For those of you who would like to experience an interesting contemporary interpretation of Frank Miller's classic Daredevil stories from the early 1980s which featured the riveting character of Elektra, do treat yourselves to the second "season" of the Netflix production of "Daredevil," which introduces her on the small screen and brings her to stunning life (as played by French actress Élodie Yung). From there, her story continues in a follow-up Netflix series, "The Defenders," where both she and Daredevil fight to the end (and we're not talking about simply concluding the season). In the television series, as was the case in the comic, Elektra is very much her own woman--but the character in each medium stands in contrast to the other, to enough of a degree that her television persona will feel like you're watching a familiar yet fresh new version of her, which indeed you are.
It's the embrace of Miller's darker take on the character, and on Daredevil, which allows their transition to television to meet with the success that eluded them in cinema--for while the film stays more true to Miller's story, the TV series instead incorporates elements of it to build an entirely new sequence of story installments for both characters, a model that has served Marvel (and by extension, Disney) well in its film ventures. Yet like my experience with "Jessica Jones" and the character's handling in her comic series, Alias, I was curious to return to the comics and read the powerful story where Elektra met her death at the hands of Bullseye--a development that, like Elektra herself, was handled very differently in the two Netflix series.The double-sized issue from 1982 stands nicely apart from its big-budget counterpart, as well as being an excellent example of comics storytelling that any Daredevil reader likely drank in from cover to cover. It also has the distinction of being almost entirely told from the perspective of Bullseye, former chief assassin of the Kingpin--an approach which, to my total surprise, worked, and for a whopping thirty-eight pages. You'd think that this kind of story would at some point need to include Matt Murdock's feelings and thoughts on the matter, since buyers were presumably plunking down $1.00 and some change to touch base with the hero, whose reaction to this murder would likely be at least as dramatic as the killing stroke itself.
But this is all Bullseye's show, beginning with his current incarceration at Daredevil's hands. But the root of the grudge Bullseye carries for DD isn't at all what you might have expected.
















































