In the Third season everything looks different and exciting in this series which seem more exciting. The supernatural hero returns to complete his duties, which he started in previous seasons. Daredevil is the blind lawyer who will protect a city completely after the destruction of the building and after the hand-making.
Perhaps more than any show in the whole Marvel-Netflix Globular Cluster, Daredevil makes me question everything I like and everything I dislike about the Heroes for Hire and their simultaneously intriguing and mind-numbing transits through space-time.
The new baddie's arrival on the scene is perhaps one of the new season's best achievements -- not simply because of the character's popularity in the comics, but due to the careful manner by which the writers and Bethel breathe life into him.
[Season 3] is a strong outing,... as new showrunner Erik Oleson reorients the Man Without Fear to very much be full of fear and obstacles as he attempts to climb his way out of the debris of everything that has come before.
Just as Matt Murdock rises from the ashes and rubble to save Hell's Kitchen one more time, Daredevil Season 3 could potentially do the same for Marvel shows on Netflix.
Unlike the previous two seasons, Season 3 minimizes Matt and his moral dilemmas to make more room for what is truly one of Marvel's best supporting casts.
There's a linear flow to it all that is focused and efficient. That doesn't mean the show couldn't lose steam like so many other promising yet still flawed Marvel series on Netflix. But so far, so good.