What's Inside?
- Matt Murdock shocks courtroom by revealing he is Daredevil, choosing principle over revenge in the season’s defining moral turning point.
- Wilson Fisk loses control of New York, unleashes violence, then ultimately surrenders after Matt forces him to confront consequences.
- Finale sets up Season 3 with Matt in prison, Defenders reuniting, Bullseye looming, and Heather Glenn’s dark transformation teased.
The moment Matt Murdock stood up in that courtroom and told the world he was Daredevil, something shifted. Not just for the character, but for the MCU itself. Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 has been building toward a reckoning, and its finale, “The Southern Cross,” delivers one that is equal parts legal drama, moral philosophy, and superhero spectacle. But what makes the ending so memorable is not the action. It is the choice. Matt gets his shot at Wilson Fisk, and instead of destroying him, he offers something far more complicated.
Why Did Matt Murdock Reveal He Is Daredevil in Court?

There is a direct parallel here that the show leans into deliberately. Eighteen years ago, Tony Stark walked up to a bank of microphones and told the room, “I am Iron Man.” Matt Murdock does something similar, but his stage is a courtroom, and his evidence is his own body. Standing as co-counsel in the case against Karen Page, with cameras rolling and Fisk sitting across the room, Matt throws his cane into the air to reveal a billy club, watches it ricochet off multiple surfaces, and catches it cleanly. For a blind man, it is a near-impossible thing to witness. He follows it up by placing himself on Fisk’s Northern Star boat, the same vessel used to ferry illegal weapons to paying customers.
It is unorthodox. It is also exactly enough. The case collapses, Karen walks free, and Fisk’s carefully constructed public image begins cracking in real time.
What follows is just as gripping. Cornered and humiliated, Fisk loses whatever restraint he had been holding onto. He turns on the protesters who storm the building, beating through them with terrifying force, searching for Matt with the singular focus of a man who has decided consequence no longer applies to him. Matt eventually removes his mask and meets Fisk face to face. He does not fight him. He talks. He tells Fisk plainly that what they are both doing is tearing apart the city they each claim to love, and that the only way out is to stop. Fisk, somehow, listens. He leaves. Later in the episode, he is seen somewhere warm, far from New York.
That moment is not mercy in the soft sense. It is Matt refusing to become what he has been fighting. Letting the mob kill Fisk, or finishing the job himself, would have made him part of the same cycle he spent the entire season trying to break. His arrest at the end of the episode, which he accepts without resistance, makes the same point. Justice has to mean something across the board, including for the man who just saved the city.
What Does Matt’s Arrest Mean for Daredevil: Born Again Season 3?

Matt going to prison is the most consequential thing the finale does, and the show knows it. When the police arrive at the restaurant, he hears them before Karen does. He does not run. He kneels and puts his hands behind his head. For a character who has spent years operating in the shadows, the gesture carries real weight. His identity is public, his legal standing is finished, and the one wall between Matt Murdock and Daredevil no longer exists.
Season 3 will have to contend with all of that. And based on set photos that have already surfaced from production, it looks like Matt will not be alone in dealing with the fallout.
Mike Colter’s return as Luke Cage is confirmed, and the Season 2 finale gives his reappearance a proper emotional foundation. Jessica Jones had referenced earlier in the season that CIA operative Mr. Charles had once tried to recruit people with abilities, and that not everyone she knew had said no. That mystery lands in Episode 7, when it becomes clear Luke had been working for Charles overseas. His reappearance in the final episode, with his daughter Danielle running toward him, is genuinely affecting. But it also opens a much bigger thread. Luke’s ties to Charles, who is connected to both Fisk and OXE Group’s weapons operation, mean that his time away from New York may matter more than it initially seemed.
Set photos from Season 3 production have also confirmed that Finn Jones is returning as Danny Rand, which means the Defenders are almost fully assembled again. The one complication is that Matt is behind bars. The leading theory, supported by those photos which show Jessica, Luke, and Danny without Matt, is that the three of them will be working to get him out. Given the morally complicated terrain all of them operate on, it tracks.
Who Is Heather Glenn Becoming, and What Happened to Bullseye?

Two of the finale’s most unsettling moments belong to supporting characters, and both land harder for being underplayed.
Heather Glenn’s arc across the season has been quietly disturbing. A trained professional trying to understand the psychology of vigilantism, she became a target of Muse and spent much of the back half of the season drawn deeper into Fisk’s orbit. The finale’s final scene with her is brief and says almost nothing out loud. She opens a drawer, takes out the Muse mask that nearly killed her, and puts it on. The mirror shot that follows shows her face reflected back, and she is smiling. It is not grief. It is not fear. It is something far more troubling, the suggestion that trauma has not just left a mark on her but begun to reshape who she is. Whether she is stepping into the Muse identity herself or simply confronting something she can no longer outrun, the show leaves it deliberately open. Either way, she is almost certainly a major threat in Season 3.
Benjamin Poindexter’s ending is quieter, and that is precisely what makes it unnerving. Bullseye, who spent Season 1 trying to destroy Matt’s reputation on Fisk’s behalf and this season killing Vanessa Fisk in an act of long-delayed retribution, ends the finale seated on a plane beside Mr. Charles. He does not speak. He simply watches. Given everything we know about how Poindexter operates, the stillness reads less like resolution and more like the moment before something breaks. Charles may not realize yet what is sitting next to him.
Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 is a dense, morally serious piece of television that earns its big moments because it takes the time to build them. The finale does not wrap things up so much as rearrange the board for what comes next. Matt is in prison. His identity is public. Fisk is still breathing. The Defenders are gathering. And somewhere out there, Heather Glenn is looking in a mirror and smiling behind a dead man’s mask.
Season 3 has a lot to answer for.








