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Daredevil has finally been busted, and this time for perjury of all things, of lying to the court about being Daredevil.
He gets sent to the Big House. Needless to say, he doesn't have a lot of friends among the inmates, although he is not without supporters outside and on the staff.
Things will get nasty as those inside try to manipulate this new player to their own ends.
A fine Daredevil arc.
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This book takes Daredevil off in an exciting new direction and is a terrific jump off from the BMB storyline that preceded it. I highly recommend it to those who have been following the story since DD was brought back from the dead by Kevin Smith.
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Holy cow...! Brian Michael Bendis' long run on "Daredevil" was a highwater mark for the superhero genre, and a tough act to follow. In this seething prison drama, writer Ed Brubaker matches the intensity of the Bendis story arc, and then some. Matt Murdoch is in Rykers Island prison, where a mix of super-powered and super-bad convicts can't wait to get their hands on him. Every claustrophobic prison flick you've seen is evoked, and all the tension and fear and adrenaline serves to show, once again, what a gnarly fighter DD actually is. Following in Frank Miller's footsteps, Bendis and Brubaker have made a bid to elevate DD from second-class status into the same kind of brooding urban uber-warrior that Batman became, and they have succeeded wildly. This volume, which gathers issues #82-87, is one of the most intense, tightly scripted comicbook stories you're likely to read, a real nailbiter, and another big step forward in the Daredevil saga. Highly recommended!
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Brian Michael Bendis concluded his long and excellent run on Daredevil by having the blind lawyer turned vigilante wind up in prison no thanks to Wilson Fisk, AKA the Kingpin. With Bendis departing, Ed Brubaker (Captain America, Sleeper) takes the reins and picks up right where Bendis left off. Matt Murdock is in Rykers and frequently has run-ins with prisoners, all the while a plot is unfolding to take his life. However, as Matt, Foggy, and others soon learn, if Matt is in prison, then who is defending Hell's Kitchen and wearing the Daredevil costume? Brubaker writes a compelling story, and the guest spots from Bullseye, Iron Fist, and Frank "The Punisher" Castle are excellently used as well. There are some shocks to be found in here, and the conclusion of The Devil, Inside and Out sets the stage for an even bolder direction that the series is going in. Michael Lark's artwork can't compare to Alex Maleev's, no matter how hard he may try, but it's pretty good nonetheless. All in all, this first storyarc in Ed Brubaker's run is a great pickup for new and old readers alike.
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