Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Elektra: Assassin

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Schedule
  
Monthly

Genre
  
Writer(s)
  
Frank Miller

Publisher
  
Format
  
Number of issues
  
8

Main character
  
Elektra

Elektra: Assassin Elektra Assassin39s Political Satire Cuts Deep 30 Years Later

Publication date
  
August 1986 – March 1987

Authors
  
Bill Sienkiewicz, Frank Miller

Editors
  
D. G. Chichester, Archie Goodwin

Similar
  
Ronin, Daredevil, Hard Boiled, Martha Washington, Sin City

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Elektra: Assassin is an eight-issue limited series published by Epic Comics, an imprint of Marvel Comics, between August 1986 and March 1987. Written by Frank Miller and illustrated by Bill Sienkiewicz, Elektra: Assassin satirizes ultra-violence, politics, comic book clichés like ninjas and cyborgs, and the portrayal of women.

Contents

Elektra: Assassin Elektra Assassin39s Political Satire Cuts Deep 30 Years Later

Publication history

Elektra: Assassin Elektra Assassin 1986 comic books

Frank Miller and Bill Sienkiewicz were at the height of their popularity when this series was released, shortly on the heels of Miller's hugely successful Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, and Miller & Sienkiewicz's Marvel Graphic Novel Daredevil: Love and War.

As with Ronin and Born Again, Miller wrote the series with the full script method.

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As with Daredevil: Love and War, Sienkiewicz illustrated Elektra: Assassin using watercolors as opposed to the traditional pencilling/inking method. His exaggerated art was unique amongst mainstream comics of the time, bringing to mind the illustration style of adult-oriented comics magazines like Heavy Metal.

Plot summary

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The story starts out with Elektra in a mental institution in South America, attempting to recover her memory. The first issue is very disjointed, as Elektra pieces together jumbled memories ranging from the murder of her mother, molestation by her father (which she says is actually an invented memory), to more recent events such as an assassination she carried out. This led her to discover the existence of "The Beast," which controls people by forcing them to drink its milk. At first, The Beast's motives are unclear, but it is gradually revealed that it is attempting to bring about a nuclear war. When its initial plans fail, it launches the presidential campaign of Ken Wind (with a face resembling a grainy Dan Quayle photograph, whose resemblance is a coincidence, according to Sienkiewicz, since it is a Sienkiewicz self-portrait.) Wind proves extremely popular, through various platitudes which disguise his evil nature; when Wind takes over, he intends to launch a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union, bringing about mutually assured destruction.

Elektra: Assassin BILL SIENKIEWICZ ELEKTRA ASSASSIN 7 PAGE 23 VOX POPULI in

Elektra uses her psychic powers to escape, running afoul of a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent named Garrett. Garrett, an alcoholic, feels ashamed and becomes obsessed with Elektra, but she manages to stay one step ahead of him. She traps him in a building which is blown up, and most of his body is destroyed. S.H.I.E.L.D.'s experimental cybernetics division builds him a robotic body and attaches his head. His psychic bond with Elektra continues to grow, and he eventually realizes he is powerless against her. She sets out to stop the Beast, killing various subordinates and several S.H.I.E.L.D. agents in the process. In response, Nick Fury sends Chastity McBryde, a strictly by-the-book agent. Perry, a sociopath who was Garret's former partner, has now also been turned into a cyborg. Chastity learns of Perry's suppressed sociopathic criminal history, and informs Fury, but Perry manages to escape before S.H.I.E.L.D.can deactivate him. Perry is extremely dangerous and eventually comes under the service of The Beast.

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The Beast manages to get Wind elected president, but Elektra thwarts the plan with her psychic powers and ninja skills. In a final confrontation, Elektra manages to injure The Beast, terminate Perry, and transfer the mind of Garrett into Ken Wind and vice versa before she and Garrett are captured by S.H.I.E.L.D. As Chastity is giving her final report to the President about what happened, we realize that in the end, Garrett, in the body of Wind, is the President. Elektra, using her psychic powers yet again, manages to escape S.H.I.E.L.D.after she has recovered, by placing her mind in one of the blue helper dwarfs, knocking out Chastity and then releasing her own body.

Rating

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Miller's story wasn’t considered appropriate for the Comics Code Authority seal. Instead, Elektra: Assassin was released under the Marvel imprint Epic Comics, known for producing material more appropriate for adults. It was also not sold on newsstands, but only through speciality stores.

Continuity

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It is deliberately left vague whether the events in Elektra: Assassin take place prior to Elektra's initial appearances in Daredevil, or whether it details a subsequent resurrection. Former Marvel editor Mary Jo Duffy, in the introduction to the Elektra omnibus, claims that Frank Miller conceived the series as taking place before Elektra's Daredevil appearance. The events in Elektra: Assassin are alluded to in writer Garth Ennis' 2000s Punisher run.

Collected editions

The series has been collected into a trade papeback:

  • Elektra: Assassin (268 pages, Marvel, 1989, ISBN 0-87135-309-1, Panini Comics, 2005, ISBN 1-904159-89-3)
  • It was also included in the 2008 hardcover Elektra by Frank Miller Omnibus (ISBN 0-7851-2777-1).

    Awards

  • 1988: Nominated for "Best Finite Series" Eisner Award

  • Elektra: Assassin Elektra Assassin 01 pages 67 BIG OTHER

    References

    Elektra: Assassin Wikipedia