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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brubaker's run ends in fine form., October 22, 2009
This review is from: Daredevil: Return of the King (Paperback)
Ed Brubaker arrived on the "Daredevil" title with issue 82 of the present volume, following a mammoth run by Brian Michael Bendis that lasted for some 60+ issues and, with Brubaker's consent, ended with Daredevil in prison awaiting trial, his identity having been exposed. Brubaker took this extremely difficult spot and ran with it, ran with it for around 40 issues of his own. This volume, which collects the final five issues of his run (#116-119, 500; the series resumed its old numbering), endeavours to leave his successor (Andy Diggle) in a similar predicament. Some spoilers follow.
This is the second trade in a two-part story ("Lady Bullseye" being the first part; for whatever reason, Marvel has ceased renaming Brubaker's trades into multi-part volumes, which was done with the first four collections, "The Devil, Inside And Out" and "Hell to Pay" vols. 1 & 2), as Brubaker revisits the Hand, the ninja clan introduced during the Miller era who have been reliable opponents for Daredevil ever since. In the preceding trade, they aimed to make Daredevil their leader, which he declined: now their gaze turns elsewhere, to Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin. With his return, Brubaker's Daredevil comes full circle. The Kingpin was a major figure in the first arc, but, apart from a one-issue appearance at the end of the second, he has been off the board for the next two years' worth of stories, while other villains occupied Matt's attention. This arc is an absorbed finale to many of the themes that Brubaker has been working on since he started on the book.
At the same time, Brubaker conducts some of his own revisions of the Hand's mythos, largely through the introduction of Master Izo, a multi-centenarian ninja who was, we are shown, the original founder of the Chaste, and sensei to Daredevil's sensei, Stick. The final revelations in the climactic issue #500 suggest a completely new spin on the purpose of Daredevil's life, which gives Andy Diggle quite a bit of new ideas to work with. Izo is one of the most interesting additions to the Daredevil mythos in quite a while. Likewise, Brubaker's creation Lady Bullseye gets more of her history filled in here, and the character ends up in a situation that has me eagerly awaiting her next appearance.
Looking over the whole of Brubaker's run from the vantage-point of the end, I think it's very clear how much of it is a treatise on the consequences of his identity having been revealed in Bendis' "Out". Matt got out of jail fairly quickly, but this earlier act was far harder to escape. The middle period of Brubaker's run documents Matt's attempt to get his life back, but the grinding resolution requires him to accept that he can't. This reaches its apogee in this arc, where he stops hanging on to his mentally-crippled wife Milla and more or less leaves his civilian life behind to take the Hand's leadership. He leaves his most stalwart civilian allies, Foggy and Dakota, a note telling them to put his stuff in storage, and just leaves, the better so they can't follow.
That, I think, is what Brubaker is arguing with this run: that Matt Murdock, lawyer, can't exist anymore. The new trials ahead he will face as Daredevil. Given the crushing angst of his reality over the last decade, that might be a welcome new challenge. We will see where Andy Diggle takes it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Run Finishes Strong, January 7, 2010
This review is from: Daredevil: Return of the King (Paperback)
There's not too much to add - if you're a fan of Brubaker or the character of Matt Murdock, you're going to want this book.
I wanted to be sure to chime in on this volume, though, as I was a little critical of the preceding one, Lady Bullseye. While I still question the marketing decision to split the two books, the plot points raised in LB are quite satisfactorily resolved here. The promise of a new status quo and supporting cast is exciting, and there is even an in-story verbal jab about DD being a little too mopey that I enjoyed. Not the best of Brubaker or Marvel's critical flagship book, but pretty darn good.
Michael Lark and David Aja do great work here, as well. Until Aja gets another assignment, this is a good fix for those jonesing for more of his gorgeous art after his Immortal Iron Fist wrapped.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dramatic end to a remarkable run, December 5, 2009
This review is from: Daredevil: Return of the King (Paperback)
"Daredevil: Return Of The King"
Written by Ed Brubaker
(Marvel Comics, 2009)
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In the years-long run of authors Brian Michael Bendis and Ed Brubaker, the Daredevil character has gone through a remarkable revitalization. The Bendis/Maleev stories were a singular experience, a long story arc that made a major superhero character more palpable and real than ever before, in which DD's personal life was torn apart, his secret identity publicly exposed and his security thrown into question. Ed Brubaker followed with a similar intent, but gradually moved DD back into more conventional terrain, particularly in the last dozen or so issues, in which the bad-ninja secret society called The Hand made its resurgence and once again became more central to the Daredevil mythos. In part this may be because Brubaker was positioning the character for another writer to take the reins, and wanted to leave him on familiar footing.
Nonetheless, this final collection of Brubaker-penned episodes has both a return to the past and a sense of "jumping the shark," and while it was an engaging and exciting read, with a few intriguing surprises, it also felt forced at times and not always true to form. The ending, although rushed, opens a big can of worms for future issues to explore -- I'm skeptical about a new writer being able to sustain the moodiness and stylishness of the Bendis/Brubaker years, but I'm certainly willing to give it a try. No other character in the Marvel universe has had such a strong transformation into something close to "adult" literature, and several characters in DD's world have emerged as worthy of deeper exploration. We'll see how the new guy does, soon enough. (Joe Sixpack, ReadThatAgain book reviews)
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