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Elektra

Elektra

List Price: $16.99
Your Price: $16.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good writing, horrid art
Review: Brain Michael Bendis is one of today's greats.
His work on Alias, Ultimate Spider-man, Daredevil, Powers, Ultimate X-Men - not to mention his past works (Jinx, Goldfish, Sam & Twitch, etc. etc.) - is fantastic. He's a constant main-stay at the top of the charts AND he's a fan-favorite.
I was very excited when he was put on to bring back the Elektra title, especially on "Marvel Knights," with it's slightly harder edge.
I don't want to give away the story, but it basically gives insight into Elektra, an assassin-for-hire and an the interesting tale of the scorpion key. Her character has Daredevil roots, but you won't find daredevil as a character in this story. This is about her, and her post-mortem journey (she was killed with her own sai, and yet came back...). The story starts off pretty nicely, but later on, you get disconnected from Elektra's character. Overall, it's a good story - one that I would give four stars.
This is a graphic novel, a collection of comic books - a visual medium with equal importance to art as writing. The story is good. The art however, is absolutely horrid. Chuck Austen is currently the writer on many books, including Uncanny X-Men, Captain America, Superman: Metropolis, The Eternal, etc. He's known as a mediocre writer, with occasionally good stories. Personally, I like some of his stories, while hating others (i.e. - Endangered Species). However, he does the art on Elektra (as he did on U.S. War Machine - except this time with Colors), and his art (if you can call it that) is disgusting. Think Ugly, misshapen Barbie dolls. There is no passion, no emotion in his pencils and his inability to draw (even with computer assistance) at the calibre one comes to expect from professionals takes away from the book, especially considering how beautiful Greg Horn's covers are. The art gets two stars (with a BIG bump from the covers... Austen alone would barely deserve half a star).
So this book overall gets 3 stars. If you really want to get to know Elektra a little bit, maybe check out some of Frank Miller's work first, he's done a couple of quintessential Elektra stories. This book is good and worth buying only if you can get over the art.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great writing overshadowed by some very lacking art
Review: Don't let the eye popping cover art fool you, the art contained in Elektra: The Scorpion Key is very lacking to say the least. Chuck Austen (current writer of Uncanny X-Men, and writer/artist for U.S. War Machine) has never been anywhere near solid as an artist before he became an exclusive writer, and it shows here in this book collecting the first few issues of Elektra relaunched under the Marvel Knights banner. Brian Michael Bendis (Daredevil, Alias, Ultimate Spider-Man) has a very well crafted story here, but the disfigured art drags it down. Were it not for Bendis' stellar (as usual) writing, this book wouldn't be worth reading, but if you can get past Austen's art, this is worth reading for Elektra and Daredevil readers.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Trite
Review: Elektra, a cold blooded, hardened assassin sees a few home movies of the collateral damage caused by a past assignment and gets all weepy? What?? Hello??? Earth to Rucka. Very dissapointing. A superficial, trite, self-help book level examination of the cost to the soul of life as an assassin. For an honest take on this subject matter see Frank Miller's Elektra Lives Again. The dream sequences that Matt Murdock experiences of Elektra's life after death in that book are truly gripping (and chilling). More is said in those 3 pages than in Rucka's ridiculous, 144 page, Dr. Phil-esque writing of Elektra.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Solid work from Greg Rucka
Review: I'm a big fan of Greg Rucka. I read virtually everything he writes. The introspective and attentive nature of his works appeals to me. That being said, I found this Elektra trade to be extremely entertaining, although not as good as his work on Whiteout or Queen and Country. I was somewhat let down by the inconsistent art, but in the world of serial comics, you can't always do anything about that. Those who dismiss the work as trite or "out of character", in only my humble opinion, only want characters to "be" a certain way, and don't allow for the changes and doubts that people, and characters, go through. The idea that someone, at a low point in their life, would begin to question their actions or purpose, is a concept almost all can relate to.

Rucka's writing is excellent. The art is also good, if somewhat inconsistent. 4 stars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I expected more from Rucka
Review: In Elektra: Introspect, Greg Rucka poses the question, "What do world-renowed assassins do when they can't get work?"
The answer was less than satisfactory.
Elektra, the world's deadliest assassin, can't seem to get a job anymore. Many of her employers say that there is too much attention on her, and she's a risk. Without work and without money, Elektra languishes for a while before being hunted down and captured by the mysterious Mr. Locke, who heads a group of Elektra haters. It seems that Mr. Locke and his group have all lost friends or loved ones because of Elektra, and they want her to pay.
I didn't really have a problem with this book at all. Rucka stays true to the character and does put her in a rather sticky situation. However, I found that this work was less than compelling and sometimes even boring. The art by Carlo Pagulayan was OK, but wasn't very dynamic. The highlight of this book may have been the bonus issue included in the back, written by Greg Rucka and rendered in full Computer Graphics by cover artist Greg Horn. Your jaw will drop when you read and see that one.
In summation, Elektra: Introspect was a good enough story, but left a lot to be desired. Greg Rucka remains one of my favorite authors, but this is clearly not his best work. If you want to read an awesome Rucka Elektra story, read Elektra and Wolverine: The Redeemer instead.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Elektra-fying
Review: Ninja-for-hire, Elektra, once killed by Daredevil's greatest foe returns in ELEKTRA: THE SCORPIO KEY. In the past, she had been the world's most feared assassin. In the past, she had been Daredevil's lover. In the past, she had been killed only to rise again. The story opens with Elektra confronting the man who killed her father. She holds the guy at sai-point and begins telling him a story, letting him know she isn't going to kill him--yet. She tells him how the story began a week ago in Paris, how she was approached by S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Stanley Dreyfuss and commissioned to assassinate Saddam Abed Dasam, ruler of Iraq, and steal an ornate box adorned with two black scorpions poised to lash out with their tails. Of course, there is a kicker, HYDRA, the evil organization that constantly wars against S.H.I.E.L.D. and the Western powers, lurks in the shadows. Elektra turns the offer down flat until she is personally contacted by Colonel Nick Fury, legendary World War II hero and rough-and-tough agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. Even when talking to Nick Fury face-to-face, Elektra is reluctant to take the deal, in spite of Fury's offer to erase her record and take her off the Most Wanted list. Only when she finds out the true stakes of the high-level espionage capter--the fabled Scorpio Key--does Elektra swing into action. And her decisions are not going to be popular with the people trying to manipulate her.

Brian Michael Bendis is a very popular writer among legions of comic book fans. In addition to creating and writing his award-winning series, POWERS, he also regularly scripts ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN, ALIAS, and DAREDEVIL. All of his work is fast-tracked into the graphic novel format. Chuck Austen is a good artist and has done work on U.S. WAR MACHINE, but has recently taken over the writing chores on UNCANNY X-MEN. The colorist, Nathan Eyring, developed a style over the books that was simply amazing.

Bendis' dialogue, as always with any project he touches, was great and lent itself to explosive artistic rendering. Even the scene where Elektra held Stanley at bay in Paris with the sai under the table showed the motion and the action about to break loose. The action sequences detailed by Austen are absolutely mesmerizing, and--at times--chilling in their execution (literally!) and raw savagery. In Austen's capable hands, Elektra becomes a poetess of death. Nick Fury comes through as the character most Marvel Comics fans know and love. He's tough and irascible, totally devoted to his view of the world and what should be done in it. Nathan Eyring performed an outstanding display of colors, shading mood, action, and suspense with a skill seldom seen in the comics format.

As good as Bendis is, he was a little loose on this graphic novel. Elektra begins by offering a story that lets the reader inside her mind and heart, but by the fourth section of the story, she is distant from the reader, only a series of images played out against a series of media interviews. The fifth chapter keeps Elektra distant, making the reader guess what she is feeling and thinking when there was so much more in the beginning. Also, the twist with Stanley's true nature was totally unexpected and seemed almost to come out of left field although it was planned. The final chapter in the graphic novel really doesn't mesh well with the first five that complete a whole story, but the inclusion helps Elektra fans keep the series all together in trade paperback format.

ELEKTRA: THE SCORPIO KEY is recommended for fans of Bendis' and Austen's work. Comics fans interested in the field of espionage and Elektra will also want to add this one to their collections. People who enjoy Ed Brubaker's and Greg Rucka's writing will want to give Bendis a try if they've not encountered him before. He knows a lot of tricks as a writer, and he shows quite a few of them here.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One tough Ninja and one excellent writer!
Review: Ordinarily I don't buy martial arts comics. I don't know why, because I'm sure many of them are very good, but they've just never interested me. I used to love Daredevil back when Frank Miller was writing it, and he was the one who first introduced Elektra, so I do have a certain fondness for her. Still, I doubt I would have picked this graphic novel up if not for the free preview in Wizard magazine. Once I read that, I was hooked.

So what was it that grabbed me?

The writing. Brian Michael Bendis writes dialogue that's real. So real, in fact, that his dialogue sounds like a conversation you would hear between two people at the table next to you at lunch (except Bendis' dialogue is a lot more interesting). He excels at writing tough, streetwise characters, and Elektra and Nick Fury (who also figures heavily into the plot) match that description perfectly.

The artwork is different too. I'm not sure of all the details, but I think the artist created the artwork on a computer, then colored it with paints using Photoshop or a similar product. And he didn't just go with vibrant colors like everyone else does. Instead, he picked muted colors that help add atmosphere to the story. I don't know if the process would work that well for every comic out there, but for Elektra, it works for me.

In the story, Elektra is contacted by S.H.I.E.L.D. and asked to retrieve a box from an evil dictator. She's asked to break into a heavily guarded fortress, steal the box, and kill the dictator. Now I'm not going to tell you what happens, but I will tell you that the bulk of the story takes place before she even attempts to steal the box. In fact, most of the story consists of conversations between the key players, as well as attempts by the players to outmaneuver the others.

And that's another thing I like about this graphic novel. It doesn't focus on the martial arts. Rather, it focuses on how someone who has complete control over their body (like Elektra), uses her Ninja tricks to survive, outsmart, and outflank everyone else.

One last point I'd like to make is about Greg Horn. This man is one of the best in the business at drawing beautiful women, and all of his gorgeous covers for Elektra are reproduced in full in this graphic novel.

So do I recommend this title? Yes! If you like strong writing, great artwork, and ninjas, then you should definitely pick this up!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good, but something's wrong
Review: This is a little bit of a departure for the character, as I suspect will be for the rest of the series. And to be quite honest, I'm not sure if she is the right character under the supposed description. Elektra kills, yes, but with good reason. According to Locke and the other characters that surround her, she kills relentlessly even if the person is not the intended target. That's not the Elektra Frank Miller created and crafted. Certainly not the Elektra Brian Michael Bendis provided depth for. This is also part of the problem towards the end of the story when Elektra makes a major confrontation with Locke.

I found this characterization of Elektra to be quite out of character. First time readers probably won't understand this as they have not read any of the previous stories from Miller and the story Bendis wrote that kicked off the Marvel Knights portion of the series. They will think of her the way the characters throughout describe her. And to be quite honest, that's not fair.

Aside from the characterization problem I had, Rucka provides some nice action at the mid point when Elektra is left in a desert and then picks off mercenaries who want to kill her. For those who don't know, Rucka has a martial arts background and uses some of that knowledge to make this scene wonderfully awesome. The illustrations by Carlo Pagulayan improve a little bit from how Chuck Austen illustrated under Bendis' writing. However, it would have been so much better had cover painter Greg Horn create the interiors. Oh well, at least Carlo did a nice job.

This edition includes a story from an issue of Marvel Knights: Double-Shot called "Trust". Rucka does much better with this story and the interiors are painted by Horn. If anything, this was a pleasure to read through and showed exactly the kind of hired assassin Elektra is. Stealthy and creative, using a murder weapon that no one would ever think of. Perhaps Rucka should look back on this story and milk the characterizations as opposed to the Elektra he used in the main story.

"Introspect" is a fine read, but I just can't get over the major characterization change that really doesn't fit her. I'm not sure if long time fans of the character will agree, but I will stand by my decision on this. First time readers will probably not understand what I'm talking about unless they read Daredevil Visionaries: Frank Miller Vol. 2 and the first six issues of the Marvel Knights edition of Elektra as written by Brian Michael Bendis. I have faith that the Rucka stories further down are better, but he appears to be off on a rather questionable start.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good, but something's wrong
Review: This is a little bit of a departure for the character, as I suspect will be for the rest of the series. And to be quite honest, I'm not sure if she is the right character under the supposed description. Elektra kills, yes, but with good reason. According to Locke and the other characters that surround her, she kills relentlessly even if the person is not the intended target. That's not the Elektra Frank Miller created and crafted. Certainly not the Elektra Brian Michael Bendis provided depth for. This is also part of the problem towards the end of the story when Elektra makes a major confrontation with Locke.

I found this characterization of Elektra to be quite out of character. First time readers probably won't understand this as they have not read any of the previous stories from Miller and the story Bendis wrote that kicked off the Marvel Knights portion of the series. They will think of her the way the characters throughout describe her. And to be quite honest, that's not fair.

Aside from the characterization problem I had, Rucka provides some nice action at the mid point when Elektra is left in a desert and then picks off mercenaries who want to kill her. For those who don't know, Rucka has a martial arts background and uses some of that knowledge to make this scene wonderfully awesome. The illustrations by Carlo Pagulayan improve a little bit from how Chuck Austen illustrated under Bendis' writing. However, it would have been so much better had cover painter Greg Horn create the interiors. Oh well, at least Carlo did a nice job.

This edition includes a story from an issue of Marvel Knights: Double-Shot called "Trust". Rucka does much better with this story and the interiors are painted by Horn. If anything, this was a pleasure to read through and showed exactly the kind of hired assassin Elektra is. Stealthy and creative, using a murder weapon that no one would ever think of. Perhaps Rucka should look back on this story and milk the characterizations as opposed to the Elektra he used in the main story.

"Introspect" is a fine read, but I just can't get over the major characterization change that really doesn't fit her. I'm not sure if long time fans of the character will agree, but I will stand by my decision on this. First time readers will probably not understand what I'm talking about unless they read Daredevil Visionaries: Frank Miller Vol. 2 and the first six issues of the Marvel Knights edition of Elektra as written by Brian Michael Bendis. I have faith that the Rucka stories further down are better, but he appears to be off on a rather questionable start.


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