Sunday, 12 October 2014

Hey, Kids: Your Official First Look at Charlie Cox in Marvel's Daredevil on Netflix


Who follows things on Marvel.com?  Not me.  That's how I found this.


Matt Murdock suits up in the first images from the new series for Netflix!

Above: Charlie Cox as Daredevil.


We've known for quite a while that Charlie Cox would bring the Man Without Fear to life in "Marvel's Daredevil" on Netflix, but now we've got your first look at the actor in character with the first two images from the series!
Above: Charlie Cox as Daredevil...is that really the costume he has now??


Along with the first image of Cox as Murdock, you can also check out a photo featuring Matt in his first costume, inspired by Frank Miller and John Romita, Jr.'s seminal DAREDEVIL: MAN WITHOUT FEAR series, widely considered to be one of the most important and influential Daredevil stories of all time.
Combined with the intense footage seen by lucky fans at New York Comic Con, we're even more excited to see Charlie Cox as the badass Daredevil we've always wanted!

Take a look at the first photos from the series below followed by the original image by Romita, Jr. that inspired Matt's costume, and keep your eyes on Marvel.com in the coming months for the latest on "Marvel's Daredevil"!



"Marvel's Daredevil" follows the journey of Matt Murdock, who was blinded as a young boy but imbued with extraordinary senses, now fighting against injustice by day as a lawyer, and by night as the super hero Daredevil in modern day Hell's Kitchen, New York City.
 Marvel's first original series on Netflix is Executive Produced by series Showrunner Steven S. DeKnight ("Spartacus," "Buffy: The Vampire Slayer," "Angel") and Drew Goddard ("Cabin in the Woods," "Lost," "Buffy The Vampire Slayer," in addition to writing the first two episodes of "Marvel's Daredevil"), along with Marvel TV's Jeph Loeb ("Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.," "Smallville," "Heroes").

"Marvel's Daredevil" is produced by Marvel Television in association with ABC Studios for Netflix

Daredevil (really?) in the, uh, "seminal"  DAREDEVIL: MAN WITHOUT FEAR
 
For more information on "Marvel's Daredevil," and the other exciting new Marvel Television series coming to Netflix, stay tuned to Marvel.com

4 comments:

  1. You know, the news from DC and Marvel ....I mean, Disney just makes me laugh so hard. Does any of these guys that make the tv shows know anything about comics ? At all ? Like having actually read one ? And Thor .... he´s not worthy because somebody whispered something to him ? And now he can´t get it up anymore.

    You have to laugh about this crap, right ? Well, we still got the ESSENTIALS and the occasional tarde of when comics still were good. Kirby´s FF and all that.

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  2. Well, I've been reading a lot of 1980s-1990s comics such as West Coast Avengers (changed at #47 to Avengers West Coast because Marvel "realised" books were listed alphabetically!!!) and you can say that around 1995 things were getting VERY bad.
    Read comics? "WHY?" read a comic is what they'll ask back. Does it make money if they read a comic? It's down to $s now. I said over and over that once Di$ney bought Marvel it was the end of the company. Its all there on the record.
    And, yep, we have the Essentials and our old comic books and that's it. You are going to see more merchandise and less comics. Movies are the big money maker now. Di$ney just want money. Di$ney Publishing Worldwide is the company now and Marvel just a logo.
    Depressing.

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  3. I meant to ask what you thought of the Civil Wars series? It just killed things completely for me!

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  4. Dang! Just checked your blog and found some reviews of the series. You mention Nightcrawler exclaiming "lieberstesh!" and when I read it at the time I was puzzled. Never ever heard it so thought it was a lettering mistake. "lieberstesh" is explained on one Marvel page as "German, English. Lieberstesh, "Lieber" is German for dear, "stesh" seems to be a English slang word for "very, very cool". Now, hold on a minute there,boy! I use 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th century as well as more modern slang in my books and I love the more obscure stuff. I can tell you that as a 57 year old who has known punks, Goths, hippies and all sorts of folk that I have never, ever EVER heard "tesh" as a slang word for "cool" -this is made up crap by an American writer "because it sounded German-ish" and I think it would have been better to use real German in that particular situation such as: "Man sieht sie heiß!"/"Wow. Was für ein Outfit!" or maybe "Mann, sie gibt mir einen Steifen!" (he-hem....maybe not the last one!!).

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