Elektra (character): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Marvel Comics fictional character}} |
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{{Superherobox| <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics--> |
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{{Infobox comics character <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics--> |
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image=[[Image:Elektra 3.jpg|250px]] |
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| image = Elektra 3.jpg |
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|caption=Elektra from the cover to ''Elektra'' (vol. 2) #3.<br>Art by [[Greg Horn]]. |
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| caption = Textless cover of ''Elektra'' #3 (November 2001). <br />Art by [[Greg Horn]]. |
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|comic_color=background:#ff8080 |
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|character_name=Elektra |
| character_name = Elektra |
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| publisher = [[Marvel Comics]] |
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|real_name=Elektra Natchios |
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| debut = {{ubl|'''As Elektra:'''|''[[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|Daredevil]]'' #168 (Jan. 1981)|'''As Daredevil:'''|''[[King in Black]]'' #1 (Dec. 2020; [[Cameo appearance|cameo]]); [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|''Daredevil'' Vol. 7]] #25 (Dec. 2020; full appearance)}} |
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|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] |
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| creators = [[Frank Miller]] |
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|debut=''Daredevil'' #168 (January, 1981) |
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| full name = Elektra Natchios |
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|creators=[[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]] |
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| alliances = {{Plainlist| |
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|alliance_color=background:#c0c0c0 |
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* [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] |
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|alliances=[[Hand (comics)|The Hand]]<br/>[[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]<br/>[[HYDRA]]<br/>[[The Chaste]] |
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* [[Thunderbolts (comics)|Thunderbolts]] |
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|aliases=Erynys |
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* Code Red<ref>''Hulk'' vol. 2 #14</ref> |
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|powers=Peak human strength, agility, speed, endurance, flexibility and reflexes<br>Master of virtually all martial arts, particularly ninjutsu<br>Low-level mind control and telepathic communication<br>Expert with all kinds of weapon, particularly her trademark twin sai |
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* [[The Hand (comics)|The Hand]] |
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|}} |
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* [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]] |
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* [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] |
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* [[Chaste (Marvel Comics)|The Chaste]] |
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* [[Heroes for Hire]] |
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* [[A-Force]] |
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* [[Savage Avengers]]}} |
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| aliases = {{ubl|Erynys|[[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]]|Woman Without Fear}} |
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| powers = |
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* Peak human physical and mental condition |
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* Precognition |
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* Mind switch |
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* Telekinesis |
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* Telepathy |
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* Hypnosis |
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* Master [[martial arts|martial artist]] |
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* Expert with various types of weaponry, such as her trademark twin [[Sai (weapon)|sai]] |
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| partners = [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]] |
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}} |
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'''Elektra Natchios''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|n|æ|tʃ|i|ɒ|s}}, {{IPAc-en|US|-|oʊ|s}}) is a fictional character appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[Marvel Comics]]. She was initially created as a supporting character for the [[superhero]] [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Matt Murdock / Daredevil]], to whom Elektra has functioned as a villainous adversary, [[Romantic interest|love interest]], and later, a heroic ally. Created by [[Frank Miller]], the character first appeared in ''[[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|Daredevil]]'' #168 (Jan. 1981).<ref>{{cite book |last1=DeFalco |first1=Tom |last2=Sanderson |first2=Peter |last3=Brevoort |first3=Tom |last4=Teitelbaum |first4=Michael |last5=Wallace |first5=Daniel |last6=Darling |first6=Andrew |last7=Forbeck |first7=Matt |last8=Cowsill |first8=Alan |last9=Bray |first9=Adam |title=The Marvel Encyclopedia |date=2019 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-7890-0 |page=123}}</ref> Her violent nature and mercenary lifestyle has served as a divisive point of conflict between her and Daredevil, which, in 2020, culminated in her becoming the second '''Daredevil'''. |
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The character is a highly trained assassin of [[Greeks|Greek descent]] who wields a pair of [[sai (weapon)|sai]] as her trademark weapons. Elektra is one of Frank Miller's best-known creations, and has appeared in numerous modern storylines even though Marvel had promised not to revive the character without Miller's permission. She is the title character of three ongoing series: The first, written by [[Peter Milligan]] and [[Larry Hama]] and drawn by [[Mike Deodato Jr.]], from 1996 to 1997; the second, primarily written by [[Greg Rucka]], from 2001 to 2003; and the third, written by [[Haden Blackman]], from 2014 to 2015. She has also appeared as a [[supporting character]] of [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]] and in other series and mini-series. |
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'''Elektra Natchios''', usually referred to only by her first name '''Elektra''', is a [[fictional character]] in publications from [[Marvel Comics]]. Created by [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]], the character first appeared in ''[[Daredevil (Marvel Comics)|Daredevil]]'' #168 (January 1981). |
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[[Jennifer Garner]] portrayed Elektra in the films ''[[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]]'' (2003), ''[[Elektra (2005 film)|Elektra]]'' (2005), and ''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'' (2024). [[Élodie Yung]] portrayed [[Elektra Natchios (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|the character]] in the [[Marvel's Netflix television series|MCU Netflix television series]] ''[[Daredevil (TV series)|Daredevil]]'' (2016) and ''[[The Defenders (miniseries)|The Defenders]]'' (2017).<ref name="Elodie Yung to Play Elektra in 'Marvel's Daredevil'">{{cite web |url=https://variety.com/2015/tv/news/daredevil-elektra-elodie-yung-1201535579/ |title=Elodie Yung to Play Elektra in 'Marvel's Daredevil' |date=8 July 2015 |work=Variety |access-date=8 July 2015}}</ref> |
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Elektra is a [[Greek]] [[ninja]] [[assassination|assassin]] who wields two bladed [[sai (weapon)|sai]] as her trademark weapon. She is a love interest of the [[superhero]] [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics)|Daredevil]], but her violent nature and [[mercenary]] lifestyle divide the two. She is one of Frank Miller's best-loved creations, and subsequent writers' use of her is controversial as Marvel had originally promised to not resurrect the character without Miller's permission.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2007/06/28/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-109/|title=Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed #109|accessdate=2007-07-15|date=[[2007-06-29]]|author=Brian Cronin|publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]]}}</ref> She has also appeared as a [[supporting character]] of the [[X-Men]]'s [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]]. |
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== Publication history == |
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She is named after [[Electra]], daughter of [[Agamemnon]] of [[Mycenae]] and [[Clytemnestra]] of [[Sparta]]. In the [[2003 in film|2003]] movie ''[[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]]'', she was portrayed by [[Jennifer Garner]]. Garner returned for the role as the main character in the [[2005 in film|2005]] [[spin-off|spinoff]], ''[[Elektra (2005 film)|Elektra]]''. |
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===Creation=== |
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[[File:9.17.16FrankMillerByLuigiNovi16.jpg|thumb|left|[[Frank Miller]] signing a copy of the ''Elektra'' comics series during an appearance at [[Midtown Comics]]]] |
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Elektra was created by Frank Miller, who based the character's appearance on [[Lisa Lyon]], a [[Female bodybuilding|female bodybuilder]].<ref>Miller and Janson, p. 779.</ref> Miller and Janson also sometimes modeled her appearance on the actress [[Bo Derek]].<ref>Young, 109.</ref> Miller has said that he designed the character around [[Electra]], a character in [[Greek tragedy]], and the [[Electra complex]] theorized by [[Carl Jung]].<ref name="Miller and Janson, p. 787">Miller and Janson, p. 787.</ref> Comics scholar Paul Young has identified the first appearances of the character as paying homage to Sand Seref, a [[femme fatale]] character in [[Will Eisner]]'s series, ''[[Spirit (comics character)|The Spirit]]''. Miller has frequently cited Eisner as an inspiration.<ref>Young, p. 107</ref> Some critics have also compared the character to [[Catwoman]], who has a similar ambivalent relationship with [[Batman]], although Elektra is portrayed as much more dangerous and violent.<ref>Lindsay, p. 116.</ref> |
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===Frank Miller period: 1980s and early 1990s=== |
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==Fictional character biography== |
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Elektra first appeared in ''[[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|Daredevil]]'' #168 (January 1981). Miller intended this issue, which was essentially a filler story, to be Elektra's only appearance.<ref>{{cite news | author = Kraft, David Anthony | author2 = Salicup, Jim | author-link = David Anthony Kraft | author-link2 = Jim Salicrup | date = April 1983 | title = Frank Miller's Ronin | work =[[Comics Interview]]| issue = #2 | page = 13 | publisher = [[Fictioneer Books]]}}</ref> She instead became a frequently appearing villain in ''Daredevil'', until she was murdered by [[Bullseye (Marvel Comics)|Bullseye]] in issue #181 (April 1982). She was resurrected shortly after, but the story contained a narrative note which indicates that Daredevil must never encounter her again.<ref>''Daredevil'' #190 (Jan. 1983). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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===Introduction=== |
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According to [[Marvel Comics]], Elektra is the world's most lethal woman and one of Marvel's most cold-blooded characters. She has killed more men than just about any other Marvel character while remaining one of the most popular heroines in the Marvel Universe. |
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Miller collaborated with [[Bill Sienkiewicz]] on ''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'', a surrealistic, satirical miniseries that ran from 1986 to 1987, with unclear relation to mainstream continuity.<ref name=cyso>{{cite web |last=Burgas |first=Greg |url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2007/01/21/comics-you-should-own-elektra-assassin/ |title=Comics You Should Own - Elektra: Assassin |work=Comics Should Be Good |publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]] |date=January 21, 2007 |access-date=January 12, 2010 |archive-date=August 23, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150823022920/http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2007/01/21/comics-you-should-own-elektra-assassin/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Mary [[Jo Duffy]], the editor who initiated the project, writes that Sienkiewicz was the chosen artist because of his skills: "the fine drafting, the loony caricatures, and the high-style infusion of sex-and-drugs-and-rock'n'roll."<ref>''Elektra by Frank Miller Omnibus'', Marvel, p. 34.</ref> In the story, Elektra discovers that a US presidential candidate intends to launch a nuclear war, and in opposing him she comes into conflict with [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] agents, cyborgs and monsters. The series concludes with the successful election of the candidate, but the replacement of his mind by another character whose motives are ambiguous.<ref>Marvel Year by Year: A Visual History: New Edition, DK, 2022, p. 218.</ref> The Daredevil ''Fall from Grace'' storyline establishes that ''Elektra: Assassin'' is a hallucinatory distortion of canonical events in which Elektra took part, in the mind of a delusional S.H.I.E.L.D. cyborg named John Garret (who is the main protagonist of the story).<ref>''Daredevil Epic Collection vol. 18: 1993-1994: Fall from Grace'', 2024.</ref> |
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===Family and early life=== |
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Elektra was born in a Greek island on Athens near the [[Aegean Sea]] to '''Hugo Kostas Natchios''' and his wife '''Christina Natchios'''. She had an older brother named '''Orestez Natchios''' (in [[Greek language|Greek]] the name should be Oρέστης - ''i.e.'' [[Orestes (mythology)|Orestes]] with Latin alphabet). |
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In 1990, Elektra appeared in another Miller creation, ''[[Elektra Lives Again]]''. This is an avant-garde story that takes place outside normal Marvel continuity. It won an [[Eisner Award]] for "Best Graphic Album: New".<ref>[http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner91.php 1991 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners], Comic Book Awards Almanac</ref> |
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Two contradictory accounts of her family history have been given in various issues. In ''Elektra: Root of Evil'' #1-4 (March - June, 1995), it is stated that her father was an aspiring diplomat who eventually managed to gain his first assignment as an ambassador to an unspecified country. However, Hugo and his wife had grown apart. Christina had begun a series of extramarital affairs with no apparent interest in keeping them secret, resulting in personal humiliation for her husband. Popular opinion in diplomatic circles stated that a man unable to control his wife had no business deciding on the fate of the world. When Christina became pregnant for a second time, Hugo was certain the child was not his own. |
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In 1993, Miller revisited the character in the miniseries ''[[Daredevil: The Man Without Fear]]''. Taking place in the past before Matt Murdock took on the Daredevil identity, the story elaborates the relationship between Murdock and Elektra Natchios.<ref>Frank Miller, ''Daredevil: The Man without Fear'' trade paperback, 2020.</ref> |
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Hugo confided to his adolescent son that his mother was a whore who was shaming their family. Orestez promised his father that Christina would never again shame them. Hugo failed to understand the meaning of these words. On [[August 13]] of that year, the couple was on holiday in the Aegean Sea. They were located by a helicopter which opened fire on them both. The assassins left them for dead. The couple was taken to a nearby hospital. Christina gave premature birth to Elektra and then died. Hugo recovered from his wounds. |
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===1990s=== |
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Orestez had hired the assassins in order to indirectly commit [[matricide]]. He was horrified by the idea of unintentional [[patricide]] and ran away from home. Hugo was the only family left to Elektra. At first, Hugo had no intention to raise this "bastard" child. However, a paternity test confirmed the child to be his own. Hugo was not sorry for losing Christina. He was grateful, however, for her giving him a daughter. He arranged for a beautiful headstone to be placed on her grave. Images of the [[Erinyes]] on the headstone implied however that Christina was responsible for her own death. |
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After over a decade's absence from regular continuity, she reappeared in ''Daredevil'' #324–327 (Jan.–April 1994). ''Daredevil'' writer [[D. G. Chichester]] recounted that he and editor [[Ralph Macchio (editor)|Ralph Macchio]] had discussed the character's return several times: |
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{{blockquote|We'd bandied about the idea [of bringing back Elektra] in a casual fashion now and again, but neither of us wanted to do it as a gimmick. On the rare occasion I thought I had a legitimate angle to use her, Ralph was cool to the idea. But as we geared up for what would become "Fall From Grace", Ralph out of the blue said, "What about bringing back Elektra?" – and it was really the missing piece that clicked together all the loose pieces of the story in my head, and became the nexus for everything tying together as well as it did. In my mind, it's always been '''her''' to whom the title refers.<ref>Mithra, Kuljit (Feb. 1998). [http://www.manwithoutfear.com/daredevil-interviews/Chichester Interview with D. G. Chichester], manwithoutfear.com.</ref>}} |
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Hugo grew to adore Elektra. He nicknamed her his "Little [[Amber]]" and showered her with gifts. Her favorite gift was a pet dog of her own, named Agamemnon, continuing the pattern of Hugo naming members of his family after the [[Atreus|Atreidae]]. The dog was killed when a nine-year-old Elektra was assaulted by kidnappers. The men were all killed by Orestez, who had grown into an accomplished [[martial arts|martial art]]ist after leaving home. He did not explain his presence there. He briefly acquainted himself to his little sister and then left again. |
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This upset Frank Miller, who claimed that Marvel had previously promised him that the character would not be used in any publication.<ref>{{cite book | first=Sean |last=Howe |title=Marvel Comics: the Untold Story |page=351 |isbn=978-0-06-199210-0 |author-link=Sean Howe |year=2012 |publisher=Harper |location=New York}}</ref> |
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However, Orestez had a lasting effect in her life. He advised his father that Elektra needed to learn [[self-defense]]. Hugo hired a [[sensei]] to teach her the martial arts, beginning her acquaintance with fighting. According to the [[Daredevil (film)|''Daredevil'' film]], Elektra's father hired a new sensei every year, to ensure her skills in the martial arts. The issues were scripted by [[D.G. Chichester]] and drawn by [[Scott McDaniel]]. |
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Electra served as a supporting character in ''[[Wolverine (comic book)|Wolverine]]'', written by [[Larry Hama]] (in #100–106). The Wolverine story arc establishes that Elektra has been re-trained and rehabilitated by [[Stick (character)|Stick]] and is now morally good. While she remains unusually ruthless,<ref>Wolverine #102, 1996</ref> this is the first time she takes on a heroic role. As a spin-off of this storyline, in 1996 she starred in an ongoing series that lasted nineteen issues, initially written by the same author along with [[Peter Milligan]] and illustrated by [[Mike Deodato Jr.]] The series establishes that Elektra was resurrected by the [[Chaste (Marvel Comics)|Chaste]], the adversaries of the Hand.<ref>Peter Milligan, Larry Hama, and Mike Deodato Jr., Elektra: The Complete Collection, 2017.</ref> The series has a much lighter tone, sometimes including parody of [[romance comics]], and Elektra is much more virtuous.<ref>''Elektra'' -1, July 1997.</ref> The narrative declares, "She was once a wild-eyed assassin ... of course, she's a completely different person now."<ref>''Elektra'' #4, February 1997.</ref> However, she struggles with a tendency to relapse into her earlier, more indiscriminately violent, tendencies.<ref>''Elektra'' #8, June 1997.</ref> Elektra briefly resumes her relationship with Daredevil in this series, although he is unfaithful to his primary girlfriend at that time, [[Karen Page]].<ref>Elektra #11-13, Oct.-Dec. 1997.</ref> |
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===Contradictory accounts=== |
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A different account was told in ''Elektra'' (Vol. 2) #18 (May, 1998). The account was told to [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] by an old family retainer by the name of "Stavros." Stavros had reportedly met Hugo and Christina during [[World War II]], at the time of Greece's occupation by [[Nazi Germany]]. |
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===2000s=== |
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Stavros was leader to a small group of the Greek [[Resistance movement]]. A younger Hugo was a leader of a greater [[clandestine cell system|covert cell]] which operated in the same area. A 15-year-old Christina was also part of the cell and operated as a messenger. She brought a message to Stavros one day: an order to join her [[commandant]] and fight under his orders. Stavros replied to this arrogant message with laughter until Christina drew her gun and threatened his life. The following day, Stavros joined a leader who was able to inspire such determination to his followers. |
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Elektra appeared in a second self-titled ongoing series that lasted 22 issues, from 2001 to 2003. While initially written by [[Brian Michael Bendis]], the series was primarily written (after issue #6) by [[Greg Rucka]].<ref>Elekta by Greg Rucka Ultimate Collection, Marvel, 2012.</ref> This series ignores the events of the previous series written by Milligan, and Elektra returns to her earlier morally-ambiguous, tormented characterization. In 2002, Rucka also wrote a novella featuring the character along with [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]], titled ''[[Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer]]''. While this is a prose narrative rather than a graphic novel, it includes extensive illustrations by [[Yoshitaka Amano]]. The status of the story with Marvel mainstream canon is unclear; the characters do not appear to have met before, and do not make reference to earlier stories in the Hama and Milligan series in which they interact. In an interview concerning his approach to these characters, Rucka comments on Elektra's allure as tied to her mysterious and enigmatic nature, and states that for this reason she is very difficult to write or to identify with. He describes it as a compelling [[emotional detachment]], and contrasts this to Wolverine's demeanor, which he sees as warmer.<ref>Jennifer Lee, "Writing Redeemer: A Conversation with Greg Rucka," appended to ''Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer'', Marvel, 2002.</ref> |
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Beginning in [[Ultimate Spider-Man]] #51 (February 2004), an alternate version of Elektra serves as a recurring adversary in Brian Michael Bendis's acclaimed re-interpretation of Spider-Man in the [[Ultimate Marvel]] timeline. In October of the same year, this alternate version of the character featured in her own five-issue miniseries written by [[Mike Carey (writer)|Mike Carey]] and illustrated by [[Salvador Larroca]], with Daredevil as a supporting character.<ref>''Ultimate Elektra: Devils Due'', Marvel, 2005.</ref> |
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Christina would prove her worth many times during the resistance. She married Hugo after the war. They were not involved in the [[Greek Civil War]]. However, the later war cost Christina her life. Christina was in the eighth month of her pregnancy when Hugo had to go to [[Athens]], [[Attica]] on "government matters." Stavros was left behind to take care of her. He accompanied her to the clinic to see the family doctor and was then dismissed for an hour. During that hour, "a man who considered himself a [[Patriotism|patriot]]", but wanted by the [[Hellenic Army|Greek Army]] invaded the clinic (given the time, the man was probably a member of the [[Democratic Army of Greece]] under [[Markos Vafiadis]]). He killed the doctor and attempted to take the patient as [[hostage]]s. Christina attempted to convince him to stop the unnecessary violence, but was shot in the chest. She used her old [[combat]] training to take the man down. She then had to stop the other patients from assaulting the already defeated man until his arrest yet she was mortally wounded and gave premature birth. Elektra was born in the clinic floor, painted red from the [[blood]] of her mother. Christina died before hearing the first cry of her daughter. The issue was scripted by [[Larry Hama]] and drawn by [[Mike Deodato]]. |
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Also in 2004, Elektra appears as a prominent leading character in [[Mark Millar]]'s ''Wolverine'' storyline "Enemy of the State," with art by [[John Romita Jr.]] (who previously drew Elektra in the ''Man without Fear'' miniseries a decade earlier). In this storyline, she works with SHIELD to help Wolverine fight the Hand. In the course of events, she appears to be re-brainwashed by the Hand, although this is revealed to be a ruse on her part. However, in order to maintain the deception, she kills a number of SHIELD agents in cold blood.<ref>''Wolverine: Enemy of the State'' vol. 1 and 2, Marvel.</ref> |
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The two versions of the nature of Christina Natchios' death cannot be reconciled. Furthermore, ''Elektra: Assassin'' #1 (August, 1986) placed [[ambiguity]] on the relationship Elektra had with her father. The adult Elektra recalled vague memories of being [[rape]]d by her father as a 5 year old. Years of counseling and medication had convinced her this was a [[false memory syndrome|false memory]], but the doubt remained. Another memory had the 6 year old Elektra sitting on Hugo's lap while her teasing father compared her to a [[cat]]; likely the [[Cheshire Cat]] from [[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]] by [[Lewis Carroll]]. Elektra grew up close to her father but was plagued by dark [[Vision (spirituality)|vision]]s and voices with no known source. She occasionally reacted to them with [[self-injury|self-harm]]. Her father eventually sent her away to [[psychotherapy]] until becoming more stable. It was uncertain whether Elektra actually became more stable or merely appeared to. The issue was scripted by [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]] and drawn by [[Bill Sienkiewicz]]. |
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[[Image:daredevil168.png|thumbnail|170px|Cover to ''Daredevil'' Vol. 1 #168, Elektra's first appearance. Art by Frank Miller.]] |
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In the mainstream Marvel universe, Elektra encounters Matt Murdock again in ''Daredevil'' vol. 2 #77 through #81 (November 2005 - March 2006), written by Bendis and illustrated by [[Alex Maleev]]. In this storyline, she arrives to warn Murdock about Kingpin's public revelation and confirmation of his secret identity.<ref>''Daredevil'' vol. 2 #78 (December 2005).</ref> |
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The account of her childhood in the film ''[[Elektra (2005 film)|Elektra]]'' appears to blend these two contradictory versions. In the film, her father did not abuse her physically or sexually, but rather pushed and bullied her as a warped form of "training"; in an attempt to forge her into an implacable warrior, he harshly punished her for the smallest failure or show of weakness. She did indeed mature into a formidable warrior, but was crippled emotionally. |
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In 2007, in the ''[[Secret Invasion]]'' storyline also written by Bendis, Elektra is kidnapped and replaced by a [[Skrull]], an alien being who can shapeshift to impersonate others.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #6–7 (2007). Marvel Comics.</ref> This Skrull is then killed, and the true Elektra is restored to Earth. In 2009, Elektra re-appears after her kidnapping by the Skrulls in the miniseries ''Dark Reign: Elektra'' by [[Zeb Wells]].<ref>''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #1-5.</ref> |
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===Activities as an adult=== |
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Hugo Natchios is known to have eventually served as a Greek ambassador to the [[United States]]. 19 year old Elektra first attended [[Columbia University]], [[New York City]], [[New York]]. There, Elektra met the man who would become her [[boyfriend]], [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics)|Matt Murdock]]. |
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===2010s=== |
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A year later, 20 year old Elektra and her father were kidnapped by [[Terrorism|terrorists]]. Matt wore a mask for the first time and started a rescue attempt. Elektra used the distraction to strike down some of the terrorists. However, one of the defeated men fell out of a window. The [[police]] assumed the terrorists had started throwing their hostages out of the window. They opened fire and killed the man closest to the window: Hugo Natchios, right in front of his daughter's eyes. |
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In 2013, Wells returned to the character in a sequel, in which Elektra again teams up with Wolverine, this time against Kingpin. This occurs in a story arc of ''[[Savage Wolverine]]''.<ref name="Dead Body 2014">''Savage Wolverine vol. 2: Hands on a Dead Body'', Marvel, 2014.</ref> |
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Elektra featured in a third ongoing series from 2014 to 2015, written by [[Haden Blackman]]. This was illustrated in a more surreal, psychedelic style reminiscent of Bill Sinkiewicz's depiction of the character in the 1980s. The primary artist, Mike del Mundo, affirms that his approach is an homage to ''Elektra: Assassin''.<ref name="Elektra vol. 2: Révérence, 2016">Elektra vol. 2: Révérence, 2016.</ref> Leah Bernstein, a comic-book critic, acclaims this as the best of the Elektra series.<ref>Leah Bernstein, "10 Best Elektra Comics, Ranked," ''CBR'', August 23, 2024. [https://www.cbr.com/elektra-best-comics/]</ref> Blackman affirms that the character is difficult to write that it is hard to avoid what he describes as "the stigma of being 'Daredevil's dead girlfriend.'" Nonetheless he concludes that upon completion this was the story and character he is "most proud of writing."<ref name="Elektra vol. 2: Révérence, 2016"/> |
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Elektra lost faith and hope. She quit Columbia and returned to China to study [[martial arts]]. [[Stick (comics)|Stick]], a member of the benevolent organization called [[the Chaste]], recognized the darkness in her soul and attempted to train her himself, but she ultimately sided with the [[Hand (comics)|Hand]], a sect of [[mysticism|mystical]] [[ninja]], who trained her as an assassin. She later broke away from them and became an independent agent, and in this role she again encountered Matt Murdock, who was now active as Daredevil. She battled Daredevil in order to force him to help her capture the criminal Alarich Wallenquist, and Daredevil saved her from being killed by Eric Slaughter.<ref>''Daredevil'' #168</ref> She soon learned of his double identity, and although the pair worked together to fight the Hand, they also came into conflict frequently. |
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Elektra reappears in the ''Daredevil'' series in a storyline beginning in April 2016, written by [[Charles Soule]]. In this story, Elektra is supernaturally deluded into believing that she has a daughter.<ref>''Daredevil: Back in Black vol. 2: Supersonic''.</ref> |
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Elektra later first battled the Hand alongside Daredevil and [[Gladiator (Melvin Potter)|Gladiator]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #174</ref> She then battled [[Kirigi]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #175</ref> |
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In 2019, Elektra featured as part of the [[Savage Avengers]], along with Wolverine, [[Punisher]], [[Venom (character)|Venom]], [[Brother Voodoo]], and [[Conan the Barbarian]].<ref>''Savage Avengers vol. 1: City of Sickles''.</ref> |
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[[Image:Dd181.png|Cover to ''Daredevil'' Vol. 1 #181. Art by Frank Miller.|230px|thumb|left]] |
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Elektra again encounters Daredevil in a long story arc written by [[Chip Zdarsky]], beginning with ''Daredevil'' (2019) #10 (July 2019). As a result of the spell cast to maintain Daredevil's secret identity, Elektra has separated her memories of Matt Murdock and Daredevil and thinks of them as two separate men.<ref>''Daredevil'' (2019) #11 (August 2019).</ref> |
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She soon became the chief assassin in the employ of [[New York City|New York City's]] premier crimelord, the [[Kingpin (comics)|Kingpin]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #178</ref> She attempted to kill Daredevil after he tried to stop her from terrorizing [[Ben Urich]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #179</ref> The Kingpin then assigned her to kill Matt Murdock's partner, [[Foggy Nelson|Franklin "Foggy" Nelson]]. When Nelson recognized Elektra as Matt's college girlfriend, she was unable to kill him. |
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===2020s=== |
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Elektra was fatally stabbed by [[Bullseye (comics)|Bullseye]] with one of her own sais in a battle over which of them would be the Kingpin's assassin. Elektra managed to crawl over to Daredevil's house before dying in his arms as Bullseye watched the two, hidden among a crowd that had gathered to see what was going on.<ref>''Daredevil'' #181</ref> Later, members of the Hand stole her body and attempted to resurrect her. Daredevil, with the assistance of [[Stone (Marvel Comics)#Stone I|Stone]], a member of Stick's order, intervened, defeating the Hand ninja. Daredevil then tried to revive Elektra himself. Although his attempt failed, it did have the effect of purifying Elektra's soul. Elektra's body subsequently disappeared with Stone.<ref>''Daredevil'' #190</ref> |
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Elektra continues to feature in Chip Zdarsky's run of ''Daredevil''. While Daredevil is incarcerated, Elektra decides that she needs to impress him with her commitment to protecting innocent people in Hell's Kitchen. In order to do this, she becomes a new Daredevil, making a new costume for herself that modifies the original.<ref>Daredevil vol. 7 #25, December 2020.</ref> She later joins forces with the original Daredevil and they work together as a team up to the conclusion of Zdarsky's ''Daredevil'' series with issue #36 in February 2022.<ref>''Daredevil by Chip Zdarsky vol. 7: Lockdown''.</ref> In her new persona, Elektra is also the main protagonist of Zdarsky's three-issue miniseries ''Daredevil: Woman without Fear'', the first issue of which appeared in March 2022. In this story, she fights [[Kraven the Hunter]].<ref>''Daredevil: Woman without Fear''.</ref> Elektra and Daredevil co-star in the ''[[Devil's Reign]]'' miniseries and Marvel event, which concluded in May 2022. Subsequently, they are the leading protagonists in Zdarsky's new ''Daredevil'' series, which concluded in April 2023.<ref>Daredevil and Elektra by Chip Zdarsky, vol. 1 and 2.</ref> |
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In 2021, Elektra also appeared in a new mini-series titled ''Elektra: Black, White and Blood''. Largely outside of mainstream continuity, each issue features a different writer and generally in the [[horror comics]] genre. Authors include [[Charles Soule]], [[Peter David]], [[Ann Nocenti]], [[Peach Momoko]], and [[Kevin Eastman]].<ref>Elektra: Black, White and Blood Treasury Edition, 2022.</ref> |
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Years later, Stick would send her to aid the [[X-Men|X-Man]] [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]], at a time when he had been physically and mentally regressed to a bestial form. She helped retrain him to the point where he could think and vocalize as a human once more, and spent time with him thereafter as he returned to his normal form, including taking him with her on a return to her ancestral home. |
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==Personality and characteristics== |
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Some time after her partnership with Wolverine ended, it was revealed that when Elektra was resurrected by Stone, Elektra's evil aspect had been physically split apart from her in its own body as a consequence of the ritual performed by Daredevil. Her darker half, calling itself Erynys, fought Elektra and was killed by her, thus returning the dark side to Elektra's soul. |
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Elektra is an unusually ruthless [[antihero]] and [[femme fatale]]. Scholar Paul Young defines some of her defining initial characteristics as including her succinct speech patterns, her "athletic, eroticized body," her [[father complex]], and her lethal weapons and fighting prowess. He notes that another critic, Larry Rodman, memorably compared her to a "[[psychosis|psychotic]] [[Fitness and figure competition|swimsuit model]]."<ref>Young, p. 104.</ref> Young points out that Elektra combines the femme fatale of [[film noir]] with [[chopsocky]] [[martial arts film]]s.<ref>Young, p. 108.</ref> The character is also associated with [[hypersexuality]], particularly in the 1993 ''Man without Fear'' miniseries.<ref>Young, p. 110.</ref> |
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She shows few compunctions about killing her adversaries, and in some stories even kills innocent people.<ref>Young, p. 113.</ref> However, she maintains a strong affection for Matt Murdock and, later, other people she admires. She is often morally conflicted and attempts to use her skills for good.<ref>Larisa A. Garski and Jennifer L. Yen, "Elektra: Portrait of the Assassin as a Young Woman," ''Daredevil and Psychology: The Devil You Know'', in Langley, p. 138-151.</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://nbrehmer.medium.com/someones-assassin-subverting-femme-fatale-tropes-and-why-elektra-remains-one-of-marvels-7649d1f7ce8c | title="Someone's Assassin:" Subverting Femme Fatale Tropes and Why Elektra Remains One of Marvels'… | date=12 December 2020 }}</ref> Miller says that Elektra's violent disposition originates from the trauma of the loss of her father, and that he meant the character to illustrate Jung's [[Electra complex]]: "She was a young woman who had her sexual interest centered on her father, and just as she was transferring this to another man, her father is killed." Miller argues that this initial anger led to corruption by other forces (the Hand and the Kingpin). In his view she is not essentially good, but rather "one of the villains who's got a weak streak in them."<ref name="Miller and Janson, p. 787"/> After her resurrection, in the 1996 ongoing series written by Peter Milligan, she has a more conventionally heroic disposition,<ref name="Elektra #4, February 1997">Elektra #4, February 1997.</ref> but in subsequent stories her moral character continues to vacillate. |
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===''Wolverine: Enemy of the State''=== |
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Elektra was recently one of the 'good guys' when she worked with [[S.H.I.E.L.D.|S.H.I.E.L.D]]. |
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== Fictional character biography == |
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Hydra and The Hand joined forces, killing off various heroes and resurrecting them into their possessed warriors, including the X-Man Wolverine, who became their killing machine. Based on her relationship with Logan and her ties to the Hand, [[Nick Fury]] hired Elektra to lead the mission, paying her in excess of $200,000, more money in one day than the (then) yearly salary of the [[President of the United States]]. She worked to stop Wolverine from killing others as well as to try and turn him back to his normal self. During a fight with The Hand, Elektra was killed and resurrected as a Hand warrior, eventually becoming their leader. Along with [[Northstar]], another hero killed and resurrected by the Hand, Elektra attacked Nick Fury, injuring him badly. |
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{{long plot|date=December 2024}} |
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=== Family and early life === |
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[[Image:NorthstarElektraHYDRA.png|thumb|Elektra, alongside [[Northstar]], at the head of a legion of [[Hand (comics)|Hand]] and [[HYDRA]]-brainwashed characters.]] |
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Elektra was born on a Greek island near the [[Aegean Sea]], to Hugo Kostas Natchios and Christina Natchios. She had an older brother named Orestez.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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Two contradictory accounts of her family history have been given. In ''Elektra: Root of Evil'' #1–4 (March–June 1995), Christina is killed by assassins hired by Orestez, while in ''Elektra'' #18 (1995), she is killed by an insurrectionist during the [[Greek Civil War]]. In both accounts, she gives premature birth to Elektra just before dying. |
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Thanks to S.H.I.E.L.D, Wolverine eventually came to his senses and wanted revenge. During a fight with Elektra, she mentally spoke to him, using new abilities given to her by the Hand, which were similar to the Kimaguri abilities she had in the Elektra movie. She explained that being killed by the Hand was all part of a plan she had from the beginning. She explained that she had been resurrected by The Hand and infiltrated the organization, making them believe they had been successful in resurrecting her as a brainwashed warrior. She told him that they would take The Hand and Hydra down together. They fought off many ninjas and were victorious. [[Gorgon (Tomi Shishido)|Gorgon]], however, attacked Elektra and threw off her mental blocks, enabling him to read her thoughts and see where Fury was being treated for his injuries (he also discovered that the [[Holy See|Vatican]] also hired her, to kill him). Gorgon teleported, with Elektra, to kill Fury. When they arrived, Elektra ordered the S.H.I.E.L.D. soldiers to attack. Gorgon used his power on her neck and she collapsed. Wolverine eventually used Gorgon's own powers against him, defeating him. |
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When nine-year-old Elektra was assaulted by kidnappers, the men were all killed by Orestez, who had grown into an accomplished [[martial arts|martial artist]] after leaving home. Orestez advised his father that Elektra needed to learn [[self-defense]]. Hugo hired a [[sensei]] to teach her the martial arts.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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In an e-mail to [[Kitty Pryde]], Nick Fury told her that Elektra had survived, but was missing and was probably in Eastern Europe, creating her own militia group, which she intended to be her own version of The Hand. He also told Kitty that Elektra was no threat... so far. It was unknown where Elektra really was or what her plans were. (Wolverine v3 #31) |
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In ''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'' #1 (Aug. 1986), the adult Elektra has vague memories of being raped by her father as a five-year-old. Years of counseling and medication had convinced her this was a [[false memory syndrome|false memory]], but the doubt remained. Elektra grew up close to her father but was plagued by dark [[Vision (spirituality)|visions]] and voices with no known source. She occasionally reacted to them with [[self-harm]]. Her father eventually sent her away to [[psychotherapy]] to become more stable. It was uncertain whether Elektra actually became more stable or merely appeared to be.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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===Daredevil and the Kingpin=== |
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She resurfaced to help Daredevil with a situation with the Kingpin. The crimelord, in exchange for his freedom, offered the FBI evidence that Matt Murdock was irrefutably Daredevil. |
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=== Activities as an adult === |
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It was revealed that Elektra actually helped Kingpin gain all the needed information back when she was Daredevil's enemy, and she returned because she felt an obligation to help Matt out of the trouble for which she felt responsible. It was also revealed by the [[Black Widow (Marvel Comics)|Black Widow]] that Elektra is now the leader of The Hand. |
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[[File:Daredevil cover - number 168.png|thumbnail|170px|Cover to ''Daredevil'' Vol. 1 #168 - January 1981, Elektra's first appearance (misspelt as "Elecktra"). Art by Frank Miller.]] |
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Hugo Natchios eventually served as a Greek ambassador to the [[United States]]. Nineteen-year-old Elektra attended [[Columbia University]] in [[New York City]]. There, Elektra began dating classmate [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Matt Murdock]].<ref>Frank Miller, ''Daredevil: The Man without Fear'' trade paperback.</ref> |
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A year later, Elektra and her father were kidnapped by [[Terrorism|terrorists]]. A rescue attempt by Matt went wrong, and Hugo was gunned down.<ref name="debut" /> Elektra lost faith and hope. She quit Columbia and returned to China to study [[martial arts]]. [[Stick (comics)|Stick]], a member of the benevolent [[Chaste (Marvel Comics)|Chaste]] organization, recognized the darkness in her soul and attempted to train her himself, but she ultimately sided with the [[The Hand (comics)|Hand]], a sect of [[mysticism|mystical]] [[ninja]] who trained her as an assassin. She later broke away from them and became an independent agent, and in this role she encountered [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]]. She defeated Daredevil in her mission to kill the criminal Alarich Wallenquist. However, she failed her assignment, and Daredevil had to save her from being killed by Eric Slaughter, revealing his secret identity to her in the process.<ref name="debut">''Daredevil'' #168 (Jan. 1981)</ref> Although the pair worked together to fight the Hand, they also came into conflict frequently.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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Daredevil meets up with Elektra, the Black Widow, and the new White Tiger in front of the building that holds the "Murdock Papers" (the evidence Kingpin was talking about). They intended to retrieve the papers before the FBI could get there, but were suddenly attacked by Bullseye. Daredevil and Elektra fought the villain and, after a lengthy and bloody battle, won. However, Daredevil was suddenly shot by [[Paladin (comics)|Paladin]] (who was working for FBI operatives) and was left bleeding profusely in Elektra's arms. Elektra then takes Matt to the [[Night Nurse (comics)#Night Nurse (modern)|Night Nurse]], but insists that The Hand should cure him. Black Widow appears and objects. While Elektra and Black Widow fight, The Hand heals Matt Murdock. |
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Elektra later battled the Hand alongside Daredevil and [[Gladiator (Melvin Potter)|Gladiator]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #174</ref> She then battled [[Kirigi (Marvel Comics)|Kirigi]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #175 (Oct. 1981)</ref> |
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Outside the Night Nurse's medical office, reporters and police gather. Elektra then jumps out the side of the window, along with The Hand to drive off the police and FBI. She gets in a quarrel with [[Luke Cage]], and quickly exits the scene at Matt's request. |
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She soon became the chief assassin in the employ of the [[Kingpin (comics)|Kingpin]], [[New York City]]'s premier crime lord.<ref>''Daredevil'' #178 (Jan. 1982)</ref> She attempted to kill Daredevil after he tried to stop her from terrorizing [[Ben Urich]].<ref>''Daredevil'' #179 (Feb. 1982)</ref> The Kingpin then assigned her to kill [[Foggy Nelson|Franklin "Foggy" Nelson]], Matt's partner. When Nelson recognized Elektra as Matt's college girlfriend, she was unable to kill him.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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===Replacement by Skrulls=== |
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{{seealso|Secret Invasion}} |
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Elektra was fatally stabbed by [[Bullseye (comics)|Bullseye]] with one of her own [[Sai (weapon)|sai]] in a battle over which of them would be the Kingpin's assassin. Elektra managed to crawl to Daredevil's house before dying in his arms as Bullseye watched the two, hidden among a crowd that had gathered to see what was going on.<ref>''Daredevil'' #181 (Apr. 1982)</ref> Later, members of The Hand stole her body and attempted to resurrect her. Daredevil, with the assistance of [[Stone (Marvel Comics)|Stone]], a member of Stick's order, intervened, defeating The Hand ninja. Daredevil then tried to revive Elektra himself. Although his attempt failed, it did have the effect of purifying Elektra's soul. Elektra's body subsequently disappeared, as did Stone.<ref>''Daredevil'' #190 (Jan. 1983)</ref> |
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It is revealed that before "Wolverine: Enemy of the State," Elektra was attacked by a Skrull possessing the powers of the X-Men and the Ghost Rider, but Elektra killed the Skrull. Later on, Elektra was attacked by two Skrulls with more power and was beaten near to death and replaced. The Skrull Elektra then takes over the Hand and hires Electro to break Sauron out of the Raft. |
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Later, Elektra was found to have been resurrected by Stone and residing upon the [[Chaste (Marvel Comics)|Chaste mountain]], where she claimed to have found peace. It was revealed that when Elektra was resurrected, the evil aspect of her soul had physically split apart from her and had been placed in its own body by the Snakeroot (a part of The Hand), as a consequence of the ritual performed by Daredevil. Her darker half, calling itself '''Erynys'''<!--boldface per MOS:BOLDSYN--> ({{IPAc-en|ɪ|ˈ|r|ɪ|n|ɪ|s}}), was tasked to get the About Face Virus for the Snakeroot so that the merger of the corpse and Elektra's essence would become permanent, allowing them complete control over an obedient version of the assassin. Confronted by Daredevil, Stone and Elektra, the Snakeroot fought back in a gruelling battle over the virus. Eventually, Erynys was killed, thus returning the dark side to Elektra's soul.<ref>''Daredevil'' #325 (Feb. 1994)</ref> |
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Elektra seemingly reappears, appearing to be corrupted by the Hand.<ref>''[[New Avengers (comics)|New Avengers]]'' #28</ref> She kills, resurrects, and imprisons the vigilante [[Echo (comics)|Maya Lopez]], intending to use her as a weapon. The New Avengers rescue Lopez and she end up stabbing Elektra to death <ref>''New Avengers'' #31</ref>. However, upon her death it is revealed that "Elektra" is actually a [[Skrull]] in disguise; its death indicates that the Skrulls have become undetectable to even the heightened senses of New Avengers members [[Spider-Man]], [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]], and [[Doctor Strange]]. The corpse is given to [[Iron Man]] by [[Spider-Woman (Jessica Drew)|Spider-Woman]].<ref>''Mighty Avengers'' #7</ref> |
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Some time later, Stick sent Elektra to help [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]] at a time when physically and mentally regressed to a bestial form. She helped retrain Logan to the point where the latter could think and vocalise as a human once more, and spent time thereafter as the [[X-Men|X-Man]] returned to a normal form, including taking Logan with her on a visit to her ancestral home.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 2 #106 (Oct. 1996)</ref> |
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''New Avengers'' #40 reveals that Elektra was replaced by a Skrull imposter named Siri prior to the events of ''Wolverine: Enemy of the State'', and ''Wolverine: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D''. It is unclear how the Hand, who resurrected 'Elektra' during ''Wolverine: Enemy of the State'', failed to notice that she had reverted to being a Skrull. The real Elektra's current whereabouts are unknown <ref>''New Avengers'' #40</ref> |
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Seeking a focus for her life, Elektra recruited her own order of fighters and mercenaries called the Ryu, to oppose the Snakeroot. She proved to be a poor leader, however, and the entire Ryu was killed trying to prevent the Snakeroot from assassinating a set of pure souls for their cause. Elektra ultimately completed the destruction of the Snakeroot and the protection of the last soul alone.<ref>''Elektra: Root of Evil'' #1–4 (March–June 1995)</ref> |
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==Powers and abilities== |
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===Skills=== |
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{{Original research|date=April 2008}} |
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Elektra's primary abilities are a strong knowledge of martial arts and weaponry. Elektra learned ancient martial arts of China, Siam, and Japan. She is a master combatant with the Japanese [[Sai (weapon)|Sai]], her usual weapon of choice. She is also highly skilled with the katana, daggers, 3-sectional staff and throwing stars. She is a master of many Japanese combat forms including [[Ninjutsu]]. Elektra is an Olympic-level athlete, strong in [[gymnastics]] and [[swimming]], with a high level in athleticism in human strength, speed, agility, and reflexes. Resistant to pain and extreme cold, she can freely go [[barefoot]] into the winter snow. She is also able to keep to the shadows and move with such speed that she can remain unseen even in daylight, thus explaining why she is Marvel's top killer. She cannot be seen in a dim lighted room and she can't be detected if she is in a warehouse of any sort and kind. |
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Later, Elektra asked martial-artist King Lau and boxer McKinley Stewart to help her open a [[Dojo]].<ref>''Elektra (Vol. 2)'' #1 (Sept. 1996)</ref> After a showdown with Bullseye led to the death of a young woman's father, Elektra took in the girl, Nina, as her roommate and [[ward (law)|ward]]. During this time, a villain named the Architect was calling all super-villains to meet in [[New York City]], for a competition to have Elektra kill him so that he could be reborn in a new host body. With the help of [[Doctor Strange]], the Architect was killed and his essence was trapped in the body of a small demon, caged by Strange.<ref>''Elektra (Vol. 2)'' #2-8 (Oct 1996 - Apr 1997)</ref> |
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Elektra has demonstrated on occasion the ability to mesmerize others, and as such make them see illusions or other phenomena. |
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She was hired by [[Nick Fury]] to assassinate Saddam Abed Dassam, the leader of Iraq who was in league with [[Hydra (comics)|HYDRA]], and retrieve the Scorpio Key. Fury hired her as a way to avoid accountability in global political circles. HYDRA tried to hire her, an offer she refused. They then set the [[Kenuichio Harada|Silver Samurai]] on to her and it appeared she killed the Silver Samurai though the latter appeared alive and well in other comics. When she eventually obtained the Scorpio Key, she refused to give it to Fury, believing that Fury could not be trusted with such a powerful weapon. She instead gave it to the police officer who had killed her father, stating that the officer had a debt to her and would not let her down.<ref>''Elektra'' vol. 2 #1–5 (September 2001 – January 2002)</ref> |
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Elektra's strangest (and perhaps most obscure) gift is her ability to "throw" her mind into those of others. For instance, she was able to track down her enemy, Ken Wind, by temporarily "borrowing" people's minds and acting through them while she hunted around for her prey. This temporal mind control enables her to metaphorically sniff out the psyche, or intent, of her targets. It saw extensive use during ''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'', in which she was heavily reliant on only her ninja powers. It is unknown how long the effect lasts, but Elektra has gone a full two days or more in someone else's mind while they zoned out in hers. |
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===Wolverine: Enemy of the State=== |
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Elektra has occasionally demonstrated low-level telekinesis, though it is possible that this may be an illusion which victims of her mesmerism are led to see. She can communicate telepathically with individuals possessing similar levels of mental discipline, such as the Chaste. |
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Elektra worked with [[S.H.I.E.L.D.|S.H.I.E.L.D]].<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #20</ref> |
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HYDRA and The Hand joined forces, killing off various heroes and resurrecting them into their possessed warriors, including Wolverine, who became their killing machine.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #21</ref> Based on her relationship with Logan and her ties to the Hand, Fury hired Elektra to lead the mission, paying her in excess of $200,000, more money in one day than the (then) yearly salary of the [[President of the United States]].<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #23. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> She worked to stop Wolverine from killing others as well as to try to turn him back to his normal self. During a fight with The Hand, Elektra was killed and resurrected as a Hand warrior, eventually becoming their leader.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #24</ref> Along with the X-Man [[Northstar (Marvel Comics)|Northstar]] and other superhumans killed and resurrected by the Hand, Elektra attacked Fury, injuring the latter badly and causing the destruction of a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier.<ref name="Wolverine v3 #27">''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #27. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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It is unclear what the limitations on her psychic ability are. She may be limited by touching distance or to minds easily affected by persuasion; the last time Elektra tried this trick, it was with S.H.I.E.L.D. Elektra was not born with this interesting gift: she mastered it through training and refinement with The Hand. Their fighters share a similar power, which means each of them — including Elektra — are mentally linked to [[Hand (comics)|The Beast]], the relentless demigod of The Hand who has haunted her since she broke rank. |
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Thanks to S.H.I.E.L.D., Wolverine eventually came to his senses and wanted revenge.<ref name="Wolverine v3 #27" /> During a fight with Elektra, she mentally spoke to Wolverine, using new abilities given to her by the Hand. She explained that being killed by The Hand was all part of a plan she had from the beginning. She explained that she had been resurrected by The Hand and infiltrated the organization, making them believe they had been successful in resurrecting her as a brainwashed warrior. She told him that they would take The Hand and HYDRA down together. They fought off many ninjas and were victorious.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #29</ref> [[Gorgon (Tomi Shishido)|Gorgon]], however, attacked Elektra and threw off her mental blocks, enabling him to read her thoughts and see where Fury was being treated for his injuries (he also discovered that the [[Holy See|Vatican]] also hired her, to kill him). Gorgon teleported, with Elektra, to kill Fury. When they arrived, Elektra ordered the S.H.I.E.L.D. soldiers to attack. Gorgon used his power on her neck and she collapsed. Wolverine eventually used Gorgon's own powers against him, defeating him.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #30. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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Nick Fury can attest to the usage of this eerie mind control in person. In the 90's, he conducted scientific experiments on the captured assassin and found strange morphology in her brain that explained her phenomenal reflexes, yet sane rationale. Elektra moves with heightened primal instincts but the more evolved parts of her brain remain intact, preserving her intelligence. In other words, she thinks like a woman and strikes like a cobra. |
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In an [[email]] to [[Kitty Pryde]], Fury says that Elektra has survived albeit missing and probably in Eastern Europe, creating her own militia group which intends to be her own version of The Hand. Fury also says that Elektra is at present, no threat. It is during the time following the helicarrier's destruction that she is abducted by Skrulls and replaced with an imposter.<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #31; ''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #5. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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This "mind jump" ability might explain why Elektra is always a step ahead of her competition, or seems to know where her target is at all times. An extreme example would be the time she murdered an ambassador in South America. The man was sitting against the wall when Elektra sought out his mind and thrust her katana into his heart. The sword pierced through the thick wall and the politician was slain where he sat. |
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=== Daredevil and the Kingpin === |
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In the movie "Electra", Elektra possesses a similar power, which is referred to as "Kimaguri". This ability allows her to perceive time, the future, and life and death. |
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Elektra resurfaces to help Daredevil with a situation with the Kingpin. The crime lord, in exchange for his freedom, offered the FBI irrefutable evidence that Matt was Daredevil.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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It is revealed that Elektra actually helped the Kingpin gain all the needed information back when she was Daredevil's enemy, and she returned because she felt an obligation to help Matt out of the trouble for which she felt responsible. It was also revealed by the [[Black Widow (Natalia Romanova)|Black Widow]] that Elektra is now the leader of The Hand.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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Elektra also studied [[political science]] at Columbia University, in New York City. |
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Daredevil meets up with Elektra, the Black Widow, and the new White Tiger in front of the building that holds the "Murdock Papers" (the evidence Kingpin was talking about). They intended to retrieve the papers before the FBI could get there, but were suddenly attacked by Bullseye. Daredevil and Elektra fought the villain and, after a lengthy and bloody battle, won. However, Daredevil was suddenly shot by [[Paladin (comics)|Paladin]] (who was working for FBI operatives) and was left bleeding profusely in Elektra's arms. Elektra then takes Matt to the [[Night Nurse (comics)#Night Nurse (modern)|Night Nurse]], but insists that The Hand should cure him. Black Widow appears and objects. While Elektra and Black Widow fight, The Hand heals Murdock.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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===Physical Strength=== |
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{{Original research|date=December 2007}} |
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"Something that was not a Mack truck slammed into the agents, sending them sprawling. [...] Pitman then fell to his knees, disemboweled. Newton's head, cleft from the shoulders, struck the floor. [...] She punched her hand through Gower's body armor. Her hand was reaching under his rib cage for his heart when she passed out." (Assassin #3) |
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Outside the Night Nurse's medical office, reporters and police gather. Elektra then jumps out the side window, along with The Hand to drive off the police and FBI. She gets in a quarrel with [[Luke Cage]], and quickly exits the scene at Matt's request.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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Elektra is human, which means she's not endowed with any outstanding mutant powers like most in the Marvel universe. However, she has naturally enhanced her body through daily, lifelong training. Her speed and agility are probably her greatest assets -- she's been known to swipe weapons off of a trained operative before they can finish blinking or dodge the trajectory of incoming bullets. |
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It was later revealed that "Elektra" was actually a Skrull and not the real Elektra.<ref>''Elektra: Dark Reign'' #5. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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Elektra pushes herself on a daily basis to reach her peak human limits. From this Zen, she has achieved a decathlete's endurance, a gymnast's flexibility, and furious strength. As for examples, she once climbed a vertical cliff with her bare hands, survived a fight with The Hand underwater, went without food or water in the Mojave for days, and tore through a straightjacket while heavily drugged by her captors (see Locke). |
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=== Replacement by Skrulls === |
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The assassin also has good upper body strength, as evident when she shoved Wolverine and Mac during a pissing match with each other (Elektra Vol. 1). In that situation, both men were triple her weight (Logan being 300 lbs. with [[adamantium]]). |
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{{Main|Secret Invasion}} |
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Elektra seemingly reappears, appearing to be corrupted by the Hand.<ref>''[[The New Avengers (comics)|The New Avengers]]'' #28</ref> She kills, resurrects, and imprisons the vigilante [[Echo (Marvel Comics)|Maya Lopez]] to use as a weapon. The [[The New Avengers (comics)|New Avengers]] rescue Lopez who ends up stabbing Elektra to death,<ref>''The New Avengers'' #31. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> however, her death revealed that "Elektra" is actually a [[Skrull]] in disguise.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #6–7 (2007). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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It turns out that the real Elektra was selected to be replaced by the Skrull Siri. Elektra was targeted by several Skrull impostors while staying in Japan, but she fought and killed most of these Skrulls (including Siri). Elektra gets blindsided and severely beaten by the Super-Skrull [[Pagon]] who ultimately took Elektra's place (since Siri was killed by Elektra) as a major "reveal" of [[Veranke]]'s intent to take over the world's superheroes.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #16. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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It can be said that Elektra can achieve anything if she puts her mind to it, and that is exactly the kind of attitude that has saved her while fighting superpowered enemies like The Beast in the past. |
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The real Elektra was revealed to be alive upon one of the Skrull ships and was released during the final battle between the heroes and the Skrulls.<ref>''Secret Invasion'' #8</ref> [[Iron Man]] immediately orders her held in protective custody at S.H.I.E.L.D.<ref name="dre1">''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #1 (March 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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===Immune System=== |
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{{Original research|date=December 2007}} |
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"Elektra can control her own autonomous nervous system to a degree, controlling bleeding, fighting infection, etc." <ref>(Elektra: The Official Movie Adaptation)</ref> |
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==="Dark Reign"=== |
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Able to raise her endorphin levels through adrenaline, Elektra can will herself to be impervious to pain or emotion during critical moments, putting death on hold until she can administer attention to her wounds (like a Tibetan monk who can withstand extreme highs of pain, heat, and cold.) |
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Being the only Skrull captive showing signs of experimentation and torture, Elektra finds herself weakened by multiple injuries. [[Norman Osborn]] orders her studied and monitored to obtain information as to why this was the case.<ref name="dre1" /> Paladin breaks into [[H.A.M.M.E.R.]] headquarters intending to kill Elektra for $82 million. She overpowers Paladin and chokes him by spitting her broken tooth down his throat. She forces him to surrender the keys to her to escape. Before leaving the cell, she murders the interrogator who was torturing her for information.<ref name="dre1" /> She finally makes her escape after taking down several H.A.M.M.E.R. operatives and manages to reach Murdock's office to raid his stash of first aid supplies. After being confronted by Nelson, she collapses from extensive blood loss due to her injuries.<ref name="dre2">''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #2 (April 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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Elektra wakes up handcuffed to a hospital bed in the Night Nurse's clinic. The nurse explains that she bound Elektra for her own safety, although the ninja easily frees herself. Their conversation is interrupted when a hit woman named Nico breaks in and attempts to kill both of them. Elektra sends Nico flying out the window then arms herself with the ninja's weapons while telling the Night Nurse to escape. Elektra jumps into the alley and battles Nico, only to find that another hit man named Carmine is also attempting to kill her with a sniper rifle from a rooftop. She manages to defeat Nico while evading Carmine's shots and obtains some clues from Nico as to why she was being targeted for assassination. On the rooftop, Carmine is murdered by Bullseye (in the guise of Hawkeye) who was sent by Osborn to kill Elektra.<ref name="dre3">''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #3 (May 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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This was how she was able to drag herself, bleeding profusely from the hole Bullseye put in her chest, to see her old flame Daredevil before dying in his arms. Elektra's body and mind are almost always in a meditative state. She doesn't waste her energy on extraneous activities. She is so quiet outside and in that even Matt (who is known for his radar senses) has difficulty picking up her heartbeat. |
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Elektra climbs to the top of the building to confront the third assassin, only to be taken aback when she discovers that he is Bullseye. Although initially hesitant, she stands her ground and faces her killer. The two begin to fight when Nico manages to reach the rooftop to check on Carmine. Bullseye attempts to kill her with a drug laced arrow, but she is saved by Elektra (who accidentally gets the drugs on the arrow in her system in the process). Bullseye then kicks the seemingly sedated Elektra off the building, but she manages to land safely. Bullseye follows and confronts her on the street, attempting to kill her with her own sai, much like their first encounter. However, this time Elektra outmaneuvers him and stabs him through the back with one of his own arrows. Nico once more interrupts the fight, attempting to shoot the fleeing Bullseye, then confronting the heavily drugged, helpless Elektra. H.A.M.M.E.R. agents enter the fray and shoot Nico, but are ambushed and killed by Wolverine before they can finish Elektra off.<ref name="dre4">''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #4 (June 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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"Her heart didn't skip. Her breathing didn't budge. I deserved that. Idiot." (Daredevil Vol. II, #37) |
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After escaping H.A.M.M.E.R., Wolverine reveals to Elektra where Nico ran, and Elektra tries to confront the problem head on and peaceably end the conflict. Arriving at the Blackhawk crash site, she discovers that Agent Brothers, a former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent, was the one who put a price on her head. Brothers claims that she was responsible for killing hundreds of S.H.I.E.L.D. agents during the [[#Wolverine: Enemy of the State|Blackhawk incident]]. Elektra, having no memory of the incident, denies the accusations and urges both Brothers and Nico to go in peace, stating that it was her Skrull impostor who was responsible for the incident. However, Osborn then appears, and reveals that Elektra was in fact abducted after the Helicarrier attack, although she has no memory of this because she had used a mind trick to "forget" her resurrections and the incidents surrounding them to prevent the Skrulls from accessing them during her abduction. Osborn taunts Elektra to undo this mind trick, and Elektra obliges. It is then revealed that Elektra is actually guilty of the accusations. She then proceeds to kill both Nico and Brothers.<ref name="dre5">''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #5 (June 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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Finally, Elektra does not smoke but will, on occasion, drink. She'll push aside any personal preferences in order to pull off a disguise. |
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== |
=== Code Red === |
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Elektra was involved in an incident with the [[Thunderbolt Ross|Red Hulk]], [[X-Force]], a new villain, the [[Betty Ross|Red She-Hulk]], and a few other well known mercenaries such as [[Deadpool]] and the [[Punisher]].<ref>Loeb, Jeph. Hulk vol. 2 #14–17 (October – December 2009). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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===DC Vs. Marvel=== |
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In the ''[[DC Vs. Marvel]]'' miniseries, Elektra fought [[Catwoman]] and won. Stating that she has no problem with killing people, but this was not really 'their' fight, she instead cuts Catwoman's whip in a way that causes the DC character to fall into a truck filled with sand. She does state that she is a spectacular martial artist and can, most likely, beat other heroines. |
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=== |
=== Shadowland === |
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{{Main|Shadowland (comics)}} |
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In one of the universes visited by the [[Exiles (Marvel Comics)|Exiles]], Elektra was one of the few remaining survivors in a world ravaged by [[HYDRA#Exiles|HYDRA]] and their leader, [[Invisible Woman|Sue Storm]]. Elektra is shown to be the lover of [[Mister Fantastic|Reed Richards]], and is a key player in the revival of the inhabitants of that earth. Her abilities are identical to that of her mainstream version. |
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In "[[Shadowland (comics)|Shadowland]]" storyline, Stick tries to convince Elektra to help stop the Hand from corrupting Matt. But she refuses, because she wanted him to be cold-hearted just like her out of spite for him. She reconsiders when she witnessed the broadcast of Daredevil killing Bullseye.<ref>''Shadowland: Elektra'' (September 2010)</ref> She joins the Hand so she can gain intel on the Shadowland fortress to help the super heroes infiltrate it. Later upon rejoining the Hand, Elektra visits Daredevil and [[Typhoid Mary (character)|Typhoid Mary]] at Bullseye's grave intending to resurrect him.<ref>''Shadowland'' #3 (September 2010). [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> She then helps sneak the super heroes into the building, to stop Daredevil from resurrecting Bullseye. A fight erupts and just when Elektra tried to reach out to Matt, the Demon of the Hand finally possesses him. Once he defeats all of the super heroes, Iron Fist used his chi energy on the demon to help heal Matt's soul. While that was happening, Elektra entered Matt's mind to encourage him fight the evil presence of the demon. Matt killed himself to stop the demon from causing any more chaos. Elektra later resurrected him.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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=== |
===Thunderbolts=== |
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As part of the 2012 [[Marvel NOW!]] branding, Elektra becomes a member of Red Hulk's [[Thunderbolts (comics)|Thunderbolts]].<ref>''Thunderbolts'' vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics</ref><ref name="Thunderbolts">{{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=40965 |title=Way and Dillon Confirmed For Marvel NOW! "Thunderbolts" |last=James |first=Adam |date=12 September 2012 |publisher=Comic Book Resources |access-date=12 September 2012}}</ref> |
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Elektra appears as one of the assassins of the [[Kingpin (comics)|Kingpin]] and is later hired by [[Thunderbird (comics)#House of M|John Proudstar]] to bring down Luke Cage's "Avengers".<ref>''House of M: Avengers'' #3</ref> |
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=== |
===Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.=== |
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During the "[[Avengers: Standoff!]]" storyline, Elektra was incarcerated for some unknown reason in Pleasant Hill, a gated community established by S.H.I.E.L.D. S.H.I.E.L.D. used the powers of Kobik to turn her into Sheriff Eva. During this time, she was in love with [[Absorbing Man]]'s altered human form of an ice cream vendor named Henry. After Baron [[Helmut Zemo]] and Fixer started using a machine to turn all the inmates back to normal, Elektra was among those restored. She talked Absorbing Man out to harming the innocent lives at Pleasant Hill.<ref>''Illuminati'' #6. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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In the [[Marvel Mangaverse]], Elektra is evil and works for the Hand. When she is first introduced she encounters Daredevil who at first refuses to believe that she was working for the enemy. After a tearful reunion they kiss and she says to him "You tried to save my soul once. Unfortunately there was nothing there worth saving" and then proceeds to cut him in half. Later, during her fight with [[Ms. Marvel|Carol Danvers]], she shows [[remorse]] for having killed him. Elektra thanks Carol when Carol cuts her in half with Daredevil's blades. |
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During the 2016 "[[Civil War II]]" storyline, Elektra joined S.H.I.E.L.D. to free her conscience of the deaths of the passengers of the crashed Black Hawk. She took the position of field director when [[Phil Coulson]] left the group.<ref>''Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.'' #8</ref> When Coulson was trying to interfere with Captain Marvel's plans to use [[Ulysses (comics)|Ulysses Cain]]'s abilities to stop crime before it happens, Elektra discovered that [[Leo Fitz]] was Coulson's mole in her group which Maria Hill was alerted to. At the same time, she also reinstated [[Grant Ward (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Grant Ward]] into S.H.I.E.L.D. and placed an explosive collar on his neck to ensure his loyalty.<ref>''Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D'' #9. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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===Marvel Zombies=== |
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In the Ultimate Fantastic Four arc "Crossover," Elektra is seen among the zombie hordes preparing to attack [[Alternate versions of Magneto#Marvel Zombies|Magneto]], Mr. Fantastic, and the few living humans they are protecting. She is also among the zombies that attack (and infect) [[Punisher|Frank Castle]]. |
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=== |
=== Becoming Daredevil === |
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During [[Chip Zdarsky]]'s run on [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|''Daredevil'']], Elektra seeks out Murdock to help form an organization called The Fist to take down The Hand once and for all. To prove herself trustworthy, she takes up the mantle of Daredevil and protects Hell Kitchen while Matt is in prison.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Everything That's Happened in 'Daredevil' So Far |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/comics/everything-that-s-happened-in-daredevil-so-far |access-date=2022-07-16 |website=[[Marvel Entertainment]]|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-09-19 |title=Daredevil Has Blood On His Hands And Is Facing Jail Time In Marvel Comics |url=https://screenrant.com/daredevil-going-to-prison-marvel-comics/ |access-date=2022-07-16 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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In the [[MC2]] Universe (an alternate future primarily focused on the children of current Marvel superheroes), Elektra married Wolverine and the two had a daughter named Rina Logan, a.k.a. [[Wild Thing (comics)|Wild Thing]]. Very little is said about the future of Elektra, although we do see that she is actively involved in parenting Rina. Additionally, it is shown that she is wealthy enough to have an "extra-dimensional" credit rating. |
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== Powers and abilities == |
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Elektra also has a cameo in [[Spider-Girl]] where she is hired by the [[Black Tarantula]] to be Spider-Girl's martial arts instructor. |
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Elektra's primary abilities are a strong knowledge of martial arts and weaponry. Elektra learned ancient martial arts of China, Siam, and Japan. She is a master combatant with the Okinawan [[Sai (weapon)|sai]], her usual weapon of choice. She is also highly skilled with the [[katana]], daggers, [[three-section staff]], and [[shuriken]]. She is a master of many Japanese combat forms including [[Ninjutsu]], [[Aikido]] and [[Karate]].<ref>''Daredevil: The Man Without Fear'' #3 (December 1993)</ref> Elektra is an Olympic-level athlete, strong in [[gymnastics]] and [[human swimming|swimming]], with superior strength, speed, agility, reflexes, stamina, endurance, dexterity, reactions, coordination and balance. She is resistant to pain and extreme heat and cold. She is also able to keep to the shadows and move with such speed that she can remain unseen even in daylight. |
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Elektra has the ability to [[wikt:mesmerize|mesmerize]] others, and as such make them see [[illusion]]s or other phenomena.<ref>''Elektra Assassin'' #5. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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===Mutant X=== |
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In the [[Mutant X (comics)|Mutant X]] Universe—an alternate world which was visited by the [[Earth-616]] (mainstream Marvel Universe) [[Havok (comics)|Havok]]—Elektra (surname: Stavros), while still equally trained as a martial artist and assassin, was the nanny and [[bodyguard]] of Scott Summers. Scott was the son of that reality's [[Havok (comics)|Alex Summers]] and [[Madelyne Pryor]]. She came to accept that Scott believed a different man inhabited the body of his father. Elektra stuck with Alex, protecting Scott from repeated assaults by his mother, the Goblin Queen, and her brainwashed allies. She seemingly dies near the end of the series, though Scott reassures Alex that she will come back. |
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Elektra also has the ability to "throw" her mind into those of others. For instance, she was able to track down her enemy, Ken Wind, by temporarily "borrowing" people's minds and acting through them while she hunted around for her prey.<ref>''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #1. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> This temporary mind control enables her to metaphorically sniff out the psyche, or intent, of her targets.<ref name=":0"/> It saw extensive use during ''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'', in which she was heavily reliant on only her ninja powers.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} |
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===Ultimate Elektra=== |
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:'' See also: [[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]] for information on the two starring miniseries.'' |
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In the [[Ultimate Marvel]] universe, Elektra Natchios is a [[student]] at [[Columbia University]] who has a knack for [[martial arts]] and is a great fan of [[Bruce Lee]]. Her mother died of [[breast cancer]] when she was 6, and her father is trying to make money with a [[self-service laundry|laundromat]]. |
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Elektra can communicate telepathically with individuals possessing similar levels of mental discipline, such as the Chaste. She mastered this ability during training with The Hand, which mentally links her to [[Hand (comics)|The Beast]], the demigod of The Hand. She is able to shield her mind from others.<ref name=":0">''Wolverine'' Vol 3 #29. [[Marvel Comics]].</ref> |
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In this universe, she starts out as a sweet, innocent girl who cares deeply for her loved ones - so deeply that she is willing to go over dead bodies to help them. This trait starts her descent into becoming one of the most deadly assassins. |
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She can see glimpses of future events across precognitive visions.<ref name=":0"/> |
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There is a gap between the Elektra featured in ''[[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]]'' and ''Ultimate Elektra'' and the one shown in ''[[Ultimate Spider-Man]]''. In the first two arcs, she is a normal college student, but in the last arc - which is set a few years later - she has become the [[Kingpin (comics)#Ultimate Kingpin|Kingpin]]'s right hand and is a villainess. She is shown in this universe as a highly dangerous and skilled killer, and was able to take down the likes of [[Hammerhead (comics)#Ultimate Hammerhead|Hammerhead]], [[Black Cat (comics)#Ultimate Black Cat|Black Cat]], [[Moon Knight#Ultimate Moon Knight|Moon Knight]], and [[Alternate versions of Spider-Man#Ultimate Spider-Man|Spider-Man]] easily. She was later put into a coma when Moon Knight threw one of his crescent blades at her, hitting her in the head when she was about to kill Black Cat. |
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== Themes and motifs == |
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==Feature series== |
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Elektra stories tend to emphasize her characteristics as a [[sex symbol]] and [[femme fatale]]. For example, in the 1996 ongoing series she speaks of the "fevered desires" and "dark, sensual fantasies" she inspires in men.<ref name="Elektra #4, February 1997"/> The Frank Miller stories in particular also explore madness, sadism, death, and mourning.<ref>Young, p. 196-197.</ref> The ''Elektra: Assassin'' miniseries is a satire on American culture and politics, in which [[American exceptionalism|idealistic justifications]] for US policy have hidden, obscene motives of dominance, lust, and self-destruction.<ref>Young, p. 236.</ref> |
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<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:ElektraSaga Issue1.jpg|thumb|right|140px|Cover of ''Elektra Saga'' #1.]] --> |
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== Supporting characters== |
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Elektra has received her own comic series twice. The second series was published under the [[Marvel Knights]] imprint; it was labeled Mature/Violent for content, but despite that was never actually a Max book. |
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Elektra was initially a supporting character for [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]], as an early girlfriend and an antagonist. He often appears in stories in which she is the main protagonist. She also commonly appears in a stories featuring [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]], who at one point refers to her as a "kindred spirit."<ref name="Dead Body 2014"/> She also sometimes works together with [[Nick Fury]] and [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]. Her primary antagonists and enemies include [[The Hand (comics)|the Hand]] and [[Bullseye (Marvel Comics)|Bullseye]], who at one time succeeded in murdering her (although she was resurrected). |
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== Cultural impact and legacy == |
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===Mainstream Universe Series=== |
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J. Andrew Deman describes Elektra as "an iconic Marvel warrior woman." Following her example, the popular character [[Psylocke]] of the [[X-Men]] adopted as similar costume and fighting style, in 1989. As with Elektra, the Hand trains and shapes Psylocke into a ninja assassin.<ref>J. Andrew Deman, The Claremont Run: Subverting Gender in the X-Men, University of Texas Press, 2023, p. 62.</ref> |
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*''Elektra Saga'' (1983) #1-4 (fix-up drawn from previously published material) |
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*''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'' (1986) #1-8 |
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*''Elektra Lives Again'' (1990) #1 ([[Epic Comics]] [[graphic novel]]) |
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*''Elektra: Root of Evil'' (1995) #1-4 |
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*''Elektra Megazine'' (1996) #1-2 (reprint series) |
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*''Elektra'' (1996 series) #1-19 (Elektra defeats [[Bullseye (comics)|Bullseye]] and other super villains) |
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Elektra was one of the primary inspirations for the [[Bad girl art]] trend of the 1990s in American comics.<ref name="Conroy">{{cite book|last1=Conroy|first1=Mike|title=500 Great Comic Book Action Heroes|date=2004|publisher=Collins & Brown|location=London|isbn=9781844110049|pages=198–199}}</ref><ref name="Gabilliet">{{cite book|last1=Gabilliet|first1=Jean-Paul|last2=Beaty|first2=Bart|last3=Nguyen|first3=Nick|title=Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books|date=2010|publisher=University Press of Mississippi|location=Jackson|isbn=9781604732672|pages=102–103|edition=1st}}</ref> |
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===Alternate Universe Series=== |
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*''Elektra'' (2001 series) #1-35 ([[Marvel Knights]]) (Elektra proves to be the ultimate assassin in whole [[Marvel Universe]]) |
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*''[[Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer]]'' (2002) #1-3 (Illustrated by [[Yoshitaka Amano]]; Elektra defeats [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] for the second time) |
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*''[[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]]'' (2002) #1-4 |
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*''Elektra: Glimpse & Echo'' (2002) #1-4 |
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*''Elektra: The Hand'' (2004) #1-5 |
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*''[[#Ultimate Elektra|Ultimate Elektra]]'' (2004) #1-5 |
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*''the classic marvel figurine collection #17: Elektra'' (2006) |
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[[Doug Petrie]], a writer for ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'', credits Elektra as the inspiration for the character of [[Faith (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Faith]]. In his view, "In a different, teen, punkier context, Faith is so much like Elektra."<ref name=MonsterBook>{{cite book|last=Golden|first=Christopher|author-link=Christopher Golden |author2=Stephen R. Bissette |author2-link=Stephen R. Bissette |author3=Thomas E. Sniegoski |author3-link=Thomas E. Sniegoski |title=Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Monster Book|publisher=Pocket Books|year=2000|location=New York|pages=VI|isbn=978-0-671-04259-2}}</ref> |
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==In other media== |
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===Animation=== |
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A replica of Elektra's costume is shown at a costume shop in an episode of [[Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends]]. |
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== Other versions == |
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===Films=== |
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[[Image:Elektra teaser.jpg|185px|thumb|right|[[Jennifer Garner]] as Elektra.]] |
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=== What If? === |
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* In the [[2003 in film|2003]] [[Daredevil (film)|''Daredevil'' film]], Elektra (portrayed by [[Jennifer Garner]]) was Daredevil's love interest. Her father was killed by [[Bullseye (comics)|Bullseye]] and she blamed Daredevil for his death. Elektra was trained by Stick as a child so she practiced intensely with her favorite weapons, sai's, which she would use to kill Daredevil. When she finally confronted the vigilante, she impaled him by his shoulder but before she would kill him, she wanted to know who she would be actually killing. She unmasked him and was surprised to find Matt Murdock. Elektra then learned that it was Bullseye who murdered her father. Ironically, however, when she confronted him, Bullseye (who had been attracted to Elektra due to her beauty, skills, and hatred for him) beat her in battle: slitting half of her throat and impaling her in the stomach. When Bullseye left, she was able to say goodbye to Daredevil before dying in his arms. |
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In the story "What If Elektra Had Lived?", penned by Frank Miller, Elektra's murder at the hands of Bullseye does not occur as Bullseye is cut down and killed while trying to escape from prison. Elektra spares Franklin Nelson's life, irritating the Kingpin, who swiftly orders her execution. After fighting off several assassination attempts, Elektra flees to Matt Murdock's brownstone home. Murdock initially wants to take Elektra into custody, but she warns him that with the Kingpin putting a bounty on her head, she will die at the hands of his agents if she is sent to prison. Murdock decides to flee New York with Elektra, putting up his home for sale and cutting off contact with Nelson. The couple are last seen enjoying a quiet sunset on a beach, far removed from society and seemingly happy.<ref>''What If'' #35 (Oct. 1982)</ref> |
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* In the [[Elektra (2005 film)|''Elektra'']] [[spin-off|spinoff]] [[sequel]] to ''Daredevil'', it was revealed that after Elektra died, her old trainer Stick resurrected her and trained her in martial arts in the Way of Kimagure (the ability to control time, the future, and life and death), a benevolent dichotomy of The [[Hand (comics)| Hand]]. On expulsion from Stick's school — a life lesson for her heart of anger and hate — Elektra became an assassin for hire. She soon became acquainted with a single father and his daughter, Abby. She discovered the two were being hunted down by the organization known as the Hand. Elektra, with the help of Stick and his assistants, protected Abby and her father. Abby was then revealed to be a great warrior known as the Treasure: a powerful weapon that could tip the scales of the Hand's power. Elektra had a final showdown with the leader of the Hand. If Elektra won, Abby would go free; if the leader of the Hand won, then Abby would belong to the Hand. In the battle, Elektra was nearly beaten — then, realizing that the Hand leader was her mother's killer, Elektra fatally impaled him through the heart with one of her [[Sai (weapon)|sai]], and flipped him down a well where he disintegrated. A final scene shows Elektra resurrecting Abby the same way Stick resurrected her. |
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=== |
=== House of M === |
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Elektra appears as one of the assassins of the [[Kingpin (comics)|Kingpin]] and is later hired by [[Thunderbird (John Proudstar)|John Proudstar]] to bring down Luke Cage's "Avengers".<ref>''House of M: Avengers'' #3</ref> |
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* In the game ''[[Spider-Man 2: Enter Electro]]'', she is mentioned by Spider-Man, when he is referring to Dr. Watts, whom [[Hammerhead (comics)|Hammerhead]] had taken hostage, and was wearing a red dress, similar in color to Elektra's costume. He told him that if she would have been Elektra then they would have been dead. |
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* She appears as a playable character in [[Electronic Arts|EA]]'s ''[[Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects]]'', along with other well known Marvel characters (Elektra and [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Storm]] are the only Marvel heroines). In this video game, she fights against Daredevil who has been altered by an imperfect chip and wins, but then she is defeated by the magician [[The Wink]]. It is not known if Elektra will return for [[Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects#Sequel|Marvel Nemesis 2]] . |
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* Elektra is also a playable character in [[Activision]] [[Computer role-playing game|RPG]], ''[[Marvel: Ultimate Alliance]]'' voiced by [[Gabrielle Carteris]]. She is the fastest character in the game and her sai attacks are very deadly. She has special dialogue with [[Arcade (comics)|Arcade]], Black Widow, Bullseye, and The [[Wrecking Crew (comics)|Wrecking Crew]], and is one of the few characters who appear during all game briefings. A simulation disk involved Dardevil protecting Elektra from Bullseye and another simulation disk has her fighting Bullseye on the S.H.I.E.L.D. Omega Base. Her costumes include her classic, Ultimate, Assassin, and Stealth. |
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* Elektra also has a cameo appearance in the game ''[[Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter]]''. She is locked in a container along with several other Marvel and [[Street Fighter]] characters who are locked in containers in [[Apocalypse (comics)|Apocalypse]]'s stage. |
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* Elektra was also [[Elektra (2005 film)#Canceled video game|supposed to have a game based on the movie]] but it was never released as publishers felt it would not be popular enough. There is a petition online by a publisher, who said the only way they would make it is if enough people signed up for "Elektra: The Game"; [http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/elektra-the-game.html see the petition for more details]. |
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=== |
=== Marvel Zombies === |
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In the ''[[Ultimate Fantastic Four]]'' arc "Crossover", Elektra is seen among the [[Marvel Zombies|zombie hordes]] preparing to attack [[Alternative versions of Magneto#Marvel Zombies|Magneto]], Mr. Fantastic, and the few living humans they are protecting.<ref>''Ultimate Fantastic Four'' #23 (2005)</ref> She is also among the zombies that attack (and infect) [[Punisher|Frank Castle]].{{Volume needed|c=y|date=November 2010}} The infected Wolverine from this incident travels to another Earth where he kills the human Elektra with his claws, impaling her through the stomach in the manner of Bullseye.<ref>''Marvel Zombies Return'' #3 (2009)</ref> |
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*Elektra appeared in the [[Marvel Legends]] toy line, in series 4 and in the Urban legends box set (repaint white outfit). |
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*Elektra appears in [[Hasbro]]'s [[Marvel Super Hero Squad]] toy line for children ages 3 and older, sharing a two-pack with Daredevil. In 2008, a white-clothed Elektra with a different face was issued in a box set including a repainted [[Ghost Rider (comics)|Ghost Rider]], Punisher, and Spider-Man. |
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*Elektra also appears in the [[Marvel Select]] toy line, designed and produced by [[Marvel Toys|Toy Biz]] for [http://www.diamondselecttoys.com Diamond Select Toys] |
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== |
=== Mutant X === |
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In the [[Mutant X (comics)|Mutant X]] Universe – an alternate world which was visited by the [[Earth-616]] (mainstream Marvel Universe) [[Havok (comics)|Havok]] – Elektra (surname: Stavros), while still equally trained as a martial artist and assassin, is the nanny and [[bodyguard]] of Scotty Summers.<ref>''Mutant X'' #1 (Oct. 1998)</ref> Scotty is the son of that reality's [[Havok (comics)|Alex Summers]] and [[Madelyne Pryor]]. Elektra stays close to Scotty, protecting him from repeated assaults by his mother, the Goblin Queen, and her brainwashed allies.<ref>''Mutant X'' #7–12</ref> Following the disappearance of the Goblin Queen, she indulges in an affair with Havok.<ref>''Mutant X'' #19 (May 2000)</ref> She seemingly dies near the end of the series, though Scotty reassures Alex that she will come back. |
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* [[Elektra: Assassin]] |
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* [[List of women warriors in literature and popular culture]] |
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=== Ultimate Marvel === |
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==External links== |
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:'' See also: [[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]] and [[Ultimate Elektra]] for information on the two starring miniseries.'' |
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*[http://www.teako170.com/ddintro.html Daredevil & Elektra screenplay] Based upon DD #181 |
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In the [[Ultimate Marvel]] universe, Elektra Natchios is a [[student]] at [[Columbia University]] who has a knack for [[martial arts]] and is a great fan of [[Bruce Lee]]. Her mother died of breast cancer when she was 6, and her father is trying to make money with a [[self-service laundry|laundromat]]. |
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*[http://www.english.ufl.edu/imagetext/archives/v3_1/tobe/ Architectural Grounding in Miller's Elektra: Temporality and Spatiality in the Graphic Novel] Article on Elektra: Assassin |
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*http://www.marvel.com/universe/Elektra |
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In this universe, she starts out as a sweet, innocent girl who cares deeply for her loved ones – so deeply that she is willing to go over dead bodies to help them. This trait starts her descent into becoming one of the most deadly assassins in the world.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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There is a gap between the Elektra featured in ''[[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]]'' and ''[[Ultimate Elektra]]'' and the one shown in ''[[Ultimate Spider-Man]]''. In the first two arcs, she is a normal college student,{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} but in the last arc – which is set a few years later – she has become the [[Kingpin (comics)#Ultimate Kingpin|Kingpin]]'s right hand and is a villainess.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} She is hired by an unknown person to kill a Latverian terrorist, but Spider-Man prevented her from doing it.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} She is shown in this universe as a highly dangerous and skilled killer, and was able to take down the likes of [[Hammerhead (comics)#Ultimate Hammerhead|Hammerhead]],{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} [[Black Cat (Marvel Comics)|Black Cat]],{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} [[Moon Knight#Ultimate Marvel|Moon Knight]],{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} and [[Alternative versions of Spider-Man#Ultimate Spider-Man|Spider-Man]] easily.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2010}} She was later put into a coma when Moon Knight threw one of his crescent blades at her, hitting her in the head when she was about to kill Black Cat.<ref>''Ultimate Spider-Man'' Vol. 1 #85 (January 2006)</ref> |
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=== PunisherMax === |
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A more "realistic" version of Elektra appears in the ''[[PunisherMAX]]'' series, from Marvel's ''[[Max (comics)|MAX]]'' imprint. This version of the character is [[Japanese people|Japanese]]: the [[The Hand (comics)|Hand]] lends her services as a bodyguard to the [[Kingpin (comics)|Kingpin]], especially to protect him from the [[Punisher]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=33766|title=Aaron Speaks "Frankly" About "PunisherMAX"|work=Comic Book Resources|access-date=1 April 2016}}</ref> She also becomes the Kingpin's lover. It is revealed that Elektra was secretly hired by Kingpin's ex-wife [[Vanessa Fisk|Vanessa]] to assassinate him for failing to prevent the murder of their son Richard. It is also revealed that she is in a [[lesbian]] relationship with her.<ref>''PunisherMax'' # 18</ref> Elektra eventually has a final confrontation with the Punisher to save Vanessa. She manages to seriously wound the Punisher, but is shot several times and left permanently incapacitated.<ref>''PunisherMax'' #20</ref> Later, a representative from the Hand has one of his men finish her with a sword.<ref>''PunisherMax'' #22</ref> |
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=== Secret Wars (2015) === |
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During the ''[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]'' storyline, there are two different Elektras that exist in [[Battleworld]]: |
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* A [[American frontier|Wild West]] version of Elektra resides on the [[Battleworld]] domain of the Valley of Doom. She is seen as a minion of Governor Roxxon alongside Bullseye, [[Grizzly (comics)|Grizzly]], and [[Doctor Octopus|Otto Octavius]] where they were first seen intimidating Judge Franklin Nelson into leaving town so that he wouldn't preside over [[Red Wolf (comics)|Red Wolf]]'s trial. Sheriff Steve Rogers and Red Wolf later fought the villains which ended with Otto Octavius being killed in battle, Bullseye killing Sheriff Rogers, and Natasha Barnes diverting the remaining villains in the other direction so that she can hide Red Wolf.<ref>''1872'' #2</ref> Elektra and Grizzly later fought Red Wolf again where they end up defeated by him.<ref>''1872'' #3</ref> |
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* Elektra is known as Red Sai, the leader of the [[The Hand (comics)|Red Hand]] school in the ''[[wuxia]]''-inspired [[K'un-L'un]] region of [[Battleworld]]. Due to an oath made by a previous master of the Red Hand to serve every emperor of K'un-L'un, she serves as Emperor [[Zheng Zu]]'s assassin. Red Sai is also the former friend and lover of [[Shang-Chi]], the emperor's son, who was exiled for the murder of Lord Tuan, the previous master of the Iron Fist. During the tournament to decide the new ruler of K'un-L'un, Red Sai and [[Iron Fist (comics)|Rand-K'ai]], Tuan's pupil, fight Shang-Chi in the penultimate round of the Thirteen Chambers. During the fight, Red Sai confesses that Zu had sent her to assassinate his rival Tuan but ultimately failed. To spare his lover and her students from the emperor's wrath, Shang-Chi killed Tuan; Zu implicated and exiled his son for the murder to cover his own involvement. After the truth is revealed, Red Sai and Rand-K'ai let Shang-Chi pass so that he could defeat his father. After Shang-Chi emerges victorious, Red Sai pledges herself to the new emperor.<ref>''Master of Kung Fu'' vol. 2 #1-4</ref> |
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== In other media == |
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=== Television === |
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{{See also|Elektra Natchios (Marvel Cinematic Universe)}} |
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[[File:Élodie Yung as Elektra in Daredevil poster.jpg|thumb|[[Élodie Yung]] as Elektra as she appears in ''[[Daredevil (TV series)|Daredevil]]'' (2015–2018)]] |
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Elektra appears in [[Marvel's Netflix television series]], portrayed by [[Élodie Yung]] as an adult<ref>{{cite web|last1=Steinbeiser|first1=Andrew|title=Elodie Yung Cast As Elektra For Daredevil Season 2|url=http://comicbook.com/2015/07/07/elodie-yung-cast-as-elektra-for-daredevil-season-2-/|website=comicbook.com|access-date=7 July 2015}}</ref> and by Lily Chee in flashbacks.<ref>Daredevil Season 2, Episode 12. The Dark at the End of the Tunnel. Air date 18 March 2016.</ref> |
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* First appearing in the [[Daredevil season 2|second season]] of ''[[Daredevil (TV series)|Daredevil]]'' (2016), this version was trained by [[Stick (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Stick]] from childhood until the [[Chaste (Marvel Comics)|Chaste]] deemed her too dangerous and he had her adopted by Hugo and Christina Natchios to keep her safe.<ref name="Tunnel">{{cite episode|title=The Dark at the End of the Tunnel|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Lyn, Euros (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich and Douglas Petrie (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=12}}</ref> While in college, she met and dated [[Matt Murdock (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Matt Murdock]].<ref>{{cite episode|title=Nelson v. Murdock|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Blackburn, Farren (director); Luke Kalteux (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=April 10, 2015|season=1|number=10}}</ref> In the present, Stick sends her back to New York City to make him return to his side and help defeat the [[The Hand (comics)|Hand]].<ref>{{cite episode|title=Penny and Dime|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Hoar, Peter (director); John C. Kelley (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=4}}</ref> Though she falls in love with him, they break up after she fails to make Murdock kill [[Roscoe Sweeney]] for killing his father years prior.<ref>{{cite episode|title=Kinbaku|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Sigismondi, Floria (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=5}}</ref> Murdock attempts to reconcile with her by convincing her to leave Stick and become her own person,<ref>{{cite episode|title=Guilty as Sin|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Uppendahl, Michael (director); Whit Anderson (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=8}}</ref> but she seeks revenge on Stick after one of his assassins attacks her.<ref>{{cite episode|title=The Man in the Box|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Hoar, Peter (director); John C. Kelley (story); Whit Anderson & Sneha Koorse (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=10}}</ref> When Stick gets kidnapped by the Hand, Elektra and Murdock work together to find him, discovering she was destined to become the Hand's leader "'''Black Sky'''" in the process, though he helps her choose her own path.<ref name="Tunnel" /> She later sacrifices herself to save Murdock from the Hand's forces, but they dig up her body and prepare to revive her.<ref>{{cite episode|title=A Cold Day in Hell's Kitchen|series=Daredevil |series-link=Daredevil (TV series)|credits=Hoar, Peter (director); Marco Ramirez and Douglas Petrie (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=March 18, 2016|season=2|number=13}}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears in ''[[The Defenders (miniseries)|The Defenders]]''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/07/defenders-daredevil-elektra-return-elodie-yung |title=The Defenders: Elodie Yung to return as Elektra — exclusive |last=Li |first=Shirley |publisher=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |date=November 7, 2016 |access-date=November 7, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161109181555/http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/07/defenders-daredevil-elektra-return-elodie-yung |archive-date=November 9, 2016 |url-status=live }}</ref> Revived and now working for the Hand as a brainwashed assassin, she is tasked with killing Chaste members and anyone who can threaten their plans, running afoul of [[Danny Rand (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Danny Rand]], [[Colleen Wing (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Colleen Wing]],<ref>{{cite episode|title=The H Word|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Clarkson, S.J. (director); Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=1}}</ref> and [[Jessica Jones (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Jessica Jones]] in the process.<ref>{{cite episode|title=Mean Right Hook|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Clarkson, S.J. (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=2}}</ref> When Murdock, Rand, Jones, and [[Luke Cage (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Luke Cage]] join forces to form the [[Defenders (comics)|Defenders]] and combat the Hand, Elektra is sent to attack them, but is defeated by Rand.<ref>{{cite episode|title=Worst Behavior|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Hoar, Peter (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=3}}</ref> Following this, she slowly regains her memories, but kills Stick, kidnaps Rand, kills the Hand's leader Alexandra Reid to assume control of the group,<ref>{{cite episode|title=Ashes, Ashes|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Surjik, Stephen (director); Drew Goddard & Marco Ramirez (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=6}}</ref> and manipulates Rand into helping her unearth ancient caverns filled with dragon skeletons said to contain the secret to eternal life.<ref>{{cite episode|title=Fish in the Jailhouse|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Alcalá, Félix Enríquez (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=7}}</ref> After the Defenders rescue Rand and set explosives in the Hand's headquarters, Murdock stays behind to reach Elektra before they share a kiss and disappear in the explosion. While Murdock survives, Elektra's fate is left ambiguous.<ref>{{cite episode|title=The Defenders|series=The Defenders |series-link=The Defenders (miniseries)|credits=Blackburn, Farren (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer)|network=[[Netflix]]|airdate=August 18, 2017|season=1|number=8}}</ref> |
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=== Film === |
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[[File:Jennifer Garner as Elektra.jpg|thumb|[[Jennifer Garner]] as Elektra as she appears in ''[[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]]'' (2003)]] |
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* Elektra appears in the [[20th Century Fox]] film ''[[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]]'' (2003), portrayed by [[Jennifer Garner]].<ref name="done deal">{{cite web|author=Stax |date=January 27, 2002 |url=http://movies.ign.com/articles/317/317940p1.html |title=Daredevil's Done Deals |publisher=IGN |access-date=2008-03-24}}</ref> This version is the daughter of billionaire Nikolas Natchios, who had her trained in martial arts after she witnessed her mother's death at a young age. In the present, she encounters and falls in love with Matt Murdock before witnessing Nikolas' death. Initially assuming Daredevil was the culprit, she attacks him, only to learn he is Murdock. Realizing [[Bullseye (character)|Bullseye]] is her father's killer, she confronts him, but is fatally stabbed, left for dead, and dies in Murdock's arms. |
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** Elektra appears in a 2005 [[Elektra (2005 film)|self-titled]] spin-off film, portrayed again by Jennifer Garner. In this film, it is revealed that she was once a martial arts prodigy called the "Treasure". Following her death, [[Stick (comics)|Stick]] resurrected her and trained her in Kimagure, which grants the practitioner precognition and the ability to resurrect the dead. Due to her rage and fear of seeing her mother's killer however, she is expelled from Stick's training compound and becomes a contract killer. Years later, she finds herself protecting a target she was meant to kill but became acquainted with, Mark Miller, and his daughter Abby Miller, the current "Treasure", from the [[The Hand (comics)|Hand]]. |
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** Following her previous film appearances, Elektra's film rights reverted to [[Marvel Studios]] in 2014 and became available for use in the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] (MCU),<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/04/07/marvel-studios-boss-kevin-feige-talks-captain-america-the-winter-soldier-spoilers-and-whats-in-store-for-the-marvel-cinematic-universe|title=Marvel Studios Boss Kevin Feige Talks Captain America: The Winter Soldier Spoilers and What's in Store for the Marvel Cinematic Universe|publisher=IGN|date=April 16, 2014|access-date=April 16, 2014}}</ref> with Garner reprising her role as Elektra in the MCU film ''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'' (2024) via the plot element of [[Multiverse (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|the multiverse]].<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Kit |first1=Borys |last2=Couch |first2=Aaron |date=July 7, 2023 |title=Jennifer Garner Returning as Elektra for 'Deadpool 3' (Exclusive) |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/deadpool-3-jennifer-garner-returning-as-elektra-1235530539/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230707204642/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/deadpool-3-jennifer-garner-returning-as-elektra-1235530539/ |archive-date=July 7, 2023 |access-date=July 8, 2023 |website=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]}}</ref> In the film, Elektra has long-since been banished to the Void by the previous iteration of the [[Time Variance Authority (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Time Variance Authority]] (TVA), working with "The Others" in opposing [[Cassandra Nova]]. |
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=== Video games === |
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* Elektra makes a cameo appearance in ''[[Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter]]'' as one of [[Apocalypse (character)|Apocalypse]]'s prisoners. |
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* Elektra appears as a boss in the ''[[Daredevil (film)|Daredevil]]'' (2003) tie-in game as a brainwashed servant of the [[Kingpin (character)|Kingpin]] until Daredevil eventually frees her. |
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* Elektra appears in a [[Elektra (2005 film)#Video game|self-titled]] mobile game. |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects]]'', voiced by Jani Jakovac.<ref name="btva">{{cite web|url=http://behindthevoiceactors.com/characters/Daredevil/Elektra-Natchios/ |title=Behind The Voice Actors – Voice Of Elektra Natchios |publisher=Behind The Voice Actors |access-date=November 21, 2015 |postscript=. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources.}}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel: Ultimate Alliance]]'', voiced by [[Gabrielle Carteris]].<ref name="btva" /> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Super Hero Squad Online]]''. |
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* Elektra appears in ''[[LittleBigPlanet]]'' via the "Marvel Costume Kit 2" DLC.<ref name="LittleBigPlanetMCK2">{{cite web |url=http://www.littlebigplanet.com/en/downloadable_content_items/1096?t=US |title=Marvel Costume Kit 2 |publisher=[[Sony]] |access-date=December 30, 2012 |archive-date=February 19, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130219215805/http://littlebigplanet.com/en/downloadable_content_items/1096?t=US |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears as a boss, later unlockable character in ''[[Marvel Avengers Alliance]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsarama.com/18434-sdcc-13-marvel-video-games-panel-live.html|title=SDCC '13: Marvel Video Games Panel LIVE – Thor: The Dark World, LEGO Stan Lee|work=Newsarama.com|access-date=1 April 2016}}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Lego Marvel Super Heroes]]'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/07/20/lego-marvel-super-heroes-characters-and-cast-revealed|title=LEGO Marvel Super Heroes: Characters and Cast Revealed|author=Greg Miller|date=20 July 2013|work=IGN|access-date=1 April 2016}}</ref> voiced by [[Laura Bailey (voice actress)|Laura Bailey]].{{citation needed|date=November 2013}} This version works for the Kingpin. |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Heroes (video game)|Marvel Heroes]]'',<ref>http://marvel.com/news/video_games/26040/marvel_heroes_2016_roll_call_elektra{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> voiced by [[Kat Cressida|Kathryn Cressida]].<ref name="btva" /> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Contest of Champions]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/news/video_games/25254/entering_marvel_contest_of_champions_elektra|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151011234203/http://marvel.com/news/video_games/25254/entering_marvel_contest_of_champions_elektra|url-status=dead|archive-date=11 October 2015|title=Entering Marvel Contest of Champions: Elektra – News – Marvel.com|access-date=1 April 2016}}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel: Future Fight]]''. |
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* A [[Marvel Noir]]-inspired incarnation of Elektra named '''Eliza''' appears as a playable character in ''[[Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2]]''.{{citation needed|date=November 2017}} |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Strike Force]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.marvel.com/games/86782/marvel-strike-force-now-recruiting-heroes-worldwide-launch/|title='MARVEL Strike Force' Now Recruiting Heroes with Worldwide Launch|website=News – Marvel.com}}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order]]'', voiced again by Kathryn Cressida.<ref name="btva" /> |
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* Elektra appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Puzzle Quest]]''.<ref>[https://www.marvel.com/articles/games/piecing-together-marvel-puzzle-quest-daredevil-and-elektra Piecing Together Marvel Puzzle Quest: Daredevil and Elektra]</ref> |
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* Elektra appears in ''[[Marvel Snap]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Elektra - Marvel Snap Card Database - marvelsnap.io |url=https://marvelsnap.io/card/elektra-44 |access-date=2022-11-04 |website=MarvelSnap |language=en}}</ref> |
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=== Miscellaneous === |
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* Elektra appears in the ''Marvel Comics Super Heroes'' collection of commemorative postage-stamps.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.usps.com/communications/newsroom/2007/sr07_024.htm | title = USPS Stamp News: Spider-Man and Nine Other Marvel Super Heroes to Deliver for Postal Service | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090509022721/https://www.usps.com/communications/newsroom/2007/sr07_024.htm |archive-date= 2009-05-09 | website = USPS.com }}</ref> |
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* Elektra appears in a Marvel-licensed slot machine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.slotsonline.com/online-slots/reviews/elektra-1269.htm|title=Play Elektra Slot – Read the Review, Play for Fun or Real Money|access-date=1 April 2016}}</ref> |
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== Bibliography == |
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=== By Frank Miller === |
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In addition to her signature appearances in ''Daredevil'', Elektra starred in three series produced by her creator, Frank Miller: |
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* ''Elektra Saga'' #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 1984) (reprints of material from ''Daredevil'' #168, 174–177, 181–182, 187-190 and ''Bizarre Adventures'' #28) |
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* ''[[Elektra: Assassin]]'' #1–8 (Marvel Comics, 1986, with [[Bill Sienkewicz]]) |
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* ''[[Elektra Lives Again]]'' original [[graphic novel]] (Marvel Comics / [[Epic Comics]], 1990) |
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=== Additional series === |
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Elektra has also headlined the following series: |
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* ''Elektra'' vol. 1 #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 1995) |
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* ''Elektra Megazine'' #1–2 (Marvel Comics, 1996, reprint series) |
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* ''Elektra'' vol. 2, #1–19 (Marvel Comics, 1996–1998) |
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** ''Elektra'' vol. 2, #−1 (Marvel Comics, 1997, "FlashBack Month" issue) |
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** ''[[Peter Parker: Spider-Man]] / Elektra '98'' Annual (Marvel Comics, 1998) |
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* ''Elektra'' vol. 3, #1–35 (Marvel Comics / [[Marvel Knights]], 2001–2004) |
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** Issue 3 was [[Recalled comics|recalled]] by Marvel due to featuring nude images of the character. An edited version was later reissued to retailers. |
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* ''[[Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer]]'' #1–3 (Marvel Comics, 2002) |
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* ''Elektra: Glimpse & Echo'' #1–4 (Marvel Comics / Marvel Knights, 2002) |
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* ''[[Elektra: The Hand]]'' #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2004) |
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* ''[[Dark Reign (comics)|Dark Reign: Elektra]]'' #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2009) |
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* ''[[Shadowland (comics)|Shadowland: Elektra]]'' one-shot (Marvel Comics, 2010) |
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* ''Elektra'' vol. 4, #1–11 (Marvel Comics, 2014–2015) |
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* ''Elektra'' vol. 5, #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2017) |
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* ''Daredevil: Woman Without Fear'' #1–3 (Marvel Comics, 2021) |
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* ''Elektra: Black, White & Blood'' #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 2021) |
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=== Ultimate Marvel === |
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An alternate version of Elektra starred in the following series set in the fictional [[Ultimate Marvel]] Universe: |
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* ''[[Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra]]'' #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 2002) |
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* ''[[Ultimate Elektra]]'' #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2004) |
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=== Collected editions === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Title !! Material Collected !! ISBN !! Publication Date |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra: Assassin'' || ''Elektra: Assassin'' #1–8 || {{ISBNT|978-0785163565}} || August 29, 2012 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra by Frank Miller Omnibus'' || ''Elektra: Assassin'' #1–8, ''Elektra Lives Again'' #1, ''Bizarre Adventures'' #28, ''What If?'' Vol. 2 #35 || {{ISBNT|978-0785127772}} || November 11, 2008 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Daredevil/Elektra: Love and War Gallery Edition'' |
|||
|''Marvel Graphic Novel: Daredevil/Elektra - Love and War'', ''Elektra: Assassin'' #1-8 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-1302923327}} |
|||
|May 28, 2020 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra by Peter Milligan, Larry Hama & Mike Deodato Jr.: The Complete Collection'' |
|||
|''Elektra'' Vol. 2 #1-19,-1 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-1302904333}} |
|||
|March 9, 2017 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra & Wolverine: The Redeemer'' |
|||
|''Elektra & Wolverine: The Redeemer'' #1-3 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-0785109112}} |
|||
|May 1, 2002 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra: The Scorpio Key'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #1–6 || {{ISBNT|0785108432}} || November 30, 1999 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra Vol. 1: Introspect'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #10–15 || {{ISBNT|0785109730}} || December 11, 2002 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra Vol. 2: Everything Old Is New Again'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #16–21 || {{ISBNT|0785111085}} || June 11, 2003 |
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|- |
|||
|''Elektra Vol. III: Relentless'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #23–27 || {{ISBNT|0785112227}} || January 7, 2004 |
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|- |
|||
|''Elektra Vol. 4: Frenzy'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #29–35 || {{ISBNT|0785113983}} || June 30, 2004 |
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|- |
|||
|''Elektra by Greg Rucka Ultimate Collection'' |
|||
|''Elektra'' Vol. 3 #7-22, ''Marvel Knights Double-Shot'' #3 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-0785163930}} |
|||
|July 25, 2012 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra: The Hand'' || ''Elektra: The Hand'' #1–5 || {{ISBNT|0785115943}} || January 5, 2005 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Dark Reign: Elektra'' || ''Dark Reign: Elektra'' #1–5 || {{ISBNT|978-0785138433}} || December 9, 2009 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Shadowland: Street Heroes'' |
|||
|''Shadowland: Elektra, Shadowland: Daughters Of The Shadow'' #1-3, ''Shadowland: Bullseye, Shadowland: Ghost Rider'' and ''Shadowland: Spider-Man'' |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-0785148883}} |
|||
|September 7, 2011 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra Vol. 1: Bloodlines''|| ''Elektra'' Vol. 4 #1–5 || {{ISBNT|978-0785154068}} || November 18, 2014 |
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|- |
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|''Elektra Vol. 2: Reverence'' || ''Elektra'' Vol. 4 #6–11 || {{ISBNT|978-0785154075}} || May 12, 2015 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra: Always Bet on Red'' |
|||
|''Elektra'' Vol. 5 #1-6 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-1302905644}} |
|||
|September 26, 2017 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Daredevil: Woman Without Fear'' |
|||
|''Daredevil: Woman Without Fear'' #1-3 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-1302934934}} |
|||
|May 31, 2022 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Elektra: Black, White & Blood'' |
|||
|''Elektra: Black, White & Blood'' #1-4 |
|||
|{{ISBNT|978-1302932688}} |
|||
|August 2, 2022 |
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|} |
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=== Ultimate Universe === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Title !! Material Collected !! ISBN !! Publication Date |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Ultimate Daredevil & Elektra'' || ''Ultimate Daredevil & Elektra'' #1–4 || {{ISBNT|0785110763}} || November 30, 1999 |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Ultimate Elektra: Devil's Due'' || ''Ultimate Elektra'' #1–5 || {{ISBNT|0785115048}} || January 5, 2005 |
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|} |
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=== Intercompany crossovers === |
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Elektra has been featured in [[Fictional crossover#Comics|crossovers]] with characters from other publishing companies: |
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* ''Elektra/[[Cyblade]]'' one-shot (Marvel Comics / [[Top Cow Productions]], 1997) |
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* ''[[Witchblade]]/Elektra'' one-shot (Top Cow Productions / Marvel Comics, 1997) |
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== See also == |
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* [[Women warriors in literature and culture]] |
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* [[Electra]] |
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== References == |
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{{Reflist|20em}} |
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===Bibliography=== |
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* Langley, Travis, ed. (2018). ''Daredevil Psychology: The Devil You Know''. Sterling. ISBN 978-1-4549-3011-2. |
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* Lindsay, Ryan K., ed. (2013). ''The Devil is in the Details: Examining Matt Murdock and Daredevil''. Sequart Research & Literacy Organization. ISBN 9780578073736. |
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* Miller, Frank and Klaus Janson (2022). ''Daredevil by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson Omnibus''. Marvel. ISBN 978-1-302-94553-4. |
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* Young, Paul (2016). ''Frank Miller's Daredevil and the Ends of Heroism''. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813563817. |
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== External links == |
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* [http://www.marvel.com/universe/Elektra Elektra] at Marvel.com |
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* [http://toonopedia.com/elektra.htm Elektra] at [[Don Markstein's Toonopedia]]. [https://archive.today/20240527211924/https://www.webcitation.org/6iKGQOkY9?url=http://toonopedia.com/elektra.htm Archived] from the original on June 17, 2016. |
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* {{cite journal| url =http://www.english.ufl.edu/imagetext/archives/v3_1/tobe/ |title=Architectural Grounding in Miller's Elektra: Temporality and Spatiality in the Graphic Novel | first=Renée |last=Tobe| issn= 1549-6732| journal=ImageTexT | publisher= [[University of Florida]] Department of English | volume=3|issue=1|date= Summer 2006| access-date= June 17, 2016| archive-date= March 13, 2016| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160313131412/http://www.english.ufl.edu/imagetext/archives/v3_1/ | url-status=live}} |
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* {{Marveldatabase|Elektra}} |
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Latest revision as of 19:58, 26 December 2024
Elektra | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance |
|
Created by | Frank Miller |
In-story information | |
Full name | Elektra Natchios |
Team affiliations | |
Partnerships | Daredevil |
Notable aliases |
|
Abilities |
|
Elektra Natchios (UK: /ˈnætʃiɒs/, US: /-oʊs/) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She was initially created as a supporting character for the superhero Matt Murdock / Daredevil, to whom Elektra has functioned as a villainous adversary, love interest, and later, a heroic ally. Created by Frank Miller, the character first appeared in Daredevil #168 (Jan. 1981).[2] Her violent nature and mercenary lifestyle has served as a divisive point of conflict between her and Daredevil, which, in 2020, culminated in her becoming the second Daredevil.
The character is a highly trained assassin of Greek descent who wields a pair of sai as her trademark weapons. Elektra is one of Frank Miller's best-known creations, and has appeared in numerous modern storylines even though Marvel had promised not to revive the character without Miller's permission. She is the title character of three ongoing series: The first, written by Peter Milligan and Larry Hama and drawn by Mike Deodato Jr., from 1996 to 1997; the second, primarily written by Greg Rucka, from 2001 to 2003; and the third, written by Haden Blackman, from 2014 to 2015. She has also appeared as a supporting character of Wolverine and in other series and mini-series.
Jennifer Garner portrayed Elektra in the films Daredevil (2003), Elektra (2005), and Deadpool & Wolverine (2024). Élodie Yung portrayed the character in the MCU Netflix television series Daredevil (2016) and The Defenders (2017).[3]
Publication history
[edit]Creation
[edit]Elektra was created by Frank Miller, who based the character's appearance on Lisa Lyon, a female bodybuilder.[4] Miller and Janson also sometimes modeled her appearance on the actress Bo Derek.[5] Miller has said that he designed the character around Electra, a character in Greek tragedy, and the Electra complex theorized by Carl Jung.[6] Comics scholar Paul Young has identified the first appearances of the character as paying homage to Sand Seref, a femme fatale character in Will Eisner's series, The Spirit. Miller has frequently cited Eisner as an inspiration.[7] Some critics have also compared the character to Catwoman, who has a similar ambivalent relationship with Batman, although Elektra is portrayed as much more dangerous and violent.[8]
Frank Miller period: 1980s and early 1990s
[edit]Elektra first appeared in Daredevil #168 (January 1981). Miller intended this issue, which was essentially a filler story, to be Elektra's only appearance.[9] She instead became a frequently appearing villain in Daredevil, until she was murdered by Bullseye in issue #181 (April 1982). She was resurrected shortly after, but the story contained a narrative note which indicates that Daredevil must never encounter her again.[10]
Miller collaborated with Bill Sienkiewicz on Elektra: Assassin, a surrealistic, satirical miniseries that ran from 1986 to 1987, with unclear relation to mainstream continuity.[11] Mary Jo Duffy, the editor who initiated the project, writes that Sienkiewicz was the chosen artist because of his skills: "the fine drafting, the loony caricatures, and the high-style infusion of sex-and-drugs-and-rock'n'roll."[12] In the story, Elektra discovers that a US presidential candidate intends to launch a nuclear war, and in opposing him she comes into conflict with S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, cyborgs and monsters. The series concludes with the successful election of the candidate, but the replacement of his mind by another character whose motives are ambiguous.[13] The Daredevil Fall from Grace storyline establishes that Elektra: Assassin is a hallucinatory distortion of canonical events in which Elektra took part, in the mind of a delusional S.H.I.E.L.D. cyborg named John Garret (who is the main protagonist of the story).[14]
In 1990, Elektra appeared in another Miller creation, Elektra Lives Again. This is an avant-garde story that takes place outside normal Marvel continuity. It won an Eisner Award for "Best Graphic Album: New".[15]
In 1993, Miller revisited the character in the miniseries Daredevil: The Man Without Fear. Taking place in the past before Matt Murdock took on the Daredevil identity, the story elaborates the relationship between Murdock and Elektra Natchios.[16]
1990s
[edit]After over a decade's absence from regular continuity, she reappeared in Daredevil #324–327 (Jan.–April 1994). Daredevil writer D. G. Chichester recounted that he and editor Ralph Macchio had discussed the character's return several times:
We'd bandied about the idea [of bringing back Elektra] in a casual fashion now and again, but neither of us wanted to do it as a gimmick. On the rare occasion I thought I had a legitimate angle to use her, Ralph was cool to the idea. But as we geared up for what would become "Fall From Grace", Ralph out of the blue said, "What about bringing back Elektra?" – and it was really the missing piece that clicked together all the loose pieces of the story in my head, and became the nexus for everything tying together as well as it did. In my mind, it's always been her to whom the title refers.[17]
This upset Frank Miller, who claimed that Marvel had previously promised him that the character would not be used in any publication.[18]
Electra served as a supporting character in Wolverine, written by Larry Hama (in #100–106). The Wolverine story arc establishes that Elektra has been re-trained and rehabilitated by Stick and is now morally good. While she remains unusually ruthless,[19] this is the first time she takes on a heroic role. As a spin-off of this storyline, in 1996 she starred in an ongoing series that lasted nineteen issues, initially written by the same author along with Peter Milligan and illustrated by Mike Deodato Jr. The series establishes that Elektra was resurrected by the Chaste, the adversaries of the Hand.[20] The series has a much lighter tone, sometimes including parody of romance comics, and Elektra is much more virtuous.[21] The narrative declares, "She was once a wild-eyed assassin ... of course, she's a completely different person now."[22] However, she struggles with a tendency to relapse into her earlier, more indiscriminately violent, tendencies.[23] Elektra briefly resumes her relationship with Daredevil in this series, although he is unfaithful to his primary girlfriend at that time, Karen Page.[24]
2000s
[edit]Elektra appeared in a second self-titled ongoing series that lasted 22 issues, from 2001 to 2003. While initially written by Brian Michael Bendis, the series was primarily written (after issue #6) by Greg Rucka.[25] This series ignores the events of the previous series written by Milligan, and Elektra returns to her earlier morally-ambiguous, tormented characterization. In 2002, Rucka also wrote a novella featuring the character along with Wolverine, titled Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer. While this is a prose narrative rather than a graphic novel, it includes extensive illustrations by Yoshitaka Amano. The status of the story with Marvel mainstream canon is unclear; the characters do not appear to have met before, and do not make reference to earlier stories in the Hama and Milligan series in which they interact. In an interview concerning his approach to these characters, Rucka comments on Elektra's allure as tied to her mysterious and enigmatic nature, and states that for this reason she is very difficult to write or to identify with. He describes it as a compelling emotional detachment, and contrasts this to Wolverine's demeanor, which he sees as warmer.[26]
Beginning in Ultimate Spider-Man #51 (February 2004), an alternate version of Elektra serves as a recurring adversary in Brian Michael Bendis's acclaimed re-interpretation of Spider-Man in the Ultimate Marvel timeline. In October of the same year, this alternate version of the character featured in her own five-issue miniseries written by Mike Carey and illustrated by Salvador Larroca, with Daredevil as a supporting character.[27]
Also in 2004, Elektra appears as a prominent leading character in Mark Millar's Wolverine storyline "Enemy of the State," with art by John Romita Jr. (who previously drew Elektra in the Man without Fear miniseries a decade earlier). In this storyline, she works with SHIELD to help Wolverine fight the Hand. In the course of events, she appears to be re-brainwashed by the Hand, although this is revealed to be a ruse on her part. However, in order to maintain the deception, she kills a number of SHIELD agents in cold blood.[28]
In the mainstream Marvel universe, Elektra encounters Matt Murdock again in Daredevil vol. 2 #77 through #81 (November 2005 - March 2006), written by Bendis and illustrated by Alex Maleev. In this storyline, she arrives to warn Murdock about Kingpin's public revelation and confirmation of his secret identity.[29]
In 2007, in the Secret Invasion storyline also written by Bendis, Elektra is kidnapped and replaced by a Skrull, an alien being who can shapeshift to impersonate others.[30] This Skrull is then killed, and the true Elektra is restored to Earth. In 2009, Elektra re-appears after her kidnapping by the Skrulls in the miniseries Dark Reign: Elektra by Zeb Wells.[31]
2010s
[edit]In 2013, Wells returned to the character in a sequel, in which Elektra again teams up with Wolverine, this time against Kingpin. This occurs in a story arc of Savage Wolverine.[32]
Elektra featured in a third ongoing series from 2014 to 2015, written by Haden Blackman. This was illustrated in a more surreal, psychedelic style reminiscent of Bill Sinkiewicz's depiction of the character in the 1980s. The primary artist, Mike del Mundo, affirms that his approach is an homage to Elektra: Assassin.[33] Leah Bernstein, a comic-book critic, acclaims this as the best of the Elektra series.[34] Blackman affirms that the character is difficult to write that it is hard to avoid what he describes as "the stigma of being 'Daredevil's dead girlfriend.'" Nonetheless he concludes that upon completion this was the story and character he is "most proud of writing."[33]
Elektra reappears in the Daredevil series in a storyline beginning in April 2016, written by Charles Soule. In this story, Elektra is supernaturally deluded into believing that she has a daughter.[35]
In 2019, Elektra featured as part of the Savage Avengers, along with Wolverine, Punisher, Venom, Brother Voodoo, and Conan the Barbarian.[36]
Elektra again encounters Daredevil in a long story arc written by Chip Zdarsky, beginning with Daredevil (2019) #10 (July 2019). As a result of the spell cast to maintain Daredevil's secret identity, Elektra has separated her memories of Matt Murdock and Daredevil and thinks of them as two separate men.[37]
2020s
[edit]Elektra continues to feature in Chip Zdarsky's run of Daredevil. While Daredevil is incarcerated, Elektra decides that she needs to impress him with her commitment to protecting innocent people in Hell's Kitchen. In order to do this, she becomes a new Daredevil, making a new costume for herself that modifies the original.[38] She later joins forces with the original Daredevil and they work together as a team up to the conclusion of Zdarsky's Daredevil series with issue #36 in February 2022.[39] In her new persona, Elektra is also the main protagonist of Zdarsky's three-issue miniseries Daredevil: Woman without Fear, the first issue of which appeared in March 2022. In this story, she fights Kraven the Hunter.[40] Elektra and Daredevil co-star in the Devil's Reign miniseries and Marvel event, which concluded in May 2022. Subsequently, they are the leading protagonists in Zdarsky's new Daredevil series, which concluded in April 2023.[41]
In 2021, Elektra also appeared in a new mini-series titled Elektra: Black, White and Blood. Largely outside of mainstream continuity, each issue features a different writer and generally in the horror comics genre. Authors include Charles Soule, Peter David, Ann Nocenti, Peach Momoko, and Kevin Eastman.[42]
Personality and characteristics
[edit]Elektra is an unusually ruthless antihero and femme fatale. Scholar Paul Young defines some of her defining initial characteristics as including her succinct speech patterns, her "athletic, eroticized body," her father complex, and her lethal weapons and fighting prowess. He notes that another critic, Larry Rodman, memorably compared her to a "psychotic swimsuit model."[43] Young points out that Elektra combines the femme fatale of film noir with chopsocky martial arts films.[44] The character is also associated with hypersexuality, particularly in the 1993 Man without Fear miniseries.[45]
She shows few compunctions about killing her adversaries, and in some stories even kills innocent people.[46] However, she maintains a strong affection for Matt Murdock and, later, other people she admires. She is often morally conflicted and attempts to use her skills for good.[47][48] Miller says that Elektra's violent disposition originates from the trauma of the loss of her father, and that he meant the character to illustrate Jung's Electra complex: "She was a young woman who had her sexual interest centered on her father, and just as she was transferring this to another man, her father is killed." Miller argues that this initial anger led to corruption by other forces (the Hand and the Kingpin). In his view she is not essentially good, but rather "one of the villains who's got a weak streak in them."[6] After her resurrection, in the 1996 ongoing series written by Peter Milligan, she has a more conventionally heroic disposition,[49] but in subsequent stories her moral character continues to vacillate.
Fictional character biography
[edit]This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (December 2024) |
Family and early life
[edit]Elektra was born on a Greek island near the Aegean Sea, to Hugo Kostas Natchios and Christina Natchios. She had an older brother named Orestez.[citation needed]
Two contradictory accounts of her family history have been given. In Elektra: Root of Evil #1–4 (March–June 1995), Christina is killed by assassins hired by Orestez, while in Elektra #18 (1995), she is killed by an insurrectionist during the Greek Civil War. In both accounts, she gives premature birth to Elektra just before dying.
When nine-year-old Elektra was assaulted by kidnappers, the men were all killed by Orestez, who had grown into an accomplished martial artist after leaving home. Orestez advised his father that Elektra needed to learn self-defense. Hugo hired a sensei to teach her the martial arts.[citation needed]
In Elektra: Assassin #1 (Aug. 1986), the adult Elektra has vague memories of being raped by her father as a five-year-old. Years of counseling and medication had convinced her this was a false memory, but the doubt remained. Elektra grew up close to her father but was plagued by dark visions and voices with no known source. She occasionally reacted to them with self-harm. Her father eventually sent her away to psychotherapy to become more stable. It was uncertain whether Elektra actually became more stable or merely appeared to be.[citation needed]
Activities as an adult
[edit]Hugo Natchios eventually served as a Greek ambassador to the United States. Nineteen-year-old Elektra attended Columbia University in New York City. There, Elektra began dating classmate Matt Murdock.[50]
A year later, Elektra and her father were kidnapped by terrorists. A rescue attempt by Matt went wrong, and Hugo was gunned down.[51] Elektra lost faith and hope. She quit Columbia and returned to China to study martial arts. Stick, a member of the benevolent Chaste organization, recognized the darkness in her soul and attempted to train her himself, but she ultimately sided with the Hand, a sect of mystical ninja who trained her as an assassin. She later broke away from them and became an independent agent, and in this role she encountered Daredevil. She defeated Daredevil in her mission to kill the criminal Alarich Wallenquist. However, she failed her assignment, and Daredevil had to save her from being killed by Eric Slaughter, revealing his secret identity to her in the process.[51] Although the pair worked together to fight the Hand, they also came into conflict frequently.[citation needed]
Elektra later battled the Hand alongside Daredevil and Gladiator.[52] She then battled Kirigi.[53]
She soon became the chief assassin in the employ of the Kingpin, New York City's premier crime lord.[54] She attempted to kill Daredevil after he tried to stop her from terrorizing Ben Urich.[55] The Kingpin then assigned her to kill Franklin "Foggy" Nelson, Matt's partner. When Nelson recognized Elektra as Matt's college girlfriend, she was unable to kill him.[citation needed]
Elektra was fatally stabbed by Bullseye with one of her own sai in a battle over which of them would be the Kingpin's assassin. Elektra managed to crawl to Daredevil's house before dying in his arms as Bullseye watched the two, hidden among a crowd that had gathered to see what was going on.[56] Later, members of The Hand stole her body and attempted to resurrect her. Daredevil, with the assistance of Stone, a member of Stick's order, intervened, defeating The Hand ninja. Daredevil then tried to revive Elektra himself. Although his attempt failed, it did have the effect of purifying Elektra's soul. Elektra's body subsequently disappeared, as did Stone.[57]
Later, Elektra was found to have been resurrected by Stone and residing upon the Chaste mountain, where she claimed to have found peace. It was revealed that when Elektra was resurrected, the evil aspect of her soul had physically split apart from her and had been placed in its own body by the Snakeroot (a part of The Hand), as a consequence of the ritual performed by Daredevil. Her darker half, calling itself Erynys (/ɪˈrɪnɪs/), was tasked to get the About Face Virus for the Snakeroot so that the merger of the corpse and Elektra's essence would become permanent, allowing them complete control over an obedient version of the assassin. Confronted by Daredevil, Stone and Elektra, the Snakeroot fought back in a gruelling battle over the virus. Eventually, Erynys was killed, thus returning the dark side to Elektra's soul.[58]
Some time later, Stick sent Elektra to help Wolverine at a time when physically and mentally regressed to a bestial form. She helped retrain Logan to the point where the latter could think and vocalise as a human once more, and spent time thereafter as the X-Man returned to a normal form, including taking Logan with her on a visit to her ancestral home.[59]
Seeking a focus for her life, Elektra recruited her own order of fighters and mercenaries called the Ryu, to oppose the Snakeroot. She proved to be a poor leader, however, and the entire Ryu was killed trying to prevent the Snakeroot from assassinating a set of pure souls for their cause. Elektra ultimately completed the destruction of the Snakeroot and the protection of the last soul alone.[60]
Later, Elektra asked martial-artist King Lau and boxer McKinley Stewart to help her open a Dojo.[61] After a showdown with Bullseye led to the death of a young woman's father, Elektra took in the girl, Nina, as her roommate and ward. During this time, a villain named the Architect was calling all super-villains to meet in New York City, for a competition to have Elektra kill him so that he could be reborn in a new host body. With the help of Doctor Strange, the Architect was killed and his essence was trapped in the body of a small demon, caged by Strange.[62]
She was hired by Nick Fury to assassinate Saddam Abed Dassam, the leader of Iraq who was in league with HYDRA, and retrieve the Scorpio Key. Fury hired her as a way to avoid accountability in global political circles. HYDRA tried to hire her, an offer she refused. They then set the Silver Samurai on to her and it appeared she killed the Silver Samurai though the latter appeared alive and well in other comics. When she eventually obtained the Scorpio Key, she refused to give it to Fury, believing that Fury could not be trusted with such a powerful weapon. She instead gave it to the police officer who had killed her father, stating that the officer had a debt to her and would not let her down.[63]
Wolverine: Enemy of the State
[edit]Elektra worked with S.H.I.E.L.D.[64]
HYDRA and The Hand joined forces, killing off various heroes and resurrecting them into their possessed warriors, including Wolverine, who became their killing machine.[65] Based on her relationship with Logan and her ties to the Hand, Fury hired Elektra to lead the mission, paying her in excess of $200,000, more money in one day than the (then) yearly salary of the President of the United States.[66] She worked to stop Wolverine from killing others as well as to try to turn him back to his normal self. During a fight with The Hand, Elektra was killed and resurrected as a Hand warrior, eventually becoming their leader.[67] Along with the X-Man Northstar and other superhumans killed and resurrected by the Hand, Elektra attacked Fury, injuring the latter badly and causing the destruction of a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier.[68]
Thanks to S.H.I.E.L.D., Wolverine eventually came to his senses and wanted revenge.[68] During a fight with Elektra, she mentally spoke to Wolverine, using new abilities given to her by the Hand. She explained that being killed by The Hand was all part of a plan she had from the beginning. She explained that she had been resurrected by The Hand and infiltrated the organization, making them believe they had been successful in resurrecting her as a brainwashed warrior. She told him that they would take The Hand and HYDRA down together. They fought off many ninjas and were victorious.[69] Gorgon, however, attacked Elektra and threw off her mental blocks, enabling him to read her thoughts and see where Fury was being treated for his injuries (he also discovered that the Vatican also hired her, to kill him). Gorgon teleported, with Elektra, to kill Fury. When they arrived, Elektra ordered the S.H.I.E.L.D. soldiers to attack. Gorgon used his power on her neck and she collapsed. Wolverine eventually used Gorgon's own powers against him, defeating him.[70]
In an email to Kitty Pryde, Fury says that Elektra has survived albeit missing and probably in Eastern Europe, creating her own militia group which intends to be her own version of The Hand. Fury also says that Elektra is at present, no threat. It is during the time following the helicarrier's destruction that she is abducted by Skrulls and replaced with an imposter.[71]
Daredevil and the Kingpin
[edit]Elektra resurfaces to help Daredevil with a situation with the Kingpin. The crime lord, in exchange for his freedom, offered the FBI irrefutable evidence that Matt was Daredevil.[volume & issue needed]
It is revealed that Elektra actually helped the Kingpin gain all the needed information back when she was Daredevil's enemy, and she returned because she felt an obligation to help Matt out of the trouble for which she felt responsible. It was also revealed by the Black Widow that Elektra is now the leader of The Hand.[volume & issue needed]
Daredevil meets up with Elektra, the Black Widow, and the new White Tiger in front of the building that holds the "Murdock Papers" (the evidence Kingpin was talking about). They intended to retrieve the papers before the FBI could get there, but were suddenly attacked by Bullseye. Daredevil and Elektra fought the villain and, after a lengthy and bloody battle, won. However, Daredevil was suddenly shot by Paladin (who was working for FBI operatives) and was left bleeding profusely in Elektra's arms. Elektra then takes Matt to the Night Nurse, but insists that The Hand should cure him. Black Widow appears and objects. While Elektra and Black Widow fight, The Hand heals Murdock.[volume & issue needed]
Outside the Night Nurse's medical office, reporters and police gather. Elektra then jumps out the side window, along with The Hand to drive off the police and FBI. She gets in a quarrel with Luke Cage, and quickly exits the scene at Matt's request.[volume & issue needed]
It was later revealed that "Elektra" was actually a Skrull and not the real Elektra.[72]
Replacement by Skrulls
[edit]Elektra seemingly reappears, appearing to be corrupted by the Hand.[73] She kills, resurrects, and imprisons the vigilante Maya Lopez to use as a weapon. The New Avengers rescue Lopez who ends up stabbing Elektra to death,[74] however, her death revealed that "Elektra" is actually a Skrull in disguise.[75]
It turns out that the real Elektra was selected to be replaced by the Skrull Siri. Elektra was targeted by several Skrull impostors while staying in Japan, but she fought and killed most of these Skrulls (including Siri). Elektra gets blindsided and severely beaten by the Super-Skrull Pagon who ultimately took Elektra's place (since Siri was killed by Elektra) as a major "reveal" of Veranke's intent to take over the world's superheroes.[76]
The real Elektra was revealed to be alive upon one of the Skrull ships and was released during the final battle between the heroes and the Skrulls.[77] Iron Man immediately orders her held in protective custody at S.H.I.E.L.D.[78]
"Dark Reign"
[edit]Being the only Skrull captive showing signs of experimentation and torture, Elektra finds herself weakened by multiple injuries. Norman Osborn orders her studied and monitored to obtain information as to why this was the case.[78] Paladin breaks into H.A.M.M.E.R. headquarters intending to kill Elektra for $82 million. She overpowers Paladin and chokes him by spitting her broken tooth down his throat. She forces him to surrender the keys to her to escape. Before leaving the cell, she murders the interrogator who was torturing her for information.[78] She finally makes her escape after taking down several H.A.M.M.E.R. operatives and manages to reach Murdock's office to raid his stash of first aid supplies. After being confronted by Nelson, she collapses from extensive blood loss due to her injuries.[79]
Elektra wakes up handcuffed to a hospital bed in the Night Nurse's clinic. The nurse explains that she bound Elektra for her own safety, although the ninja easily frees herself. Their conversation is interrupted when a hit woman named Nico breaks in and attempts to kill both of them. Elektra sends Nico flying out the window then arms herself with the ninja's weapons while telling the Night Nurse to escape. Elektra jumps into the alley and battles Nico, only to find that another hit man named Carmine is also attempting to kill her with a sniper rifle from a rooftop. She manages to defeat Nico while evading Carmine's shots and obtains some clues from Nico as to why she was being targeted for assassination. On the rooftop, Carmine is murdered by Bullseye (in the guise of Hawkeye) who was sent by Osborn to kill Elektra.[80]
Elektra climbs to the top of the building to confront the third assassin, only to be taken aback when she discovers that he is Bullseye. Although initially hesitant, she stands her ground and faces her killer. The two begin to fight when Nico manages to reach the rooftop to check on Carmine. Bullseye attempts to kill her with a drug laced arrow, but she is saved by Elektra (who accidentally gets the drugs on the arrow in her system in the process). Bullseye then kicks the seemingly sedated Elektra off the building, but she manages to land safely. Bullseye follows and confronts her on the street, attempting to kill her with her own sai, much like their first encounter. However, this time Elektra outmaneuvers him and stabs him through the back with one of his own arrows. Nico once more interrupts the fight, attempting to shoot the fleeing Bullseye, then confronting the heavily drugged, helpless Elektra. H.A.M.M.E.R. agents enter the fray and shoot Nico, but are ambushed and killed by Wolverine before they can finish Elektra off.[81]
After escaping H.A.M.M.E.R., Wolverine reveals to Elektra where Nico ran, and Elektra tries to confront the problem head on and peaceably end the conflict. Arriving at the Blackhawk crash site, she discovers that Agent Brothers, a former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent, was the one who put a price on her head. Brothers claims that she was responsible for killing hundreds of S.H.I.E.L.D. agents during the Blackhawk incident. Elektra, having no memory of the incident, denies the accusations and urges both Brothers and Nico to go in peace, stating that it was her Skrull impostor who was responsible for the incident. However, Osborn then appears, and reveals that Elektra was in fact abducted after the Helicarrier attack, although she has no memory of this because she had used a mind trick to "forget" her resurrections and the incidents surrounding them to prevent the Skrulls from accessing them during her abduction. Osborn taunts Elektra to undo this mind trick, and Elektra obliges. It is then revealed that Elektra is actually guilty of the accusations. She then proceeds to kill both Nico and Brothers.[82]
Code Red
[edit]Elektra was involved in an incident with the Red Hulk, X-Force, a new villain, the Red She-Hulk, and a few other well known mercenaries such as Deadpool and the Punisher.[83]
Shadowland
[edit]In "Shadowland" storyline, Stick tries to convince Elektra to help stop the Hand from corrupting Matt. But she refuses, because she wanted him to be cold-hearted just like her out of spite for him. She reconsiders when she witnessed the broadcast of Daredevil killing Bullseye.[84] She joins the Hand so she can gain intel on the Shadowland fortress to help the super heroes infiltrate it. Later upon rejoining the Hand, Elektra visits Daredevil and Typhoid Mary at Bullseye's grave intending to resurrect him.[85] She then helps sneak the super heroes into the building, to stop Daredevil from resurrecting Bullseye. A fight erupts and just when Elektra tried to reach out to Matt, the Demon of the Hand finally possesses him. Once he defeats all of the super heroes, Iron Fist used his chi energy on the demon to help heal Matt's soul. While that was happening, Elektra entered Matt's mind to encourage him fight the evil presence of the demon. Matt killed himself to stop the demon from causing any more chaos. Elektra later resurrected him.[volume & issue needed]
Thunderbolts
[edit]As part of the 2012 Marvel NOW! branding, Elektra becomes a member of Red Hulk's Thunderbolts.[86][87]
Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.
[edit]During the "Avengers: Standoff!" storyline, Elektra was incarcerated for some unknown reason in Pleasant Hill, a gated community established by S.H.I.E.L.D. S.H.I.E.L.D. used the powers of Kobik to turn her into Sheriff Eva. During this time, she was in love with Absorbing Man's altered human form of an ice cream vendor named Henry. After Baron Helmut Zemo and Fixer started using a machine to turn all the inmates back to normal, Elektra was among those restored. She talked Absorbing Man out to harming the innocent lives at Pleasant Hill.[88]
During the 2016 "Civil War II" storyline, Elektra joined S.H.I.E.L.D. to free her conscience of the deaths of the passengers of the crashed Black Hawk. She took the position of field director when Phil Coulson left the group.[89] When Coulson was trying to interfere with Captain Marvel's plans to use Ulysses Cain's abilities to stop crime before it happens, Elektra discovered that Leo Fitz was Coulson's mole in her group which Maria Hill was alerted to. At the same time, she also reinstated Grant Ward into S.H.I.E.L.D. and placed an explosive collar on his neck to ensure his loyalty.[90]
Becoming Daredevil
[edit]During Chip Zdarsky's run on Daredevil, Elektra seeks out Murdock to help form an organization called The Fist to take down The Hand once and for all. To prove herself trustworthy, she takes up the mantle of Daredevil and protects Hell Kitchen while Matt is in prison.[91][92]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Elektra's primary abilities are a strong knowledge of martial arts and weaponry. Elektra learned ancient martial arts of China, Siam, and Japan. She is a master combatant with the Okinawan sai, her usual weapon of choice. She is also highly skilled with the katana, daggers, three-section staff, and shuriken. She is a master of many Japanese combat forms including Ninjutsu, Aikido and Karate.[93] Elektra is an Olympic-level athlete, strong in gymnastics and swimming, with superior strength, speed, agility, reflexes, stamina, endurance, dexterity, reactions, coordination and balance. She is resistant to pain and extreme heat and cold. She is also able to keep to the shadows and move with such speed that she can remain unseen even in daylight.
Elektra has the ability to mesmerize others, and as such make them see illusions or other phenomena.[94]
Elektra also has the ability to "throw" her mind into those of others. For instance, she was able to track down her enemy, Ken Wind, by temporarily "borrowing" people's minds and acting through them while she hunted around for her prey.[95] This temporary mind control enables her to metaphorically sniff out the psyche, or intent, of her targets.[96] It saw extensive use during Elektra: Assassin, in which she was heavily reliant on only her ninja powers.[citation needed]
Elektra can communicate telepathically with individuals possessing similar levels of mental discipline, such as the Chaste. She mastered this ability during training with The Hand, which mentally links her to The Beast, the demigod of The Hand. She is able to shield her mind from others.[96]
She can see glimpses of future events across precognitive visions.[96]
Themes and motifs
[edit]Elektra stories tend to emphasize her characteristics as a sex symbol and femme fatale. For example, in the 1996 ongoing series she speaks of the "fevered desires" and "dark, sensual fantasies" she inspires in men.[49] The Frank Miller stories in particular also explore madness, sadism, death, and mourning.[97] The Elektra: Assassin miniseries is a satire on American culture and politics, in which idealistic justifications for US policy have hidden, obscene motives of dominance, lust, and self-destruction.[98]
Supporting characters
[edit]Elektra was initially a supporting character for Daredevil, as an early girlfriend and an antagonist. He often appears in stories in which she is the main protagonist. She also commonly appears in a stories featuring Wolverine, who at one point refers to her as a "kindred spirit."[32] She also sometimes works together with Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D.. Her primary antagonists and enemies include the Hand and Bullseye, who at one time succeeded in murdering her (although she was resurrected).
Cultural impact and legacy
[edit]J. Andrew Deman describes Elektra as "an iconic Marvel warrior woman." Following her example, the popular character Psylocke of the X-Men adopted as similar costume and fighting style, in 1989. As with Elektra, the Hand trains and shapes Psylocke into a ninja assassin.[99]
Elektra was one of the primary inspirations for the Bad girl art trend of the 1990s in American comics.[100][101]
Doug Petrie, a writer for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, credits Elektra as the inspiration for the character of Faith. In his view, "In a different, teen, punkier context, Faith is so much like Elektra."[102]
Other versions
[edit]What If?
[edit]In the story "What If Elektra Had Lived?", penned by Frank Miller, Elektra's murder at the hands of Bullseye does not occur as Bullseye is cut down and killed while trying to escape from prison. Elektra spares Franklin Nelson's life, irritating the Kingpin, who swiftly orders her execution. After fighting off several assassination attempts, Elektra flees to Matt Murdock's brownstone home. Murdock initially wants to take Elektra into custody, but she warns him that with the Kingpin putting a bounty on her head, she will die at the hands of his agents if she is sent to prison. Murdock decides to flee New York with Elektra, putting up his home for sale and cutting off contact with Nelson. The couple are last seen enjoying a quiet sunset on a beach, far removed from society and seemingly happy.[103]
House of M
[edit]Elektra appears as one of the assassins of the Kingpin and is later hired by John Proudstar to bring down Luke Cage's "Avengers".[104]
Marvel Zombies
[edit]In the Ultimate Fantastic Four arc "Crossover", Elektra is seen among the zombie hordes preparing to attack Magneto, Mr. Fantastic, and the few living humans they are protecting.[105] She is also among the zombies that attack (and infect) Frank Castle.[volume & issue needed] The infected Wolverine from this incident travels to another Earth where he kills the human Elektra with his claws, impaling her through the stomach in the manner of Bullseye.[106]
Mutant X
[edit]In the Mutant X Universe – an alternate world which was visited by the Earth-616 (mainstream Marvel Universe) Havok – Elektra (surname: Stavros), while still equally trained as a martial artist and assassin, is the nanny and bodyguard of Scotty Summers.[107] Scotty is the son of that reality's Alex Summers and Madelyne Pryor. Elektra stays close to Scotty, protecting him from repeated assaults by his mother, the Goblin Queen, and her brainwashed allies.[108] Following the disappearance of the Goblin Queen, she indulges in an affair with Havok.[109] She seemingly dies near the end of the series, though Scotty reassures Alex that she will come back.
Ultimate Marvel
[edit]- See also: Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra and Ultimate Elektra for information on the two starring miniseries.
In the Ultimate Marvel universe, Elektra Natchios is a student at Columbia University who has a knack for martial arts and is a great fan of Bruce Lee. Her mother died of breast cancer when she was 6, and her father is trying to make money with a laundromat.
In this universe, she starts out as a sweet, innocent girl who cares deeply for her loved ones – so deeply that she is willing to go over dead bodies to help them. This trait starts her descent into becoming one of the most deadly assassins in the world.[volume & issue needed]
There is a gap between the Elektra featured in Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra and Ultimate Elektra and the one shown in Ultimate Spider-Man. In the first two arcs, she is a normal college student,[volume & issue needed] but in the last arc – which is set a few years later – she has become the Kingpin's right hand and is a villainess.[volume & issue needed] She is hired by an unknown person to kill a Latverian terrorist, but Spider-Man prevented her from doing it.[volume & issue needed] She is shown in this universe as a highly dangerous and skilled killer, and was able to take down the likes of Hammerhead,[volume & issue needed] Black Cat,[volume & issue needed] Moon Knight,[volume & issue needed] and Spider-Man easily.[volume & issue needed] She was later put into a coma when Moon Knight threw one of his crescent blades at her, hitting her in the head when she was about to kill Black Cat.[110]
PunisherMax
[edit]A more "realistic" version of Elektra appears in the PunisherMAX series, from Marvel's MAX imprint. This version of the character is Japanese: the Hand lends her services as a bodyguard to the Kingpin, especially to protect him from the Punisher.[111] She also becomes the Kingpin's lover. It is revealed that Elektra was secretly hired by Kingpin's ex-wife Vanessa to assassinate him for failing to prevent the murder of their son Richard. It is also revealed that she is in a lesbian relationship with her.[112] Elektra eventually has a final confrontation with the Punisher to save Vanessa. She manages to seriously wound the Punisher, but is shot several times and left permanently incapacitated.[113] Later, a representative from the Hand has one of his men finish her with a sword.[114]
Secret Wars (2015)
[edit]During the Secret Wars storyline, there are two different Elektras that exist in Battleworld:
- A Wild West version of Elektra resides on the Battleworld domain of the Valley of Doom. She is seen as a minion of Governor Roxxon alongside Bullseye, Grizzly, and Otto Octavius where they were first seen intimidating Judge Franklin Nelson into leaving town so that he wouldn't preside over Red Wolf's trial. Sheriff Steve Rogers and Red Wolf later fought the villains which ended with Otto Octavius being killed in battle, Bullseye killing Sheriff Rogers, and Natasha Barnes diverting the remaining villains in the other direction so that she can hide Red Wolf.[115] Elektra and Grizzly later fought Red Wolf again where they end up defeated by him.[116]
- Elektra is known as Red Sai, the leader of the Red Hand school in the wuxia-inspired K'un-L'un region of Battleworld. Due to an oath made by a previous master of the Red Hand to serve every emperor of K'un-L'un, she serves as Emperor Zheng Zu's assassin. Red Sai is also the former friend and lover of Shang-Chi, the emperor's son, who was exiled for the murder of Lord Tuan, the previous master of the Iron Fist. During the tournament to decide the new ruler of K'un-L'un, Red Sai and Rand-K'ai, Tuan's pupil, fight Shang-Chi in the penultimate round of the Thirteen Chambers. During the fight, Red Sai confesses that Zu had sent her to assassinate his rival Tuan but ultimately failed. To spare his lover and her students from the emperor's wrath, Shang-Chi killed Tuan; Zu implicated and exiled his son for the murder to cover his own involvement. After the truth is revealed, Red Sai and Rand-K'ai let Shang-Chi pass so that he could defeat his father. After Shang-Chi emerges victorious, Red Sai pledges herself to the new emperor.[117]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]Elektra appears in Marvel's Netflix television series, portrayed by Élodie Yung as an adult[118] and by Lily Chee in flashbacks.[119]
- First appearing in the second season of Daredevil (2016), this version was trained by Stick from childhood until the Chaste deemed her too dangerous and he had her adopted by Hugo and Christina Natchios to keep her safe.[120] While in college, she met and dated Matt Murdock.[121] In the present, Stick sends her back to New York City to make him return to his side and help defeat the Hand.[122] Though she falls in love with him, they break up after she fails to make Murdock kill Roscoe Sweeney for killing his father years prior.[123] Murdock attempts to reconcile with her by convincing her to leave Stick and become her own person,[124] but she seeks revenge on Stick after one of his assassins attacks her.[125] When Stick gets kidnapped by the Hand, Elektra and Murdock work together to find him, discovering she was destined to become the Hand's leader "Black Sky" in the process, though he helps her choose her own path.[120] She later sacrifices herself to save Murdock from the Hand's forces, but they dig up her body and prepare to revive her.[126]
- Elektra appears in The Defenders.[127] Revived and now working for the Hand as a brainwashed assassin, she is tasked with killing Chaste members and anyone who can threaten their plans, running afoul of Danny Rand, Colleen Wing,[128] and Jessica Jones in the process.[129] When Murdock, Rand, Jones, and Luke Cage join forces to form the Defenders and combat the Hand, Elektra is sent to attack them, but is defeated by Rand.[130] Following this, she slowly regains her memories, but kills Stick, kidnaps Rand, kills the Hand's leader Alexandra Reid to assume control of the group,[131] and manipulates Rand into helping her unearth ancient caverns filled with dragon skeletons said to contain the secret to eternal life.[132] After the Defenders rescue Rand and set explosives in the Hand's headquarters, Murdock stays behind to reach Elektra before they share a kiss and disappear in the explosion. While Murdock survives, Elektra's fate is left ambiguous.[133]
Film
[edit]- Elektra appears in the 20th Century Fox film Daredevil (2003), portrayed by Jennifer Garner.[134] This version is the daughter of billionaire Nikolas Natchios, who had her trained in martial arts after she witnessed her mother's death at a young age. In the present, she encounters and falls in love with Matt Murdock before witnessing Nikolas' death. Initially assuming Daredevil was the culprit, she attacks him, only to learn he is Murdock. Realizing Bullseye is her father's killer, she confronts him, but is fatally stabbed, left for dead, and dies in Murdock's arms.
- Elektra appears in a 2005 self-titled spin-off film, portrayed again by Jennifer Garner. In this film, it is revealed that she was once a martial arts prodigy called the "Treasure". Following her death, Stick resurrected her and trained her in Kimagure, which grants the practitioner precognition and the ability to resurrect the dead. Due to her rage and fear of seeing her mother's killer however, she is expelled from Stick's training compound and becomes a contract killer. Years later, she finds herself protecting a target she was meant to kill but became acquainted with, Mark Miller, and his daughter Abby Miller, the current "Treasure", from the Hand.
- Following her previous film appearances, Elektra's film rights reverted to Marvel Studios in 2014 and became available for use in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU),[135] with Garner reprising her role as Elektra in the MCU film Deadpool & Wolverine (2024) via the plot element of the multiverse.[136] In the film, Elektra has long-since been banished to the Void by the previous iteration of the Time Variance Authority (TVA), working with "The Others" in opposing Cassandra Nova.
Video games
[edit]- Elektra makes a cameo appearance in Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter as one of Apocalypse's prisoners.
- Elektra appears as a boss in the Daredevil (2003) tie-in game as a brainwashed servant of the Kingpin until Daredevil eventually frees her.
- Elektra appears in a self-titled mobile game.
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects, voiced by Jani Jakovac.[137]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance, voiced by Gabrielle Carteris.[137]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Super Hero Squad Online.
- Elektra appears in LittleBigPlanet via the "Marvel Costume Kit 2" DLC.[138]
- Elektra appears as a boss, later unlockable character in Marvel Avengers Alliance.[139]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes,[140] voiced by Laura Bailey.[citation needed] This version works for the Kingpin.
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Heroes,[141] voiced by Kathryn Cressida.[137]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Contest of Champions.[142]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel: Future Fight.
- A Marvel Noir-inspired incarnation of Elektra named Eliza appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2.[citation needed]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Strike Force.[143]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order, voiced again by Kathryn Cressida.[137]
- Elektra appears as a playable character in Marvel Puzzle Quest.[144]
- Elektra appears in Marvel Snap.[145]
Miscellaneous
[edit]- Elektra appears in the Marvel Comics Super Heroes collection of commemorative postage-stamps.[146]
- Elektra appears in a Marvel-licensed slot machine.[147]
Bibliography
[edit]By Frank Miller
[edit]In addition to her signature appearances in Daredevil, Elektra starred in three series produced by her creator, Frank Miller:
- Elektra Saga #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 1984) (reprints of material from Daredevil #168, 174–177, 181–182, 187-190 and Bizarre Adventures #28)
- Elektra: Assassin #1–8 (Marvel Comics, 1986, with Bill Sienkewicz)
- Elektra Lives Again original graphic novel (Marvel Comics / Epic Comics, 1990)
Additional series
[edit]Elektra has also headlined the following series:
- Elektra vol. 1 #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 1995)
- Elektra Megazine #1–2 (Marvel Comics, 1996, reprint series)
- Elektra vol. 2, #1–19 (Marvel Comics, 1996–1998)
- Elektra vol. 2, #−1 (Marvel Comics, 1997, "FlashBack Month" issue)
- Peter Parker: Spider-Man / Elektra '98 Annual (Marvel Comics, 1998)
- Elektra vol. 3, #1–35 (Marvel Comics / Marvel Knights, 2001–2004)
- Issue 3 was recalled by Marvel due to featuring nude images of the character. An edited version was later reissued to retailers.
- Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer #1–3 (Marvel Comics, 2002)
- Elektra: Glimpse & Echo #1–4 (Marvel Comics / Marvel Knights, 2002)
- Elektra: The Hand #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2004)
- Dark Reign: Elektra #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2009)
- Shadowland: Elektra one-shot (Marvel Comics, 2010)
- Elektra vol. 4, #1–11 (Marvel Comics, 2014–2015)
- Elektra vol. 5, #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2017)
- Daredevil: Woman Without Fear #1–3 (Marvel Comics, 2021)
- Elektra: Black, White & Blood #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 2021)
Ultimate Marvel
[edit]An alternate version of Elektra starred in the following series set in the fictional Ultimate Marvel Universe:
- Ultimate Daredevil and Elektra #1–4 (Marvel Comics, 2002)
- Ultimate Elektra #1–5 (Marvel Comics, 2004)
Collected editions
[edit]Title | Material Collected | ISBN | Publication Date |
---|---|---|---|
Elektra: Assassin | Elektra: Assassin #1–8 | 978-0785163565 | August 29, 2012 |
Elektra by Frank Miller Omnibus | Elektra: Assassin #1–8, Elektra Lives Again #1, Bizarre Adventures #28, What If? Vol. 2 #35 | 978-0785127772 | November 11, 2008 |
Daredevil/Elektra: Love and War Gallery Edition | Marvel Graphic Novel: Daredevil/Elektra - Love and War, Elektra: Assassin #1-8 | 978-1302923327 | May 28, 2020 |
Elektra by Peter Milligan, Larry Hama & Mike Deodato Jr.: The Complete Collection | Elektra Vol. 2 #1-19,-1 | 978-1302904333 | March 9, 2017 |
Elektra & Wolverine: The Redeemer | Elektra & Wolverine: The Redeemer #1-3 | 978-0785109112 | May 1, 2002 |
Elektra: The Scorpio Key | Elektra Vol. 3 #1–6 | 0785108432 | November 30, 1999 |
Elektra Vol. 1: Introspect | Elektra Vol. 3 #10–15 | 0785109730 | December 11, 2002 |
Elektra Vol. 2: Everything Old Is New Again | Elektra Vol. 3 #16–21 | 0785111085 | June 11, 2003 |
Elektra Vol. III: Relentless | Elektra Vol. 3 #23–27 | 0785112227 | January 7, 2004 |
Elektra Vol. 4: Frenzy | Elektra Vol. 3 #29–35 | 0785113983 | June 30, 2004 |
Elektra by Greg Rucka Ultimate Collection | Elektra Vol. 3 #7-22, Marvel Knights Double-Shot #3 | 978-0785163930 | July 25, 2012 |
Elektra: The Hand | Elektra: The Hand #1–5 | 0785115943 | January 5, 2005 |
Dark Reign: Elektra | Dark Reign: Elektra #1–5 | 978-0785138433 | December 9, 2009 |
Shadowland: Street Heroes | Shadowland: Elektra, Shadowland: Daughters Of The Shadow #1-3, Shadowland: Bullseye, Shadowland: Ghost Rider and Shadowland: Spider-Man | 978-0785148883 | September 7, 2011 |
Elektra Vol. 1: Bloodlines | Elektra Vol. 4 #1–5 | 978-0785154068 | November 18, 2014 |
Elektra Vol. 2: Reverence | Elektra Vol. 4 #6–11 | 978-0785154075 | May 12, 2015 |
Elektra: Always Bet on Red | Elektra Vol. 5 #1-6 | 978-1302905644 | September 26, 2017 |
Daredevil: Woman Without Fear | Daredevil: Woman Without Fear #1-3 | 978-1302934934 | May 31, 2022 |
Elektra: Black, White & Blood | Elektra: Black, White & Blood #1-4 | 978-1302932688 | August 2, 2022 |
Ultimate Universe
[edit]Title | Material Collected | ISBN | Publication Date |
---|---|---|---|
Ultimate Daredevil & Elektra | Ultimate Daredevil & Elektra #1–4 | 0785110763 | November 30, 1999 |
Ultimate Elektra: Devil's Due | Ultimate Elektra #1–5 | 0785115048 | January 5, 2005 |
Intercompany crossovers
[edit]Elektra has been featured in crossovers with characters from other publishing companies:
- Elektra/Cyblade one-shot (Marvel Comics / Top Cow Productions, 1997)
- Witchblade/Elektra one-shot (Top Cow Productions / Marvel Comics, 1997)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Hulk vol. 2 #14
- ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ "Elodie Yung to Play Elektra in 'Marvel's Daredevil'". Variety. 8 July 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
- ^ Miller and Janson, p. 779.
- ^ Young, 109.
- ^ a b Miller and Janson, p. 787.
- ^ Young, p. 107
- ^ Lindsay, p. 116.
- ^ Kraft, David Anthony; Salicup, Jim (April 1983). "Frank Miller's Ronin". Comics Interview. No. #2. Fictioneer Books. p. 13.
- ^ Daredevil #190 (Jan. 1983). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Burgas, Greg (January 21, 2007). "Comics You Should Own - Elektra: Assassin". Comics Should Be Good. Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on August 23, 2015. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ Elektra by Frank Miller Omnibus, Marvel, p. 34.
- ^ Marvel Year by Year: A Visual History: New Edition, DK, 2022, p. 218.
- ^ Daredevil Epic Collection vol. 18: 1993-1994: Fall from Grace, 2024.
- ^ 1991 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners, Comic Book Awards Almanac
- ^ Frank Miller, Daredevil: The Man without Fear trade paperback, 2020.
- ^ Mithra, Kuljit (Feb. 1998). Interview with D. G. Chichester, manwithoutfear.com.
- ^ Howe, Sean (2012). Marvel Comics: the Untold Story. New York: Harper. p. 351. ISBN 978-0-06-199210-0.
- ^ Wolverine #102, 1996
- ^ Peter Milligan, Larry Hama, and Mike Deodato Jr., Elektra: The Complete Collection, 2017.
- ^ Elektra -1, July 1997.
- ^ Elektra #4, February 1997.
- ^ Elektra #8, June 1997.
- ^ Elektra #11-13, Oct.-Dec. 1997.
- ^ Elekta by Greg Rucka Ultimate Collection, Marvel, 2012.
- ^ Jennifer Lee, "Writing Redeemer: A Conversation with Greg Rucka," appended to Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer, Marvel, 2002.
- ^ Ultimate Elektra: Devils Due, Marvel, 2005.
- ^ Wolverine: Enemy of the State vol. 1 and 2, Marvel.
- ^ Daredevil vol. 2 #78 (December 2005).
- ^ The Mighty Avengers #6–7 (2007). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #1-5.
- ^ a b Savage Wolverine vol. 2: Hands on a Dead Body, Marvel, 2014.
- ^ a b Elektra vol. 2: Révérence, 2016.
- ^ Leah Bernstein, "10 Best Elektra Comics, Ranked," CBR, August 23, 2024. [1]
- ^ Daredevil: Back in Black vol. 2: Supersonic.
- ^ Savage Avengers vol. 1: City of Sickles.
- ^ Daredevil (2019) #11 (August 2019).
- ^ Daredevil vol. 7 #25, December 2020.
- ^ Daredevil by Chip Zdarsky vol. 7: Lockdown.
- ^ Daredevil: Woman without Fear.
- ^ Daredevil and Elektra by Chip Zdarsky, vol. 1 and 2.
- ^ Elektra: Black, White and Blood Treasury Edition, 2022.
- ^ Young, p. 104.
- ^ Young, p. 108.
- ^ Young, p. 110.
- ^ Young, p. 113.
- ^ Larisa A. Garski and Jennifer L. Yen, "Elektra: Portrait of the Assassin as a Young Woman," Daredevil and Psychology: The Devil You Know, in Langley, p. 138-151.
- ^ ""Someone's Assassin:" Subverting Femme Fatale Tropes and Why Elektra Remains One of Marvels'…". 12 December 2020.
- ^ a b Elektra #4, February 1997.
- ^ Frank Miller, Daredevil: The Man without Fear trade paperback.
- ^ a b Daredevil #168 (Jan. 1981)
- ^ Daredevil #174
- ^ Daredevil #175 (Oct. 1981)
- ^ Daredevil #178 (Jan. 1982)
- ^ Daredevil #179 (Feb. 1982)
- ^ Daredevil #181 (Apr. 1982)
- ^ Daredevil #190 (Jan. 1983)
- ^ Daredevil #325 (Feb. 1994)
- ^ Wolverine vol. 2 #106 (Oct. 1996)
- ^ Elektra: Root of Evil #1–4 (March–June 1995)
- ^ Elektra (Vol. 2) #1 (Sept. 1996)
- ^ Elektra (Vol. 2) #2-8 (Oct 1996 - Apr 1997)
- ^ Elektra vol. 2 #1–5 (September 2001 – January 2002)
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #20
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #21
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #23. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #24
- ^ a b Wolverine vol. 3 #27. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #29
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #30. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #31; Dark Reign: Elektra #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Elektra: Dark Reign #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The New Avengers #28
- ^ The New Avengers #31. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Mighty Avengers #6–7 (2007). Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Mighty Avengers #16. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Secret Invasion #8
- ^ a b c Dark Reign: Elektra #1 (March 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #2 (April 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #3 (May 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #4 (June 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #5 (June 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Loeb, Jeph. Hulk vol. 2 #14–17 (October – December 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Shadowland: Elektra (September 2010)
- ^ Shadowland #3 (September 2010). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Thunderbolts vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics
- ^ James, Adam (12 September 2012). "Way and Dillon Confirmed For Marvel NOW! "Thunderbolts"". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 12 September 2012.
- ^ Illuminati #6. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. #8
- ^ Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D #9. Marvel Comics.
- ^ "Everything That's Happened in 'Daredevil' So Far". Marvel Entertainment. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
- ^ "Daredevil Has Blood On His Hands And Is Facing Jail Time In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. 2020-09-19. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
- ^ Daredevil: The Man Without Fear #3 (December 1993)
- ^ Elektra Assassin #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Dark Reign: Elektra #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b c Wolverine Vol 3 #29. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Young, p. 196-197.
- ^ Young, p. 236.
- ^ J. Andrew Deman, The Claremont Run: Subverting Gender in the X-Men, University of Texas Press, 2023, p. 62.
- ^ Conroy, Mike (2004). 500 Great Comic Book Action Heroes. London: Collins & Brown. pp. 198–199. ISBN 9781844110049.
- ^ Gabilliet, Jean-Paul; Beaty, Bart; Nguyen, Nick (2010). Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books (1st ed.). Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. pp. 102–103. ISBN 9781604732672.
- ^ Golden, Christopher; Stephen R. Bissette; Thomas E. Sniegoski (2000). Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Monster Book. New York: Pocket Books. pp. VI. ISBN 978-0-671-04259-2.
- ^ What If #35 (Oct. 1982)
- ^ House of M: Avengers #3
- ^ Ultimate Fantastic Four #23 (2005)
- ^ Marvel Zombies Return #3 (2009)
- ^ Mutant X #1 (Oct. 1998)
- ^ Mutant X #7–12
- ^ Mutant X #19 (May 2000)
- ^ Ultimate Spider-Man Vol. 1 #85 (January 2006)
- ^ "Aaron Speaks "Frankly" About "PunisherMAX"". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
- ^ PunisherMax # 18
- ^ PunisherMax #20
- ^ PunisherMax #22
- ^ 1872 #2
- ^ 1872 #3
- ^ Master of Kung Fu vol. 2 #1-4
- ^ Steinbeiser, Andrew. "Elodie Yung Cast As Elektra For Daredevil Season 2". comicbook.com. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
- ^ Daredevil Season 2, Episode 12. The Dark at the End of the Tunnel. Air date 18 March 2016.
- ^ a b Lyn, Euros (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich and Douglas Petrie (writer) (March 18, 2016). "The Dark at the End of the Tunnel". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 12. Netflix.
- ^ Blackburn, Farren (director); Luke Kalteux (writer) (April 10, 2015). "Nelson v. Murdock". Daredevil. Season 1. Episode 10. Netflix.
- ^ Hoar, Peter (director); John C. Kelley (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Penny and Dime". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 4. Netflix.
- ^ Sigismondi, Floria (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Kinbaku". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 5. Netflix.
- ^ Uppendahl, Michael (director); Whit Anderson (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Guilty as Sin". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 8. Netflix.
- ^ Hoar, Peter (director); John C. Kelley (story); Whit Anderson & Sneha Koorse (writer) (March 18, 2016). "The Man in the Box". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 10. Netflix.
- ^ Hoar, Peter (director); Marco Ramirez and Douglas Petrie (writer) (March 18, 2016). "A Cold Day in Hell's Kitchen". Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 13. Netflix.
- ^ Li, Shirley (November 7, 2016). "The Defenders: Elodie Yung to return as Elektra — exclusive". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on November 9, 2016. Retrieved November 7, 2016.
- ^ Clarkson, S.J. (director); Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "The H Word". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 1. Netflix.
- ^ Clarkson, S.J. (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Mean Right Hook". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 2. Netflix.
- ^ Hoar, Peter (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Worst Behavior". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 3. Netflix.
- ^ Surjik, Stephen (director); Drew Goddard & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Ashes, Ashes". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 6. Netflix.
- ^ Alcalá, Félix Enríquez (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Fish in the Jailhouse". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 7. Netflix.
- ^ Blackburn, Farren (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "The Defenders". The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 8. Netflix.
- ^ Stax (January 27, 2002). "Daredevil's Done Deals". IGN. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- ^ "Marvel Studios Boss Kevin Feige Talks Captain America: The Winter Soldier Spoilers and What's in Store for the Marvel Cinematic Universe". IGN. April 16, 2014. Retrieved April 16, 2014.
- ^ Kit, Borys; Couch, Aaron (July 7, 2023). "Jennifer Garner Returning as Elektra for 'Deadpool 3' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on July 7, 2023. Retrieved July 8, 2023.
- ^ a b c d "Behind The Voice Actors – Voice Of Elektra Natchios". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved November 21, 2015. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: postscript (link) - ^ "Marvel Costume Kit 2". Sony. Archived from the original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved December 30, 2012.
- ^ "SDCC '13: Marvel Video Games Panel LIVE – Thor: The Dark World, LEGO Stan Lee". Newsarama.com. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
- ^ Greg Miller (20 July 2013). "LEGO Marvel Super Heroes: Characters and Cast Revealed". IGN. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
- ^ http://marvel.com/news/video_games/26040/marvel_heroes_2016_roll_call_elektra[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Entering Marvel Contest of Champions: Elektra – News – Marvel.com". Archived from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
- ^ "'MARVEL Strike Force' Now Recruiting Heroes with Worldwide Launch". News – Marvel.com.
- ^ Piecing Together Marvel Puzzle Quest: Daredevil and Elektra
- ^ "Elektra - Marvel Snap Card Database - marvelsnap.io". MarvelSnap. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
- ^ "USPS Stamp News: Spider-Man and Nine Other Marvel Super Heroes to Deliver for Postal Service". USPS.com. Archived from the original on 2009-05-09.
- ^ "Play Elektra Slot – Read the Review, Play for Fun or Real Money". Retrieved 1 April 2016.
Bibliography
[edit]- Langley, Travis, ed. (2018). Daredevil Psychology: The Devil You Know. Sterling. ISBN 978-1-4549-3011-2.
- Lindsay, Ryan K., ed. (2013). The Devil is in the Details: Examining Matt Murdock and Daredevil. Sequart Research & Literacy Organization. ISBN 9780578073736.
- Miller, Frank and Klaus Janson (2022). Daredevil by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson Omnibus. Marvel. ISBN 978-1-302-94553-4.
- Young, Paul (2016). Frank Miller's Daredevil and the Ends of Heroism. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813563817.
External links
[edit]- Elektra at Marvel.com
- Elektra at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on June 17, 2016.
- Tobe, Renée (Summer 2006). "Architectural Grounding in Miller's Elektra: Temporality and Spatiality in the Graphic Novel". ImageTexT. 3 (1). University of Florida Department of English. ISSN 1549-6732. Archived from the original on March 13, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2016.
- Elektra on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki
- Characters created by Frank Miller (comics)
- Comics characters introduced in 1981
- Daredevil (Marvel Comics) characters
- Fictional aikidoka
- Fictional assassins in comics
- Fictional Greek people
- Fictional hypnotists
- Fictional immigrants to the United States
- Fictional karateka
- Fictional murdered people
- Fictional ninja
- Fictional female assassins
- Fictional female ninja
- Fictional female warriors
- Marvel Comics adapted into video games
- Marvel Comics female superheroes
- Marvel Comics martial artists
- Marvel Comics orphans
- Marvel Comics sidekicks
- Marvel Comics telepaths