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Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)

 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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Daredevil1964
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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Daredevil is a 1964 comic book series from Marvel Comics by Stan Lee and Bill Everett, with artistic input from Jack Kirby and Wally Wood. Daredevil was an attempt to recreate Lee's earlier success with the archetypal "everyman" hero Spider-Man, this time with an adult central character and a somewhat Darker and Edgier tone. The new character first appeared in Daredevil #1 (April, 1964)At a young age, Matt Murdock is blinded by a radioactive substance whilst rescuing a blind man from the path of an oncoming truck. Growing up in Hell's Kitchen, Matt was supported by his father, boxer "Battlin' Jack" Murdock. However, desperate to make ends meet, Jack turned boxing under the Fixer, a known gangster, and the only man willing to contract the aging boxer. When Jack refuses to throw a fight because his son is in the audience, he is killed by one of the Fixer's men, leaving Matt orphaned. Working his way to graduating law school and becoming a lawyer, Matt is joined by his best friend Franklin "Foggy" Nelson and their secretary/Matt's love interest Karen Page. Desperate to avenge his father yet having promised him not to use violence to deal with his problems, Matt gets around that promise by adopting a new identity who can use physical force, donning a costume to fight crime as Daredevil.Notable storylines created during this run includes: Born Again (1986)
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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Captain Geographic
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Captain Geographic: Number Nine wears a costume made from the stars and stripes.
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Darker and Edgier
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: During the mid-1990s, the series became even edgier, since the title was placed under the "Marvel Edge" line of books, which included other antiheroes/urban heroes like Punisher and the Ghost Rider.
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Genre Shift
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Genre Shift: Gerry Conway really leaned into the sci-fi aspects of the Marvel Universe.
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The Rival
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_1c3d047e
comment
The Rival: Frank Miller brought The Punisher in for a story arc, highlighting the vast differences in the methods, personalities, and ideologies of the two vigilantes. The relationship stuck and they often show up in each other's series, usually as an antagonist but occasionally as an ally. In an aversion of the usual arc, at first Punisher took a liking to Daredevil and considered it an honor to meet him, but over time grew less and less tolerant of him, going from tolerable ass to intolerable ass.
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Aborted Arc
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
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Aborted Arc: Near the end of Miller's run, Stick revealed to Daredevil that his super senses were not unique. In the past, every one had the same senses he does, they just lost them over time. The radiation only unlocked his senses, it didn't create them. Their conversation is interrupted by the arrival of a wounded Black Widow, and Stick dies soon afterwards. Sadly, no other writer picked up this thread.
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Walking the Earth
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Walking the Earth: More like "Walking Upstate New York," but this is what Matt does post-"Inferno."
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Rogues' Gallery Transplant
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_2f8c5157
comment
Rogues' Gallery Transplant: In a 1996 issue, Martinique Jason (aka, the first female Mastermind) hires Foggy Nelson's firm, and later fights Daredevil with her psychic illusions.
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Wolverine Publicity
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comment
Wolverine Publicity: The first-ever issue featured a pretty blatant case of this trope, where a quarter of the cover page was dedicated to the likes of Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four, Marvel's most popular characters at the time... who didn't appear in the story at all. The use of those characters was meant to set Daredevil up as a Marvel hero worthy of being compared to them, although it doesn't make the trope's usage any less shameless.
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Russian Roulette
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_3678bb22
comment
Russian Roulette: Between Daredevil and Bullseye. Played with, however: the gun had no bullets, but Bullseye didn't know that.
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Runaway Train
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_3b20d7f4
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Runaway Train: In the "Inferno" crossover, Matt is on a runaway train...to Hell.
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Early-Installment Weirdness
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_4f4372e9
comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: The yellow-and-red costume. It also only had one D on the chest, instead of two. As soon as Wally Wood introduced the new, all-red one, the yellow costume never made another appearance (aside from Daredevil: Yellow).
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Take Over the City
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_6aace27c
comment
Take Over the City: The plan of long-running Big Bad Kerwin J. Broderick. He was already wielding considerable clandestine influence over San Fransisco, but after getting his hands on some alien technology, he decided that he wanted to literally make himself king.
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Beware the Silly Ones
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_6c75e0e4
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Beware the Silly Ones: Most of Daredevils foes during this time were pretty silly, but that's not to say they were all harmless. Yes, the Stilt-Man's shtick is ridiculous. He still gives Daredevil tremendous trouble every time they fight, since attacking his mechanical legs does nothing and swinging up to attack his actual body gives him a chance to take aim... and unlike a lot of gimicky supervillains, he tends to have a gun. The Jester is a failed actor in a clown getup and seems anything but threatening... except, he has worked hard to master a number of fields like fencing and acrobatics in preparation for the big roles, making him dangerously skilled in every area except acting.
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Malevolent Architecture
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comment
Malevolent Architecture: Daredevil #208 ("The Deadliest Night of My Life" by Harlan Ellison, Arthur Byron Cover, and David Mazzucchelli) is all about Daredevil being tricked into a mansion filled with death traps. The entire issue is just him escaping one after the other until the entire mansion explodes, which he barely escapes. It is considered one of the best issues of Daredevil.
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The Alcoholic
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The Alcoholic: Heather Glenn and, whenever he appears in the book, Tony Stark.
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Artistic License – Law
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_8391b1c7
comment
Artistic License – Law: Despite the protagonist being a lawyer, the portrayal of legal matters was often haphazard. As an example, an early issue has Matt conclude that the Purple Man can't be prosecuted, because there is no law against him asking people for things. However, many of the things Killgrave has at that point asked people to do (give him money from a bank's register, beat up Daredevil) were themselves illegal, meaning it should have been possible to bring him up on charges for incitement or conspiracy.
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Lazy Alias
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_894f9af7
comment
Lazy Alias: Matt's father was "Battlin' Jack Murdock." So when Matt fakes his death and changes his name, he changes it to..."Jack Batlin." Real smooth, Matt.
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Ancient Conspiracy
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Ancient Conspiracy: The Chaste vs the Hand. An ancient conspiracy of ninjas.
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Rule of Symbolism
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Rule of Symbolism: J. M. DeMatteis's three part arc ("Inferno", "Purgatorio" and "Paradiso") breaks Daredevil's psyche, only to reassemble it again by the end of the run.
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Big Bad
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Big Bad: Miller basically turns the Kingpin into the Big Bad of the entire book. Even when Miller leaves, the Kingpin stays as Daredevil's ultimate nemesis.
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He-Man Woman Hater
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He-Man Woman Hater: During "Inferno", a one-shot villain named Sir was introduced. Sir worshipped "maleness" and loathed frailty and femaleness, so much so Sir killed women. In "Purgatorio", it is revealed that Sir's real identity is a woman named Marsha, who wanted to get rid of any "female weakness" and underwent both a surgical and psychological process to mold her body into a powerful male form, because Marsha promised never to "become a victim" again. The process worked, but the resulting persona, "Sir", escaped before the operation was... complete.
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Secret-Keeper
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_9f970427
comment
Secret-Keeper: During Kesel's run, Matt is on a date with Karen Page when Peter Parker and Ben Urich (from the Daily Bugle) come to meet them. Suddenly, a Spider-Man swings overhead, and Matt says he has an appointment. Karen, Ben, and even Peter cover up for his absence, each other unaware that they all know Daredevil's identity.
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Healing Factor
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Healing Factor: Number Nine's power, which makes her pretty much indestructible.
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Gratuitous Ninja
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_a6441fa
comment
Gratuitous Ninja: A major part of Frank Miller's makeover of the series consisted of turning Matt into this trope, as well as using it as a reoccurring theme.
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Mob War
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comment
Mob War: "Gangwar!"
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Working with the Ex
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_aa58bf92
comment
Working with the Ex: In 1997, Daredevil goes to work with Natasha for a three-part arc titled "The Widow's Kiss", while still dating Karen Page during this time. Also in 1997, in Elektra's solo title (1996-1997), he partnered up with Elektra, another ex, during the "American Samurai" arc.
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Significant Wardrobe Shift
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_affc0c98
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Significant Wardrobe Shift: Daredevil switches out his iconic red costume to an armored black-and-red one.
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 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_b2280b66
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Retcon
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_b2280b66
comment
Retcon: A pretty minor one, all things considered, but Frank Miller retconned what age Matt was when his father was killed. Originally, he was already in college. In Frank Miller's miniseries, Daredevil: The Man Without Fear, Matt is younger, and is instead in 12th grade. So instead of his father pressuring him to be important and Matt studying and then enrolling in law right before his father died, Matt was pressured to study and picked law... but didn't necessarily have to follow through, since he had already acted as a vigilante at the time and his father was dead.
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The Ace
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_b5b4b077
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The Jester is a failed actor in a clown getup and seems anything but threatening... except, he has worked hard to master a number of fields like fencing and acrobatics in preparation for the big roles, making him dangerously skilled in every area except acting.
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Broken Bird
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Broken Bird: Heather Glenn and she becomes more broken over time, until she eventually kills herself.
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What the Hell, Hero?
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comment
What the Hell, Hero?: Matt got this a lot during the Miller era, particularly for things like making an alliance with the Kingpin and ruining his girlfriend's career.
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Bad Guy Bar
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comment
Bad Guy Bar: McKenzie and Miller introduced Josie's Bar.
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Fake Twin Gambit
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_e9ee28bc
comment
Fake Twin Gambit: It's fun to point out that Matt made up a fake twin in order to have someone to blame for Daredevil, but this actually had far-reaching consequences.
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 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_ef3d1b57
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Technician Versus Performer
 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book) / int_ef3d1b57
comment
Technician Versus Performer: Parodied with the Jester. He wants to be an actor, but he thinks he's such a natural talent at acting that he doesn't need to study or practice. This makes him a terrible actor, something he refuses to admit. However, he has trained hard to make himself a master athlete so he could do his own stunts, making him an extremely skilled and dangerous thief and fighter and implying that he could have mastered acting too if he'd just learned the ropes. In other words, he's a Technician who thinks he's a Performer.
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Faking the Dead
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comment
Faking the Dead: Daredevil buries Matt Murdock in a grave and changes his costume to a black and red suit. He is not dead, of course.
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Name and Name: Daredevil and the Black Widow.
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Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)

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 Daredevil (1964) (Comic Book)
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