Why was elektras mom killed
She's known for her use of Okinawan sai, a long blade with a curved handle; a deadly but elegant weapon that she can wield without getting too close.
Though she will use whatever is at her disposal, Elektra's most iconic image is that of a red-clad ninja with a sai in either hand. As an assassin for hire working in New York City, Elektra came to the attention of the Kingpin, the organized crime boss who was an enemy of Daredevil.
Unsurprisingly, this brought her into a lot of conflict with Daredevil himself — and with those close to him. The first person Elektra struck out against was reporter Ben Urich, who was investigating the Kingpin. When it seemed like he was getting too close, Elektra was ordered to put a stop to it; she ran him through with one of her blades, but he luckily survived the attack.
Next she was ordered to kill Matt's best friend Foggy Nelson, but despite Elektra's intimidating credentials, she failed at that too. Elektra went after Foggy with the full intention of going through with it, but when he recognized her as Matt's college girlfriend, she couldn't kill him.
Elektra wasn't doing a great job at her chosen profession, but she was able to give the Kingpin the one thing he truly wanted: information on Daredevil's real identity. Taking the job with Kingpin also put Elektra on the villain Bullseye's radar in a bad way.
Bullseye had his own history with Kingpin; after several botched attempts to assassinate the crime lord, Bullseye was hired and fired by Kingpin in quick succession after also failing to assassinate Daredevil on Kingpin's orders.
Bullseye became obsessed with regaining his briefly-held position as Kingpin's chief assassin, so when he found out Elektra had the job, he went after her. Even though, up until that point, he had been something of a fumbling hitman and Elektra was top of her game , he succeeded in impaling her on one of her own sai. Elektra died in Matt's arms for maximum drama. Her body was later stolen by the Hand with plans to resurrect her in a ritual that would make her totally loyal to them, but Matt and Stone another member of the Chaste prevented it.
In his grief, Matt tried and failed to resurrect Elektra himself, but unbeknownst to him, Stone was the one to actually bring her back later on.
Elektra was supposed to be one of the few comic characters to stay dead, with creator Frank Miller even working out a deal with Marvel to keep her gone, but the character proved too popular to be kept out of the action.
Skrulls are aliens with a penchant for invasion and impersonation that make them incredibly useful for retconning beloved characters' actions. They can change shape to look like anyone, and it's definitely something they take advantage of.
In the planned large-scale Secret Invasion , a Skrull named Siri was chosen to take Elektra's place on earth and act as a spy. However, in the process of trying to get Elektra out of the way, Siri and several other Skrulls were killed.
Elektra wasn't going to go down easy. But, unfortunately, alien forces did finally overwhelm her. Another Skrull named Pagon was able to defeat her and send her back to Skrull Ships; while Elektra was their prisoner, Pagon acted as her and took over the Hand, making everyone think Elektra had been totally corrupted.
It wasn't until PagonElektra was killed that it was revealed to the other characters — and to readers — that she hadn't been the real Elektra the whole time.
Although Elektra's temperament might be better suited to being a lone wolf, she actually finds herself teaming up with other heroes and villains on a regular basis.
Aside from her attachments to the Chaste, the Hand, and Daredevil, Elektra joined many a superpowered team-up. Heroes for Hire has been a recurring team-up title since the 70s, when it merged the solo series Luke Cage, Hero for Hire with the canceled Iron Fist title. It became something of a revolving door for mostly street-level heroes, with Elektra joining up in She was also in the lineup of Code Red and the Thunderbolts two different but not dissimilar teams that aligned her with similarly anti-heroic characters like Red Hulk, Deadpool, Venom, and Punisher; they were a team where no one quite trusted each other, but they still got the job done.
Elektra also had a notable stretch of time working with S. Which leads us nicely into our next point. Wolverine became a mindless killer in service of the Hand, and Elektra was the one to lead the charge to put an end to the Hand's antics, then to help Wolverine return to his normal self again.
Elektra allowed herself to be killed again so she could insinuate herself into the Hand's mindless killer army fortunately, she was able to keep her sanity and destroy things from the inside.
Elektra and Logan had worked together previously, and were often painted as characters who understood each other, who knew what it was like to be a killer and to struggle with being a hero.
Though perhaps an unexpected connection on its surface, through the years Elektra and Logan developed a strong bond. They even have a kid in an alternate universe Rina Logan, aka Wild Thing. It comes as no surprise that someone with as dark as history as Elektra's would sometimes have trouble coping.
Community Showcase More. Follow TV Tropes. You need to login to do this. Get Known if you don't have an account. She's the last thing that stands between good and evil. That's a fairly common trope in comics and television, but it wasn't something as simple as a horrible delivery that resulted in her death. Her mother, Christina Natchios, was injured while only eight months pregnant during the Greek Civil War Because there are two separate origins, we chose the one most recently published in Elektra 18 as it was published in , three years after the previous origin revealed in Elektra: Root of Evil.
Whichever story you choose to believe, Elektra grew up not knowing her mother. While being raised by her father didn't turn her into an assassin, it couldn't have helped to grow up without a mother in the house.
In , Marvel published Elektra: Assassin , which portrayed an adult Elektra recalling vague memories of her father raping her when she was only five-years-old. It was revealed that she also heard voices and experienced hallucinatory visions so she began to cut herself as a means of treatment.
An interesting side-effect of her self-harm was the development of some psychic abilities Kids, do not try this at home. Her abilities didn't fully develop until she came into contact with the Hand much later.
Elektra wasn't able to determine whether or not she was really raped by her father. The pain caused by the memory and visions was difficult for her to overcome and because of her actions as a child, her father felt there was no recourse but to submit her for psychiatric evaluation and treatment.
It seems unlikely that she was actually raped, but the memories plagued her. Because of she was inflicting injury upon herself and due to the trauma she was undergoing as a result of her visions, Elektra's father had her committed to a psychiatric institution.
As you might expect from ever watching a movie or reading a book about mental illness treatment in fiction, things did not go well for Elektra. She did receive treatment and, while that may or may not have helped her, the time she spent in the institution was not She saw her orderlies as inhuman captors and tore the throat out of one unfortunate gentleman with her mouth.
During this time, she appeared to be truly insane, but her time in the asylum may have been just what she needed to evolve into the deadly assassin she became as an adult. When she was years-old, both Elektra and her father, the Greek Ambassador to the United States, were both kidnapped by terrorists.
This was in his pre-Daredevil days, when he was just beginning to understand the extent of his abilities while he wore a bandanna on his head. It's possible Elektra could have gotten herself out of the situation having studied martial arts for years, but she never got the chance. Matt went on a mission to rescue his girlfriend and her father, but the rescue attempt didn't go over very well, to say the least. In The Defenders , season one episode four, the gang is all gathered in a restaurant for a little pow-wow when someone Matt thought dead happens to stroll in ready to kill everyone present.
Wouldn't you know it: it's a freshly-resurrected Elektra Natchios, which Matt clearly doesn't feel too comfortable with given his facial ticks. As the gang prepares to take on the dark assassin, something unexpected happens. Jessica Jones was arrives in style, saving all three of her co-Defenders by shoving a van through the front of the restaurant and driving it right into Elektra.
Once the gang is finally together in all its glory, it looks like things are about to go down. Granted, this didn't really do much more than mess up Elektra's outfit, but it couldn't have felt very good either. In Daredevil , written and penciled by Frank Miller, Matt attempts to rescue Elektra and her father from the terrorists who captured them.
He quickly finds their hideout and infiltrates it, but miscalculates his coordinated attack with the tied-up Elektra and her father suffers from cardiac arrest. Matt immediately knows his heart has stopped because of his ability to hear Too bad he never bothered to learn CPR! Elektra became despondent over the loss of her father and returned to China to continue her training under Stick. Possibly due to her mental illness as a child, her upbringing, or her father being killed in front of her, she moves away from Stick's teaching and eventually joins sides with The Hand, a sect of ninja assassins who train her to become one of the deadliest killers on the planet.
Elektra was never intended to stick around the comics for very long.
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