
By: Too many to list—check out the review.
The Story: Daredevil narrowly avoids having a mid-life crisis.
The Review: It’s good thing to be fifty years old and still popular enough for people to notice. If you can get an actual commemorative issue out of it, even better! There may have been other peaks for Daredevil in earlier years, but right now he’s in one of that rare, enviable position of being both critically acclaimed and commercially successful. There’s greater joy to celebrating his longevity at a time when it looks like his greatest years are still to come.
That feeling of confidence is in no small part due to Mark Waid’s fabulous work with Daredevil for the last few years, which is why it’s so fitting that he kick off this showcase issue with “The King in Red,” a look at the life of Matt Murdock literally at age fifty. These future glimpses are tricky things because you’re projecting how certain beloved characters will end up, which is always a volatile thing to do—anyone seen the series finale of How I Met Your Mother lately?* Fortunately, with comics, readers know better than to take these future stories as anything more than potential.
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Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Alex Maleev, Alvaro Lopez, Brian Michael Bendis, Daredevil, Daredevil #1.5, Daredevil #1.5 review, Foggy Nelson, Grace Allison, Javier Rodriguez, Karl Kesel, Kurt Kesel, Mark Waid, Marvel, Marvel Comics, Matt Hollingsworth, Matt Murdock, Tom Palmer | 1 Comment »