, but some of the fighting, it just didn't take me back to that time when Daredevil was doing this thing.
[00:06:10] Speaker B: Okay, so you want to do the action right off the bat, you want to just do that Because I agree with you. I think it's the weakest part of the episode. But to my prior point, part of why you're saying that and part of why I'm saying that is because we lived and loved what Netflix did. So this is my point of if you never saw it, I don't think you feel as sideways about it as we do. So to me, it is the weakest part of the first two episodes is the fight with. With. With Bullseye. Because as some. If you live the Netflix show, you can immediately see that they're riffing on the single cam.
They're riffing on the fact that Netflix like to use this idea of we're going to set the camera in one room or one location, and then Daredevil is going to kind of fight on and off camera. Right? Like, you would kind of. The camera wouldn't necessarily track Matt Murdock. The whole time would just be like, we'll put the camera in a cab and, like, you're looking out of the cabin, and then they're fighting, like, all around the. So they did that with, like, the camera was inside the building, and then all of a sudden, the guys start coming through the get broken through the door and broken through the window. So they did some of the elements that we got used to and liked in the Netflix show. But to your point, they kind of Disney fied it because they added, like, the smoke and they added the CGI and they added many more, like, heroic poses. And this is one thing. When I went back and started rewatching Netflix, I was. It struck me because I just watched Disney 1 when he. When he's fighting most of the time, like, he ends up panting. He ends up on his face. Like, he ends up the way like a regular dude would end up if he tried to just go out and brawl with a bunch of baddies in an alley. Like, there's no, like, signature. I'm going to land right here and look perfect. Like, they don't do that. So it kind of looks like they're trying to both be down the fairway MCU and trying to be like, Netflix Gritty and grounded. I mean, listen, I know that his suit helps, but like he took like 27 knives to the chest. And I understand he took a lot of damage in the Netflix show, but the show spent a lot of time on that damage, right? Like the whole. And we'll get to this. The whole like Claire stitching him up or like the recovery time that he needed after fighting Noble to then go back out. Like that was a part of the show. In this one he's like back up on the rooftop, leaping around like two seconds after taking 20 knives to the chest. It's like there is no gravitas to the wounds.
And I think that's a, that's like an MCU thing versus, like, you know, the way Netflix used to do it. So I agree with you. It's one of the things I'm most. When I say I'm net nervous for the future. This is one of the things I'm nervous about because this was the, this was the grab you lead it action sequence they gave us in the first two episodes. And I'm like, I really hope there's something more or something different in the bag. Episode two had the bone breaking stuff and maybe that was a little bit better, but even that felt a little bit forced in the context of the scene to me. So I'm nervous about the kind of action we're going to see going forward. After having seen the first two episodes.
[00:09:30] Speaker A: I didn't mind so much the fight scene in the apartment because I know what they're trying to go for and whatever he did, what he had to do. But yes, I am nervous for when he turns into Daredevil and he has to fight. That's. That's the only thing I'm really nervous about outside of that. The interactions that he has with his.
The different people he meets, the different people he interacts with on the day to day, like his private investigator. All those people. Cherry, I think that dude has been around for years and he's always been great.
[00:10:06] Speaker B: The martial arts were a little concerning. Again, when you go back to Netflix, if you want to do it, watch the style, right? Because he's a hybrid of his dad who's a boxer, and then he's a hybrid of what Stick teaches him. And he's very like balletic. A lot of flips, a lot of somersaults, a lot of use of almost Jackie Chan style, like the props that are in the scene. Whereas in this one little bit with Bullseye, he does a couple of the spinning kicks which he likes, but otherwise he's pretty ground. He's pretty grounded ground and pound. And, like, he's not as acrobatic. He's not as acrobatic.
[00:10:47] Speaker A: I hate the ground and pound stuff, man. It reminds me always of you. Kill my teacher, Bruce Lee.
That's what everyone. Why? What is this?
I hate seeing that man.
So, yeah, that is what the. I. I'm. I'm still looking to. Because Vincent D'Onofio. Him. The. Seeing them interact at that diner and then just seeing Fisk getting the congratulatory from his colleagues for winning the mayor and him being uncomfortable. The dynamic between him and his wife. His wife is over him.
She is over him. And he's like, yo, I'm just here. I just don't want to lose my wife. Which I believe is sincere. I mean, everything about his scenes to me is always like, must watch.
[00:11:46] Speaker B: So this is the high point of the show. The conversation in the diner, to me, is the clear peak of the first two episodes. It is a clear homage to Heat. But it's also interesting to me because I feel like, again, this is my point about. I think you have to have watched everything because that conversation doesn't make any sense if you haven't watched the Netflix show. And honestly, if you haven't watched Echo because he makes a reference to him being shot in the face, or actually, that'd be the end of Hawkeye. Sorry, end of Hawkeye slash Echo, where he's been shot. And it's like, you would have no idea what they're talking about because there's no visible. Because they don't have any visible damage to his. He's had the. Basically the prosthetic surgery. In the comics, he looks just like Wilson Fisk again. So there's a lot of references to things that they assume that you've seen that I would say a lot of people probably have not seen. And I thought that was a very interesting choice of. Yeah, you can just sort of take it as show dialogue, or you can try to actually be like, wait, what is he talking about? Shot in the head? Like, what do you.
[00:12:40] Speaker A: What?
[00:12:41] Speaker B: Like, you know. And then like, Kingpin talking about all. All of this history that, like, we know they have because we watched it in season one, two, and three. But again, if you didn't see the show, you're like, okay, they know each other because they're in the same city. Why is he so. Why is he so fixated and obsessed with this one guy? You know? And so I think the Conversation is, you know, brilliantly acted. It's perfectly staged. It's very simple. I love it. But it is one of those things where I'm kind of like, oh, it's interesting. They really are counting on you to watch everything similarly with the Wife. So for first off, interesting backstory. Remember, they recast her and then they undid it, which I thought was one of the smarter. Like, we screwed up here. So they actually had a different actress who was going to play Vanessa in the original incarnation of the show. They just flat didn't. Weren't going to bring back. I think her name is Ilet Zur. I don't. I might have mispronounced that.
[00:13:30] Speaker A: But is that the same person?
[00:13:32] Speaker B: You know, it is, but it wasn't going to be. So this was one of those. Like, when they announced born again as 18 episodes, they had. They had replaced her, and she said, like, there was no conversation. They just, like, totally changed the actress. But then when the Netflix guys came back in, they undid the decision and brought back I Let Zero to be Vanessa. But to your point, Fisk and Vanessa's relationship over those three seasons is, you know, the 1A, 1B storyline of the show. And so we kind of pick it up, like, literally where we left it.
[00:14:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:14:06] Speaker B: And again, it's like, I get that you could jump into it and be like, oh, it's a cr. It's a crime kingpin who's having issues with his wife. Okay, I can. I can catch up. But, like, there's a lot more layers to that, as we know from the. Again, it's like, if you didn't see the show, you're gonna view that a little differently when they go to therapy, which is obviously, to my mind, a nod to the Sopranos. Right. Isn't that sort of Tony and Dr. Melfi? And now we're gonna have the two of them on the couch with Matt's. Matt's new girlfriend. So I'm not sure. I think that could be interesting. It could be bad, but I think the acting will be good, so we'll see where it goes. I'm open to it, but, yeah, it's again, one of those where I'm like, I'm really glad to be back with these two people who are so twisted, but I wonder if you didn't spend enough time with them from seasons 1, 2, and 3. Do you understand what's really happening when they're sitting on the couch? Like, do you get it? Like that That's a big deal that they've Gotten to that place.
[00:14:58] Speaker A: Similar to other discussions, when he has the commission, the commissioner lays into him.
That dude is not afraid.
He lays into him. So he. He's telling you about Kingpin, but you haven't seen the 1, 2, 3. So you really can't sort of really experience the sort of person and why he's feeling the way he is.
It was dope the way they. When the commissioner came into his office and he showed him the. The woman and the child, my instinct was to believe that he's threatening their lives when he's actually threatening that he has a love child.
[00:15:38] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:15:39] Speaker A: And so I was like, oh, okay. He's, you know, he's playing. He's playing. But, you know, here's the thing.
I agree with you that if you haven't watched the first three episodes, three. Three seasons of Daredevil, you may go into it a bit confused. Like, my wife. My wife watched it and she saw the first three episodes, the first three seasons, and she was in just like I was.
And she did agree with the. The.
The action sequences and how fake it looked. Let's just call it what it is. I just thought it was dope the way it was done. When she was sitting at the head of the table and she's dressing, she's basically the kingpin 100.
[00:16:19] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:16:20] Speaker A: And then when he comes in with his gray suit off the rack, maybe. I don't know.
[00:16:24] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:16:25] Speaker A: Silence.
And everybody knows who's in charge.
[00:16:29] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:16:31] Speaker A: And she resents that because she wanted to feel.
If you saw the first seasons with her and her introduction and realization as to who Wilson Fisk was, she wanted a piece of that experience.
[00:16:45] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:16:47] Speaker A: She sort of wanted to side by side, running with him at that point. But when he went away, she was the head person in charge. And now in one moment, all that power she thought she had was gone.
And so she's over it. And I don't think there's any.
Was it was going to be interesting to me is to hear Wilson Fisk's thoughts and expressing his affection towards Vanessa and towards the situation. Because when he speaks yo you is. There's just a. There's just a presence of Wilson Fisk when he talks that you want to listen because I don't think he wastes any words.
[00:17:33] Speaker B: It's what makes Vanessa one of the more interesting love interest characters we've had. Because, you know, even from the very beginning, Netflix set it up as, like, you're supposed to think she's the. The innocent, white, pure art gallery director who just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. When Wilson Fisk wants to, Wants to buy it, you know, wants to. Is in the gallery. But then when they start going out, you realize, like, oh, she's actually more twisted than he is. And you see as he starts to kind of gradually open up, and he's kind of feeding her the little details about how evil he is, but in this light of, he's actually a hero, and she's just kind of, like, feeding off that. She doesn't, like, run from it. She kind of both looks horrified. Then she's like, I'm with this, Like, I'm with this guy. And like, that. That then culminates, as you say, with, when she gets, she gets a taste of being the number one, she doesn't really want to step aside in full. And she. There are things that she would run differently than he does. And so it really creates an interesting one of those. When I say, like, I'm, there's things I'm nervous about, things I'm hopeful for. Like, this is one of the things I'm hopeful for. I, I, I, I think if done well, I know it is a Sopranos rift, but I think if done well, where these two characters go, could actually be just as interesting, if not more interesting than whatever is going on with Matt Murdock. And one of the reasons I say that is because DeNavrio always had zur as his foil, his sidekick, his lover, his wife throughout the show. But while we may change some of his henchmen, he's kind of got his number one co star. It's not really Charlie Cox, it's actually her.
[00:19:14] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:19:15] Speaker B: Whereas with Daredevil, we've changed his team a lot. And that is something I'm curious to see if how much we're going to miss or, like, what they've done. So to be clear about that, when you see Foggy die, we understand from the Netflix show how close those two were, like, what that means for him to not have Foggy. If you don't have that history, you get that he's losing his partner and his friend, but I don't think you understand. Like, he's losing his conscience. He's losing the guy who always pulled him back to center when he was, you know.
And so in the Netflix show, Charlie Cox had Eldon Henson, had Deborah Ann Wolle in every episode. Then, as the show went on, we also had. He had Stick. You know, at points, he had Ben Urich. Like, they put people around him that I think were flawless.
Ultimately, Punisher in season two. Flawless. Right. And so even though he's the star, it really was these individual relationships that helped elevate Daredevil as a character. We've changed all of those already in the first couple episodes. Right. Because Henson's off the board, at least for the time being. Karen Page is really nowhere. I mean, she's around. We know she'll be back, but she only did that little bit in the first two episodes and then kind of went off. We don't have stick yet, I assume. I assume Scott Glenn's not coming back for this, and we now have, like, a new love interest and a new law partner. And that's what I'm a little bit nervous about, because when I went and started rewatching Netflix, I was like, oh, I love all these people. I love the conversations. I love the individual relationships he built with all these side characters. And I'm just nervous that we don't have those characters back. We have new characters who I'm like, are they gonna be as good? Like, are they gonna be as good? I'm not sure that's the risk.
[00:21:07] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:21:08] Speaker B: Yeah. So my one other thing for Born Again in the category of supporting characters, and I guess I shouldn't rule this out that she's coming back, because we don't totally know over the long run. But did you find yourself missing Rosario Dawson in these first two episodes? Because that the Claire the nurse character, who's very true to the comics iteration of Daredevil. I felt like the two of them hashed out a lot of the morality and the challenges and the positives of what Matt Murdock was doing in the Netflix show. That's a lot of where I felt like that got discussed. And I just. After two episodes, I was like, man, I kind of miss that character popping in and out for a couple minutes. And maybe she will at some point, but I don't know. Did you think that, not at least so far, not having her back could or would be an issue for this show?
[00:22:03] Speaker A: I would say I didn't miss her.
I didn't miss her, but I did think of her character. And for me, it seems like they've eliminated all the moral compasses of Matt in this show with Foggy, Karen Page not being around.
Now that you mentioned Rosario Dawson, that was a person that he sort of spoke and spoke to.
So I guess make sense of all things and have that conversation to make him get a different perspective. We don't have too much of that other than the people that he's dealing with now with Cherry, the new lawyer partner that he has, and then D'Onofio now possibly the therapist.
So, yes, we're getting to know some of these other relationships that he sort of has and is creating.
But those old voices aren't there.
Hers I didn't miss.
But I. I would say is probably, like you said, is a bit too early to sort of.
Because I. I don't think there's any mention of Rosario Dawson being in this season. Correct. No, I think there will probably be some sort of wondering about her because she was so much a part of that world, that Netflix. She was. She was in Luke.
Yeah.
[00:23:35] Speaker B: She knew all of them. Yeah.
[00:23:38] Speaker A: So again, I didn't miss her or her character.
I don't know if I will, depending on what happens in the rest of this season.
So for me is like I did. Yeah, I didn't miss her. I didn't miss her.
[00:24:00] Speaker B: Interesting. I just. Because it's also in my head that Disney, the comments they made about sort of making this show, and it was, not to be fair, overloaded with action in the first two episodes. But this idea that they wanted more action, less of the conversations. And I've got that stuck in my head because like these, these individual relationships, like the Claire one, those conversations to me are essential to unpacking the conundrum of Matt Murdock and Daredevil and why he does what he does and like how you should lends what he does. And I just, I don't know, it made me nervous that that's by. By not bringing back a character like that. That's a way of eliminating some of those. Those conversations. And I just feel like this show ultimately will be less if you go too far in the direction of. Of not having. Not having that. And as you said, I think the moral compass thing is a great way to put it. Matt needs a few of those outside, like, you know, in his circle, but outside him to really make this character go, I think.
[00:24:59] Speaker A: And the fact that he's a lawyer, that he, like, they made that joke with him and the therapist, you know, I don't date lawyers because they always argue whatever. Right. To hear him having those conversations with regular people who perhaps don't have that way about them in terms of arguing certain things. They're just regular people speaking there from their perspectives. And he takes that perspective. Right. To sort of get a different view of whatever it is the conversation is being spoken about from his perspective. And now having this regular person talk to me and they sort of Fall in line. But they offer something different that I wasn't thinking about because I'm always in perhaps in lawyer mode. I don't know.
Yeah, it'll be interesting. It'll be interesting to see the rest of the season. And because it does scare me to hear that they were focusing on a lot more action and less talking.
Thankfully, that hasn't been the case. But the end of the second episode, maybe the beginning of that, Brian, I mean, we have no choice but to explore and see how it's done.
[00:26:14] Speaker B: Yeah, that's not. That's not an I'm out. That's not an I'm out. It's just like a. I'm nervous. Given the standard of all these things. We didn't talk about as much leading up to the show.
[00:26:24] Speaker A: The foreshadowing of the Punisher. How do you think he comes back based on what you've seen so far?
[00:26:33] Speaker B: Oh, great catch. This was. This is one of the themes I want to talk about. So we talked about the homages, right? So I think Heat is one, and they talked about it being a crime drama. Sopranos is two. The third to me was Dark Knight. And I think it's what you're talking about.
I think what you're seeing. And there. This is a little bit, I think, of Disney riffing on, trying to riff on real life, too, because I think in New York, this kind of did happen. But the sort of bastardized logo of the Punisher on as a tattoo on crooked cops, there's a whiff of that. And also, let's bring in White Tiger here.
There is a theme in this first two episodes of these main characters are inspiring copycats and offshoots of what they do in New York. Right. And we saw this with Batman in the Dark Knight when he shows up at the beginning. And these. All these copycat Batman, right, that are out there with shotguns trying to do what he does. To me, that's what this was. It's like, okay, how the Punisher does it while straddling the line of justice is different than how crooked cops take what he does and turns it into what they do. Right. Similarly, White Tiger is kind of. Now we know White Tiger has his amulet. Probably has his amulet, has other stuff, too. But, like, he is sort of a daredevil offshoot in terms of how he's approaching handing out justice in a costume. How. I think that is a third theme they've opened up. I have no problem that they're paying homage to the Dark Knight. I think it's great. And I'm interested to see where it goes in the category supporting cast.
I. I'm. I'm really interested in Hector Ayala, and I'm really sad that the actor passed away after they filmed season one, because I was. Yeah, that's one where I'm like, I. I already saw the guy, and I was like, I like this. I like this guy. I want to see where this goes, but I know it can't go so far because he's gone.
[00:28:16] Speaker A: Yeah. Yeah. Same thing that happened with that dude in Moon Knight.
[00:28:21] Speaker B: Yeah. Yes, exactly.
[00:28:23] Speaker A: Right?
[00:28:23] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:28:24] Speaker A: How do you think the Punisher is going to come in, though? Like, what would you. What from based on what you've seen the first two episodes? I mean, obviously, yes.
The. The. The. The tattoo of the Punisher, the word punishment. Because there's been a ongoing theme of the way that word has been used over and over again, especially in the first episode by Matt Murdock.
I feel like he is going to sort of reach out to him to sort of hand out that sort of punishment that I think he feels some people at least deserve.
[00:29:00] Speaker B: I think it'd be misunderstood. That would be my expectation. My expectation is that you're supposed to think Frank Castle has broken bad and, you know, for real. And my expectation is that when they show up, there'll be a misunderstanding and that you'll come to realize Castle still sees the world kind of as he's always seen it, but his view is like, I can't control what these other guys do, and I'm not wired to go out there and stop them. That's not. I don't care.
[00:29:28] Speaker A: That's not how I work.
[00:29:28] Speaker B: I don't care enough about that. If they want to achieve the same ends as me, but they want to do it dirtier. I can sleep at night doing that, whereas Matt can't. See, that's the. The difference.
[00:29:39] Speaker A: I'm interested in seeing. I'm interested in seeing what that conversation is going to be like, because I can see that happening. I can see that being his sort of rationale or the conversation being had between Charlie Cox. I mean, Matt Murdock and Punisher.
[00:29:52] Speaker B: Yeah. Because he's going to look at it as, like, is it getting bad dudes off the street? Are we getting some bad dudes off the street? Are they. Is it making it tough? Are they scared? Like. And he's like, okay, so what's wrong if it's a few bad guys? That's what he's gonna, you know, but he's Gonna.
[00:30:07] Speaker A: But Matt Murdock is obviously gonna tell him the victims. Right. Some of these people are innocent.
[00:30:12] Speaker B: And he has a sense of morale. Yeah. And he has a sense. We know Frank has a sense of morality that brings him back, but like, it. Yeah. His tolerance for. His tolerance for evil is higher. It just is. So.
[00:30:23] Speaker A: Yeah.
Anything else, Brian?
[00:30:27] Speaker B: No, I don't want people to think it was too negative askew. I think I led with more of the flaws of the show, but I think that the tagline is good, not great. I think. I think this show still has work to do to reach the heights of season one and season three of the Netflix show. But look, I mean, this is. This is still really good Disney product relative to what we've been getting by and large. And it is. I think it's pretty gripping. Like, I think when if you watch it again, if you. Even if you don't have history, I think you're at least like, I'm interested into where I am and what's, you know, what could be going on here. So, you know, as you say, we'll see where it goes. But it's really fingers crossed in the action and fingers crossed on the supporting cast. Like, those are the two things.
[00:31:04] Speaker A: For me, I think people are gonna definitely be going back, especially if you got away week to week. That gives you time to catch up. And those numbers, I think, will be going up.
So. Yeah. Let us know in the comments section below what you guys thought of the first two episodes of Daredevil Born Again. What'd you think of the opening sequence?
[00:31:25] Speaker B: Oh, I thought it was. I thought it was of a piece with the Netflix intro. I thought they did a solid job there without just copycatting. And because the Netflix one's pretty classic at this point, music and the red and that sort of stuff. So I did. I think he did a nice job of lateraling off that without having to be exactly the same.
[00:31:43] Speaker A: Yeah. Yeah. Let us know what you guys thought of Daredevil Born Again, season one, the first two episodes.
Season four, the first two episodes. I don't even know season four, but this is Daredevil Born Again. Tell us what you guys thought of it and we'll see you next time on the.