★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) Best for: Fans of slow-burn tragedy, character over plot, and watching Jon Bernthal brood in a leather jacket. Worst for: Anyone hoping for a clean ending, a less sadistic runtime, or the Netflix Marvel universe to get a proper farewell.
Back in New York, former ally Billy Russo (Ben Barnes), his face now a roadmap of scars from Season 1’s glass-mirror climax, has lost his memory and his identity. Under the care of a manipulative therapist, Dr. Krista Dumont (Floriana Lima), Billy begins to re-emerge not as a tragic victim, but as a more feral, desperate version of Jigsaw. Meanwhile, John Pilgrim (Josh Stewart), a quiet, religious ex-white supremacist enforcer, is dragged back into violence to retrieve Amy for a powerful family. Marvels The Punisher - Season 2
On paper, these threads converge. In practice, they pull the season in two directions. The Amy/Frank road trip is raw, character-driven, and surprisingly tender. The Billy/Krista psychosexual drama is theatrical, overwrought, and often feels like a B-movie noir with better lighting. Jon Bernthal remains the definitive live-action Punisher, not because of the gunplay (though that is visceral), but because of the silences. Watch him in the motel room scenes with Amy—the way he flinches at kindness, the way he cleans his weapons as a form of prayer. Bernthal understands that Frank Castle isn’t a hero or even an antihero. He’s a wound that grew teeth. ★★★☆☆ (3
The result is a season that is messier, longer, and more uneven than its predecessor, but one that contains some of the most affecting character work in the entire Netflix Defenders saga. Season 2 immediately bifurcates its story into two tracks that feel like they belong to different shows. Under the care of a manipulative therapist, Dr