A fight from the last episode of Marvel's Daredevil season 1. Daredevil fighting Wilson Fisk (Kingpin) who had escaped from the police after being arested.
He doesn't possess skill in swordsmanship his skills are western boxing karate taekwondo muay thai judo savate shinobi Iri intonjutsu boryaku bojutsu taijutsu wing Chun kali capoeira wushu Brazilian jui jitsu and aikido
I have to agree, Fisk is one of my favorite villains in the MCU he's just great, along with The Purple Guy from Jessica Jones. They have done a better job at being intimidating than Iron Monger or the Mandarin ever did.
This was one of THOSE moments in recent history. The sheer awesomeness and satisfaction that came from this series, in my opinion, was like a wake-up call to something undiscovered or akin to a generation turning on their TV and discovering Elvis for the first time. Absolutely love this game-changer.
daredevil: trained his whole life. fighting a war he shouldn’t have to. fought thugs and mercenaries for a good while. fast, strong and very enduring. wilson: 🤬
fisk wants to be the hero so bad, and daredevil "took that away" he is a villain who doesn't want to be the villain. but as denzel said in the equalizer "ya gotta be who you are in this world"
This is still one of my favorite moments of any superhero thing. Matt and his buddies did everything they could to take Fisk down the "right" way, destroying his assets and empire, but now they gotta bring him in. So Matt, messing with him with a line Wilson fed him earlier, tells him to "Take your shit" and it's on.
Well to be fair Frank and Matts strength are probably near the same due to their physical physique whereas Fisk is bigger than Matt so it's not easy to take him down even if Matt has acrobatic and boxing fighting styles
Neither men are physically superior to Kingpin. They may know how to fight better than him, but Fisk knows how to take a punch and dish an even stronger one out.
0:11 When Daredevil lands the "huh!" noise that he makes sounds like Spider-Man when he jumps in Spider-Man The Movie Video Game. I mean EXACTLY like it. Anyone else think so? I'm thinking that they might have used the same sound clip. Can anyone else tell me if they agree with me?
0:24 Andrew garfield talking to Tom holland about ruining his chance at getting more sequels and spinoff and be the best spider man there is because of him being in the mcu be like:
Now a days everyone wants grit and realism while I love this show a lot damn more than the mcu movies at it's core it is still a superhero show, I mean the fact most people seem to moan about kingpin strength yet except the fact that there main protagonist had special sight and hearing baffles me O.o I love the show but if you keep scrutinising every tiny detail you're just ruining it for yourself
I hope so too, I have always imagine Tom Holland and Charlie Cox should ask Marvel Studios of making a Spider-Man & Daredevil film where two heroes are taking down Kingpin.
“No! God knows I want to, but you don’t get to destroy who I am! You will go back to prison, and you will spend the rest of your miserable life in a cage, knowing you’ll never have Vanessa, that this city rejected you, it beat you. I Beat You! You’ll keep my secret, and you won’t harm Karen Page and Foggy Nelson or anyone else. Because if you do, I will go after your wife. And I will prove Vanessa, or in the murder of Agent Ray Nadeem, and like her husband, she will spend the rest of her life in a cell.”
What's great to know is now that these characters are backed by Disney money they'll be able to achieve the feats from the comics. Daredevil will be more acrobatic and will truly swing around the city with the cable in his batons, and Kingpin has already showed the strength and resilience to needed be able to feasibly fight someone like Spider-Man.
@@bryanrogers5648 the downside of having Disney back them up is that now there's a fair chance Daredevil loses his grittiness (I haven't watched " *the* " She Hulk Episode yet, but I'm sure they've toned down the grim nature of the character
Kingpin's pretty badass. Imagine how dangerous he would be if he was more agile and actually learned a fighting style as apposed to the generic street brawling he seems to rely on.
I love how this fight subtly shows Fisk's sheer brute strength without being too over the top. Throwing Daredevil across an alley into a dumpster with one arm, picking him up and throwing him into a wall, and then picking him up and holding him high above his head. Amazing stuff. I hope we get more of this in Daredevil Season 3.
Yes sir! It was at the 1:11 mark that Daredevil found out who he was messing with, LOL. I really hope they recapture Kingpin in all his greatness in season 3. I would love to see more of the brute strength displayed.
Glad he’s not ripping car doors off the hinges and taking cars to the chest. Glad he’s only fighting due to circumstance and not going out of his way to murder someone in the middle of a busy city. That would be insane
@@williamowen-holt2918Ofc I agree. I don’t mind Marvel and I enjoyed NWH, but most MCU fans just consume what’s ever given to them and act like any criticism isn’t valid cause “comic accuracy”. Criticism makes things better. The Hawkeye finale was terrible and their rendition of kingpin is nothing like the one we’ve seen previously.
You can. Lots of yoga (to get muscles ready) and gymnastics training. Box jumps and jogging to get your explosiveness up. You can do it. If you want it bad enuf.
Everything about this fight was awesome. If you look at everything that happened right up to this point and connect this together, the emotional complexity of this scene hits you like a brick. Fisk has accepted his role as the bad guy, not giving a damn about what ends he uses to accomplish his goals, and is about to make his getaway when all of a sudden the rug is pulled out from under him when Matt comes along. Matt, on the other hand, is finally starting to turn things around after a long and harsh struggle to take down Fisk, and is accepting his role as the hero and finally seeing his mission come to fruition. Both characters have completed the transformations we've seen take place for them in the series, and they finally clash in an epic showdown. Also, personally I love fights where the opponents are so dichotomous in their approaches to fighting. I love seeing cunning and skill take on brute strength and carnal rage. In addition, Fisk isn't that incompetent of a fighter; he clearly is seen blocking a couple of punches in the fights he's in. If anything he's more of a brawler. Also, I loved how in this fight you see that Fisk has speed in addition to strength; the way he charges at Daredevil is shot in a way that shows how fast he is for a man of his size.
"This city doesn't deserve a better tomorrow! It deserves to drown in its own filth! It deserves people like my father; people like you!" This line, along with the "Good Samaritan" monologue, goes a long way to reveal Fisk's true beliefs about his city. He DESPISES it, and his criminal empire serves simply to enact his vengeance upon it for the way it treated him his whole life. His entire previous manner regarding how he loved his city and wanted to save it was all a subconscious act as he struggled to embrace his true position on the moral compass. The only thing he really loved was Vanessa.
I disagree. I think it shows how Fisk has had enough. He legitimately tried to change the city but after getting betrayed by his allies, Daredevil ruining his plots, and Wesley Dying, he just couldn't handle it anymore and snapped.
Honestly I think his speech pretty much revealed how he planned to change Hell's Kitchen. Where Murdoch wants to unroot corruption and expose it for all the world to see, revile and fight back against, Fisk believes in the Phoenix approach. He believed if he could corrupt the city enough and have it linger long enough, that it would eventually destroy itself. And out of the ashes he intended to rise. But Murdoch ruined that for him by exposing him.
Fisk BELIEVED that he was changing the city but the fact his he wasn't. Every action he took in the show was self serving. It was about building himself up as a messiah for New York and reaping the benefits. The moment where he escapes from the cops is him finally dropping the bullshit. It's him getting mad at everyone for trying to hurt him and deprive him of the life he feels is rightfully his. Then he realizes just how much pleasure he would take in hurting them back, and how that naturally means he probably isn't the good guy. He didn't snap from the pressure and turn bad, he just finally stopped kidding himself and let his devil out (albeit in a different way than Matt.)
@@genemaxwell4 Yeah, agree. However, what's interesting is that basically all the things everyone answered to @Scrummy64 under his comment are not contradicting each other, I think both what You said and what's stated in general are sorta true! His arc in season 1 is pretty much a less visually intense version of what happens later with Dex in season 2. It's almost like Fisk is trying to force the "good" side of his actions to face up, while sorta concealing the "bad" side of it, forcing it to face down and considering it a "well, that's side effects of sorts". In the end he is like "Yes, there's another side to what I tried to do, and You wanted that exposed, Daredevil? Well, you can go to hell, and this city can go to hell then if it supports you, to hell where my father already is and all you who hurt me will be at".
@@galactic85 Fisk thought he was doing good for the city...but in reality...he wasn't doing it for the good of the city...he was doing it for himself. He always had this need to feel God like, like some kind of beacon of hope. He had a rough childhood and wanted some kind of release. Then along comes Daredevil to take away everything and trash his reputation. Here he's acting like a spoiled child, throwing a tantrum because he didn't get what he want. He wanted to kill Matt..figuring if he can't have this city...no one will.
This scene is proof that Hawkeye's Kingpin felt weird. Here, Fisk gets cornered by Daredevil but he still threatens and fights him hand to hand. In Hawkeye, Fisk basically just begged for his life which felt very off to me. Whether he really is dead or not, I gotta say I loved this Kingpin better.
Hawkeye's Kingpin was much reduced, but that's in it's favor... if Fisk was back to being the untouchable, unflappable mob boss he was in Daredevil, after the events of S3, it would make all of Matt's victories meaningless. There's some satisfaction in him needing to slum it with the tracksuit bozos. And while he was trying to reason with Maya, it felt more like when he tried and failed at appealing to Frank Castle's sensibilities in S2. Plus, he probably didn't want to fight her (which wouldn't be smart when she's got a gun pointed at his head) since he thought of her as a surrogate daughter. Since this is based on the comic storyline, he's almost definitely not dead, but you are right about one thing... he's got a ways to go to climb back to power.
@@tfly999 His comment is about the writing of Fisk in Hawkeye. Fisk is untouchable even when he is down just like how he quickly regain status in Prison after Season 1 DD. The writers of Hawkeye made him feel to campy.
It’s Maya we’re talking about here not DD, someone he has a special close connection with. We haven’t seen much of their relationship yet as much as we saw him with Vanessa but I reckon it’s along the lines of that, you’d want to plead for your life instead of fighting for it if you’re being pinned down by someone you love. There’s something off about his character in that ep like how come he dared venturing into the streets alone to capture Eleanor but his behaviour with Maya I could still get behind
It just seemed really strange him getting run over and blown up and walking away like it was nothing. Very out of place. That Hawkeye episode was weird.
you were born after 1999 I take it. From that statement you seem dumb enough not to establish why this crap that was edited to ungodly mince is good as we hoped it would be. Shut up.
I really like this version of Kingpin (no disrespect to MCD's solid portrayal, cause like this one), he's a deceptively strong and good fighter that gives the hero a challenge.
Alex Braunberger I think it’s an apples and oranges type of thing. I think MCD in the directors cut is more in line with old school kingpin in that he’s calm and collected and can throw down but from the first scene of the film, he’s already the kingpin.. But d’onofrio had more time to develop him and show the transformation from Wilson Fisk to the kingpin.
+CRO no it was better than batman vs bane, unless you mean batman vs superman. The batman and bane fight barely even had any music in it. Unless your talking about their last fight.
chill out guys they just show only 30mins of Fisk. There is a whole a lot of action remains. Marvel is good for Giving Fans what they want. First disappoint us then Surprise us.
kingpin isn't actually fat. He is composed almost entirely of muscle that has been developed to enormous size, giving him peak human strength, on par to that of captain america. He only has a bare 9 pounds of fat in his body. He also specialises in sumo wrestling, judo, hapkido and more.
0:32 Gives me chills everytime... I love how you see the rage he has, and it's all because of daredevil. In my opinion the hatred between the two makes this fight so awesome...
Proof that Netflix can do Marvel shows better than Disney. So far Hawkeye is the best one they made and it doesn’t even come close to this. I love Hawkeye but this is Legendary!
@@raduandrei3068 makes perfect sense. fisk's human but his anatomy and structure is much more heavy and strong like a gorilla or something dude is at peak human strength without a super soldier serum
0:33 when you realize that Disney cancelled one of the best shows of the 2010s along with an entire, unique mini cinematic universe just to gives us that embarrassing fight scene and cringy, standard MCU writing in Hawkeye
Didn't know this fight scene was received as negatively as it seems here. I think it works great, I couldn't help but think about all the origin we've seen of these two characters, both grounded and troubled pasts, yet with different motives and representing two completely different parts of the world's society. It was a lot to build up to this confrontation and really got me more emotionally involved in it, while it was also well choreographed(the majority of the fight scenes in this show are freaking awesome). I don't know, maybe this was a lazy, fan-pleasing ending that worked on me, but I was happy by the end. This show is the best of the best on Netflix, can't wait for next season with Jon Bernthal as Punisher.
Season 3 fights look a lot more real in the fact that there aren't so many flips and jumps. Makes it feel more real to me, but I miss when Matt would do a the craziest jumps just to land a kick
Indeed, Onofrio's performance was truly great and of the main pluses of the series. I really enjoyed this depiction of Wilson "Kingpin" Fisk as a man of great contrasts: for one side, he can be sensitive and sophisticated (he actually shows to be smarter than what he looks), but for the other one, he can easily turn into a brutal beast (just like in this fight).
What I like about this fight is that Matt didn't win this fight, cause he got a new suit and, like in comic book stories, suddenly gets level up and beat Kingpin without breaking a sweat. No. He actually loses this fight at first. But then he collected himself up. And He defeated Kingpin, because of his own toughness and unbreakable spirit. That makes this fight even more emotional
He wasn't trying to kill or even fight her. In his injured state all he wanted to do was get Kate's mom. And in his injured state he was still more than capable to tossing her across a store with one arm. If he truly wanted to harm her then she clearly would've died early and with relative ease.
*sigh* she was 22 and was losing! She couldn't land a single punch and only claimed victory after having to resort to setting off trick arrow that normally demolish aliens and robots. If you saw that fight as a disrespect to the Kingpin rather than a display of his physical strength and endurance then idk what to tell you.
Lol I mean tbh yes but bruh there's no need to compare the shows it's obviously which is significantly better I still like arrow but obviously daredevil is better no question.
+KingBowserVlog I agree. I mean, I can understand the Fisk from the comics, the man's fat was pure muscle, even his strength can rival with Captain America's and other heroes. Also, the fact that he wore armor under his suit made him even stronger. But the Fisk here, they seem to exaggerate his strength, I mean, Daredevil can take on 17 armed thugs with no problem but can't beat some bald guy wearing a suit. Yeah, this could have been done more properly to make it more believable. They could have made Fisk shoot himself with chemicals to make his body stronger or something. That way, it'll make sense why he's able to throw Daredevil across the alley.
Daydrian Lewis (DAYD111) Yeah, I found that weird as well, especially since they didn't give any suggestion that Fisk was that skilled in hand-to-hand combat or *that* freaking strong. It took me off guard how he managed to put up such a fight with Daredevil(granted, he was full of rage, but even then...) and how he threw him against a wall.
There has to be some kind of over exaggeration at points as if it was made to look real the fight would be over in a millisecond so your damned if you do and damned if you don't sometimes you just have to compromise
Jesus relax,fisk getting shot by echo leads to a comics story where he goes blind for a bit Hawkeye is supposed to be a campy christmas action story Would put a damper on the theme if Fisk was serious and mashed Kate into a puddle
@@sammysalgado1475 then y even include fisk then if he doesn't fit the tone. That's like if they put thanos in a Christmas special of adventures of baby groot