Stick was introduced to the Marvel Universe in Daredevil #176, published in November 1981. He was a cornerstone creation of writer-artist Frank Miller, who was in the midst of his legendary, character-defining run on the title. Miller's tenure on Daredevil is widely credited with transforming the character from a second-tier hero into a complex, noir-infused crime fighter. The introduction of elements like The Hand, Elektra, and Stick was central to this tonal shift, infusing Daredevil's world with a gritty blend of street-level crime and Japanese martial arts mysticism inspired by samurai cinema and manga. Stick's creation served a crucial narrative purpose: to provide a concrete origin for Matt Murdock's extraordinary abilities beyond the chemical accident that blinded him. He retroactively established that Matt's “radar sense” was not just a passive superpower but a skill that had to be honed through years of torturous training. This made Daredevil's prowess more earned and his backstory richer. Stick embodies the archetype of the harsh, elderly martial arts master, a figure who is as much an antagonist to the hero's emotional development as he is a mentor to his physical skills. His name, simple and direct, reflects his personality and his weapon of choice: a plain bō staff.
The origin of Stick is deliberately shrouded in mystery, varying in its specifics between the comics and screen adaptations. However, the core elements of a blind warrior leading a secret war remain constant.
Stick's precise age in the Earth-616 continuity is unknown, but he is ancient. He is the leader of the Chaste, a mountain-clan of warriors based in an unnamed, isolated fortress. The Chaste are the sworn enemies of The Hand, a nihilistic death cult of ninjas who serve a primordial demon known simply as “The Beast.” For centuries, Stick has led his small band of devoted warriors—including key members like Stone, Shaft, Claw, and Star—in a brutal, unending war to prevent The Hand from achieving its goals. Stick's life intersected with modern history when he became aware of a young boy in New York's Hell's Kitchen named Matt Murdock. Following the accident that blinded Matt but hyper-enhanced his remaining senses, Stick sought him out. He recognized the boy's raw potential but also the rage and grief that consumed him after his father's murder. Stick took Matt under his wing, training him relentlessly. He taught Matt not just how to fight but how to master his senses, referring to them as a “gift” and showing him how to filter the sensory overload into a coherent “radar sense.” His teachings were as much about spiritual discipline as physical combat, demanding Matt purge himself of emotion and attachment. Ultimately, Stick deemed Matt a failure in this regard. When Matt fashioned a costume to honor his father and embraced his emotional drive for justice, Stick viewed it as a weakness and abandoned him, considering him a “soldier” who had been lost. Years later, Stick encountered another promising, yet far more troubled, pupil: a young Elektra Natchios. He trained her for a time, but he sensed a deep, unquenchable darkness and rage within her. Believing she was tainted and a potential weapon for his enemies, Stick and the Chaste attempted to “cleanse” her. This drove Elektra away, setting her on a path to becoming one of the world's deadliest assassins, often employed by The Hand itself. Stick's primary story arc culminates in his direct confrontation with The Hand as they attempt to resurrect Elektra. Alongside his student Daredevil and the remaining members of the Chaste, Stick fought to prevent their plan. In a final, desperate act to defeat Kirigi, a powerful ninja from The Hand, Stick used an ancient technique to drain the life force from his enemies, a process which also consumed his own life. He and Stone died together, their mission a seeming success. Even in death, his presence was felt, as he psychically communicated with Daredevil to help him purge The Beast's influence from a resurrected Elektra. He was later resurrected himself during the Shadowland event to combat a Daredevil possessed by The Beast.
In the MCU (specifically the Netflix series Daredevil and The Defenders), Stick's origin is more grounded and directly tied to a singular prophecy. He is the last-known surviving leader of the Chaste, an army founded in the mystical city of K'un-Lun to fight The Hand. This version of The Hand is led by five “Fingers” who betrayed K'un-Lun, mastered a dark magic to achieve immortality through resurrection, and were subsequently banished from the city. Stick's entire life has been dedicated to hunting and destroying these five leaders and their organization. As in the comics, Stick discovered a newly orphaned Matt Murdock at the St. Agnes Orphanage. He saw the potential in the boy, not just as a fighter, but as a soldier for his war. He trained Matt for years, honing his skills and senses, but became frustrated with Matt's need for connection and a father figure. When Matt gave a gift to Stick—a bracelet made from the wrapper of the ice cream his father used to buy him—Stick saw it as a symbol of the emotional attachment that would compromise him as a warrior. He declared that Matt's “doors were not open,” abandoned him, and left without a word. Stick reappears in Matt's adult life when The Hand brings a weapon of immense power, the “Black Sky,” to New York. The Black Sky is revealed to be a child, and Stick arrives to assassinate him, an act that puts him in direct conflict with Daredevil's moral code. Stick is ruthless and pragmatic, willing to kill a child to prevent a greater catastrophe, a line Matt refuses to cross. His story continues into the second season of Daredevil and culminates in The Defenders. It is revealed that the ultimate weapon of The Hand is a resurrected, amnesiac Elektra Natchios, who is now their living weapon, the Black Sky. Stick's goal shifts to either killing Elektra or, failing that, manipulating events to turn her against her new masters. He is captured by The Hand and their leader, Alexandra Reid, who tries to persuade him to join them. He refuses, and in a final act of defiance against his former pupil, he prepares to kill Danny Rand to prevent The Hand from using him to unlock a gateway in New York. Elektra, with a flicker of her past self, intervenes and, after a brief, brutal fight, kills Stick with her sai. His death is portrayed as permanent and marks the end of the Chaste's old guard.
Stick's capabilities place him in the upper echelon of non-superhuman martial artists in the Marvel Universe, though the comic version possesses abilities that blur the line into the supernatural.
Stick is the embodiment of the stoic, unforgiving warrior monk. He is gruff, sardonic, and profoundly impatient with what he perceives as weakness, particularly emotional vulnerability. His worldview is a stark binary: there is the Chaste and its mission, and there is The Hand, which must be destroyed. There is no middle ground. This zealotry makes him a difficult and often cruel teacher. He uses insults, physical punishment, and emotional manipulation as teaching tools, believing that only by breaking his students can he rebuild them into the perfect soldiers his war requires. He feels a deep, albeit well-hidden, sense of responsibility for his students, but his dedication to the greater good of his cause will always supersede any personal affection.
The MCU version of Stick is more grounded, with his abilities presented as the absolute peak of human achievement rather than overtly supernatural.
The MCU personality is very faithful to the comics, with actor Scott Glenn adding a layer of dry, sarcastic wit to the character's gruff exterior. He is utterly dedicated to his war, viewing it as a sacred duty. His disdain for Matt's personal life and moral code is even more pronounced. He frequently mocks Matt's Catholicism, his friendships, and his refusal to kill, seeing them all as childish delusions that prevent him from becoming the warrior he needs to be. He displays a sliver of paternal affection for both Matt and Elektra, but it is always violently suppressed in favor of the mission. His final words to Elektra, “That girl was never in you,” were a last, desperate attempt to break The Hand's hold on her, showing that even in death, his focus was on the war.
The relationship between Stick and Matt Murdock is the most significant in Stick's history. It is a complex dynamic of a master and student, a surrogate father and a rebellious son. Stick saw in Matt the potential for a perfect weapon but was ultimately disappointed by the boy's humanity. He gave Matt the tools to survive and fight, but Matt's refusal to abandon his compassion and his moral code against killing represents a fundamental rejection of Stick's entire philosophy. They are reluctant allies, united only by their common enemy, The Hand. Matt respects Stick's skill and knowledge but abhors his methods, while Stick views Matt as a squandered talent and a “bleeding heart” fool who refuses to do what is necessary.
The Chaste are Stick's true family and his army. They are a small, elite cadre of warriors who share his absolute dedication to destroying The Hand. Their bond is forged in discipline and a shared, ancient purpose. Key members in the comics include:
In a surprising but significant team-up during the Enemy of the State storyline, Stick and the Chaste play a crucial role in helping to de-program a brainwashed Wolverine. HYDRA and The Hand had turned Logan into their personal assassin, and Stick was one of the few individuals with the mental and spiritual discipline required to break their conditioning. This alliance demonstrated Stick's importance in the wider Marvel Universe's mystical underworld, beyond his isolated war.
The Hand is not just an enemy; it is Stick's reason for being. The conflict between the Chaste and The Hand is an eternal, ideological war. The Chaste represents discipline, life, and order, while The Hand embodies corruption, death, and chaos through their service to The Beast. Stick's hatred for them is absolute and uncompromising. He has spent centuries studying their tactics, their magic, and their leadership, dedicating every moment of his long life to their utter annihilation.
Elektra is both Stick's greatest student and his most profound failure. He saw in her a raw talent for violence that surpassed even Matt Murdock's. However, he also sensed an innate darkness within her, a capacity for cruelty that he believed The Hand could exploit. His attempt to purge this darkness from her only served to alienate her, pushing her further down the path he feared. Their relationship is a tragic cycle of conflict. In the comics, he attempts to kill her; in the MCU, she ultimately succeeds in killing him, making their adversarial bond a core element of both their stories.
Stick's only true affiliation is with the_chaste. He is their undisputed leader and patriarch. He operates completely outside the purview of organizations like S.H.I.E.L.D., the Avengers, or any other superhero team. His war is a secret one, and he has neither the time nor the inclination to concern himself with the more public battles fought by Earth's heroes. He views them, much like he views Matt, as naive children playing at war, unaware of the true darkness that threatens the world.
This is the character's foundational storyline. Stick is introduced as Matt's mysterious former sensei, arriving to aid him in the fight against The Hand. Miller uses extensive flashbacks to detail Matt's brutal training as a child, establishing the “how” of Daredevil's abilities. The storyline solidifies the lore of The Chaste and The Hand, introduces the concept of resurrection as a key Hand ability, and culminates in Stick's heroic self-sacrifice to destroy the Hand's most powerful warrior, Kirigi. His death is a defining moment for Daredevil, forcing him to carry on the war without his master. This arc is the single most important piece of media for understanding the character's core concept.
In this surreal and politically charged limited series by Frank Miller and artist Bill Sienkiewicz, Stick appears as a psychic projection or a spiritual guide to Elektra. While not physically present, his essence helps her break free from mental conditioning and fight against The Beast, the demonic entity worshiped by The Hand. The story delves deep into the mystical side of their world and reinforces Stick's role as a spiritual warrior, whose influence extends beyond the grave. It explores the fractured psyche of Elektra and suggests that Stick's training, however brutal, instilled a core of resistance within her.
The Shadowland event saw Daredevil become possessed by The Beast of The Hand, transforming him into the leader of the ninja cult and turning Hell's Kitchen into his personal fiefdom. In response to this crisis, Stick is miraculously resurrected. He arrives to lead the remaining members of the Chaste and a coalition of street-level heroes (including Iron Fist, Shang-Chi, and Luke Cage) in a desperate war to free Matt from The Beast's control. This storyline elevated Stick from a mentor figure to a wartime general, showcasing his leadership on a grand scale and his willingness to make hard choices, including attempting to kill his former student to stop the demon controlling him.
As detailed throughout this entry, the most prominent alternate version of Stick is his incarnation in the Netflix series, portrayed by Scott Glenn. This version is a self-contained and complete character arc. Key differences from Earth-616 include:
While Stick does not appear in the theatrical cut of the 2003 Daredevil film, a subplot involving him was filmed and included in the Director's Cut. In this version, he is played by Terence Stamp. He is depicted as a mysterious, homeless-looking man who tracks down a young Matt Murdock. He engages Matt in a training fight, testing his abilities before seemingly vanishing. The interaction is brief and only hints at a larger backstory, but it was the character's first live-action appearance.
A classic What If…? comic reimagined the Daredevil origin in a feudal Japanese setting. In this world, a blind boy named Masahiro is trained by a mysterious blind warrior monk known as “The Stick,” who teaches him to become a legendary samurai protector. This version is a direct homage to the classic samurai archetypes that originally inspired Frank Miller's creation.