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Elektra

 
Movies:

Elektra

  • Director: Rob Bowman
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Action
  • Movie Type: Superhero Film
  • Themes: Lone Wolves, Fathers and Daughters, Ninjas
  • Main Cast: Jennifer Garner, Goran Visnjic, Will Yun Lee, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Terence Stamp
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 96 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Daredevil's main squeeze gets resurrected in her own flick with this spin-off martial arts actioner from director Rob Bowman (Reign of Fire, The X-Files: Fight the Future). Jennifer Garner returns to the role of Elektra Natchios, a hired assassin whose origins are finally revealed after her old ninja clan the Hand brings her back from the dead to serve their evil purposes. Reunited with her old sensei, Stick (Terence Stamp), Elektra leaves the past behind her and is eventually given an assignment to kill Mark Miller (Goran Visnjic) and his daughter, Abby (Kristin Prout). When her conscience gets the best of her and she decides to protect them instead, it's up to the Hand's top assassins to track her down and finish the job. Fans of Marvel Comics might recognize Natassia Malthe as Typhoid Mary, another nemesis of Daredevil that joins in the hunt, along with other masters of the dark mystic arts, Tattoo (Chris Ackerman), Stone (Bob Sapp), and the Hand's fearsome leader, Kirigi (Will Yun Lee). ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Kirsten Prout - Abby; Natassia Malthe - Typhoid; Chris Ackerman - Tattoo; Bob Sapp - Stone; Hiro Kanagawa - Kinkou; Jason Isaacs - DeMarco (Uncredited); Ian Tracey - Pool Shark; Colin Cunningham - McCabe; Kurt Max Runte - Nikolas Natchios; Nathaniel Arcand - Hand Ninja #1; Paul Wu - Fight Instructor; Ty Olsson - Second Paramedic; Mark Houghton - Bauer; Kendall Cross - First Paramedic; Kevan Ohtsji - Roshi Servant; Nancy Wetzel - Third Paramedic; Marke Driesschen - Weatherman; Aaron Au - Hand Ninja #2; Edson T. Ribeiro - Kinkou; Laura Ward - Young Elektra; Jana Mitsoula - Young Elektra's Mother; Sean Akira - Glowering Ikuren; Taku Kawai - Glowering Ikuren

Credit

Eric Norlin - Art Director, Doug Juhn - Art Director, Amanda Dague - Animator, Chad Shattuck - Animator, Andrew Arnett - Animator, Ruth Daly - Animator, Ryan Donoghue - Animator, Brian Dowrick - Animator, James Kinnings - Animator, Christopher Lentz - Animator, C.J. Sarachene - Animator, Dave Griffiths - Boom Operator, Martin Lacroix - Boom Operator, Dianne Crittenden - Casting, Coreen Mayrs - Casting, Heike Brandstatter - Casting, Sharon D. King - Casting, Beth Nelson - Coordinator, Mike Nowak - Conductor, Josh McLaglen - Co-producer, Kevin Feige - Co-producer, Lisa Tomczeszyn - Costume Designer, Josh McLaglen - First Assistant Director, Morgan Beggs - First Assistant Director, John Maccarthy - First Assistant Director, Rob Bowman - Director, Bryan Spicer - Second Unit Director, Kevin Stitt - Editor, Sharon Smith Holley - Editor, Stan Lee - Executive Producer, Mark Steven Johnson - Executive Producer, Brent O'Connor - Executive Producer, Bonnie Kanner - Executive Producer, Lee Berger - Executive Producer, Mike Gunther - Fights Choreographer, Anji Bemben - Hair Styles, Michael Reitz - Hair Styles, Scott Walden - Location Manager, Brien Goodrich - Lighting, Josh Bryer - Lighting, Jubin Dave - Lighting, Jack Fulmer - Lighting, Karl Herbst - Lighting, Gaelle Morand - Lighting, Al Saimoto - Lighting, Salar Saleh - Lighting, Juck Somsaman - Lighting, Darrin Wehser - Lighting, Walt Jones - Lighting, Christophe Beck - Composer (Music Score), Dave Jordan - Musical Direction/Supervision, Deborah La Mia Denaver - Makeup, Fay Von Schroeder - Makeup, John Clothier - Camera Operator, Junichi Hosoi - Camera Operator, Harvey Larocque - Camera Operator, Keith Thomson - Camera Operator, Graeme Murray - Production Designer, Bill Roe - Cinematographer, Roger Vernon - Cinematographer, Gary Foster - Producer, Arnon Milchan - Producer, Avi Arad - Producer, Craig "Pup" Heath - Recording, Robert Renga - Recording, John Rodd - Recording, Geoff Wallace - Set Designer, Jay Mitchell - Set Designer, Andy Nelson - Sound Mixer, Anna Behlmer - Sound Mixer, Michael Williamson - Sound Mixer, Patrick Ramsay - Sound Mixer, Craig Berkey - Sound/Sound Designer, Ernie Jackson - Stunts, J.J. Makaro - Stunts, Tony Morelli - Stunts, David Mylrea - Stunts, Melissa R. Stubbs - Stunts, Larry "Warlock" Lam - Stunts, Lauro Chartrand - Stunts, Duane Dickinson - Stunts, Dave Hospes - Stunts, Brad Loree - Stunts, Scott Nicholson - Stunts, Doug Chapman - Stunts, Shawn Stewart - Stunts, Dean Choe - Stunts, Grant Smith - Stunts, Owen Walstrom - Stunts, Carolyn Field - Stunts, Simon Burnett - Stunts, Paul Lazenby - Stunts, Darryl Quon - Stunts, Marny Eng - Stunts, Brian Ho - Stunts, Claude Bouchard - Stunts, Dustin Brooks - Stunts, Brian Lydiatt - Stunts, Mitchell Lee Yuen - Stunts, Shawn Beaton - Stunts, Rick Pearce - Stunts, Shauna Duggins - Stunts, Corbin Fox - Stunts, Ty Trand - Stunts, Kirk Caouette - Stunts, Trevor Addie - Stunts, Chris Atkinson - Stunts, Kimberly Chiang - Stunts, Mike Dobbin - Stunts, Kylie Furneaux - Stunts, Dean Hart - Stunts, Gaston Morrison - Stunts, Monte Thompson - Stunts, Alistair King - Stunts, David Lane - Stunts, Rafael Sola - Stunts, Loyd Bateman - Stunts, Perry Beckham - Stunts, A. Brett Chan - Stunts, Eclilson De Jesus - Stunts, Mike Desabrais - Stunts, Dave Dunaway - Stunts, Scott Flavelle - Stunts, David Fulton - Stunts, Christopher Gordon - Stunts, Adrian Hein - Stunts, Kirk Jaques - Stunts, Trevor Jones - Stunts, Jon Kralt - Stunts, Dean Lockwood - Stunts, Jovan Nenadic - Stunts, B. C.S. O'Connor - Stunts, Ron Otis - Stunts, Thomas J. Potter - Stunts, Jeffrey C. Robinson - Stunts, Todd Scott - Stunts, Noah Therrien - Stunts, Mike Mitchell - Stunts, Don Lew - Stunts, Mike Gunther - Stunts Coordinator, Brent O'Connor - Unit Production Manager, Simon Abbott - Unit Production Manager, Zak Penn - Screenwriter, Raven Metzner - Screenwriter, Stuart Zicherman - Screenwriter, Barbara Copp - Production Assistant, Zoe Nash - Production Assistant, Carmen Seigers - Production Assistant, Jillian Thorne - Production Assistant, Raymond McIntyre Jr. - Visual Effects Supervisor, Mark Freund - Visual Effects Supervisor, James Atkinson - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dan Deleeuw - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jason Dowdeswell - Visual Effects Supervisor, Greg Fawcett - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Animal Acting - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Von Williams - Matte Artist, Gloria Davies - Unit Publicist, Peter McNulty - Additional Editing, Cam North - First Assistant Camera, Ieran Humphries - First Assistant Camera, Ian Seabrook - First Assistant Camera, Stuart Haggerty - Gaffer, Peter Schaffer Smith - Gaffer, David Tickell - Gaffer, Drew David - Grip, Dan Gorval - Grip, Scott Jason Gray - Grip, Russell Hawkes - Grip, Dean Collins - Grip, Tony Whiteside - Key Grip, Rick Allen - Key Grip, David Klotz - Music Editor, Michael Tinger - Post Production Supervisor, Amy Allen - Production Coordinator, Bridgette Krupke - Production Coordinator, Jennie Morse - Production Coordinator, Kathleen Nurit - Production Coordinator, Joseph Hartwick, Jr. - Production Supervisor, Dan Sissons - Properties Master, Ken Hanis - Properties Master, Toby Lindala - Prosthetic Makeup Effects, Denis St. Amand - Re-Recording Mixer, Portia Belmont - Script Supervisor, Earen McNay - Script Supervisor, Mark Bunting - Second Assistant Director, Doug Dean - Second Assistant Director, Andre Dominguez - Special Effects Assistant, Tom Blacklock, Jr. - Special Effects Assistant, Tom Blacklock, Sr. - Special Effects Assistant, James Franchuk - Special Effects Assistant, Denys Guillemette - Special Effects Assistant, Stacy Mueller - Special Effects Assistant, Erik Aadahl - Sound Effects Director, Dave Gauthier - Special Effects Coordinator, Stefan Von Bjorn - Steadicam Operator, Joe Lederer - Still Photographer, Doane Gregory - Still Photographer, Lyndon Barrois - Supervising Animator, John A. Larsen - Supervising Sound Editor, Rick R Sparr - Visual Effects Producer, Jacqueline Lopez - Visual Effects Producer, George Macri - Visual Effects Producer, Deinnis Meyers - Visual Effects Producer, Gary Nolin - Visual Effects Producer, Jinnie Pak - Visual Effects Producer, Maria Bradley - Costume/Wardrobe, Maya Alexandra Smith - Costume/Wardrobe, Vanessa Ashley Lapato - ADR Editor, Charleen Richards-Steeves - ADR Mixer, David Lucarelli - ADR Recordist, Don Macauley - Assistant Art Director, Jeremy Stanbridge - Assistant Art Director, Courtney Andersen - Assistant Costumer Designer, Anne Carroll - Assistant Hair, Russell Hamilton - Assistant Location Manager, Nathan Kay - Assistant Location Manager, Genevieve Bridges - Assistant Production Coordinator, Brett Davies - Assistant Production Coordinator, Anton Germinario - Assistant Properties, Max Matsuoka - Assistant Properties, Spencer Louttit - Assistant Properties, Ryan Bailey - Best Boy Electric, Craig Jones - Best Boy Electric, Jeff Harvey - Best Boy Electric, Andrew Pereszlenyi - Best Boy Electric, John Leroy - Best Boy Grip, Steve Sherlock - Best Boy Grip, Hamish Purdy - Buyer, Maureen Carey - Buyer, Scott Simpson - Camera Loader, Errin Clutton - Casting Assistant, Michael Nicolo - Casting Assistant, Jessica Daniels - Casting Associate, Marvin E. Nelson - Casting Associate, Brian Shell - Construction Coordinator, Deborah Cha Blevins - Costumes Supervisor, Marie Jeanne Melanson - Costumes Supervisor, James Gerald Salberg - Dolly Grip, Keith S. Woods - Electrician, Robin Hall - Electrician, Vince Laxton - Electrician, Andrea Brown - Extra Casting, Annette McCaffrey - Extra Casting, Mary Morrisey - First Assistant Editor, Carolle Alain - First Assistant Editor, Alicia Stevenson - Foley Artist, Dawn Fintor - Foley Artist, Howard S.M. Neiman - Foley Editor, Amberwren Briskey-Cohen - Personal Assistant, Weatie Rosenlehner - Personal Assistant, Juliana Janes - Personal Assistant, Jane Bulmer - Personal Assistant, Sophie Addie - Personal Assistant, Michael Bradley Combs - Personal Assistant, Kyla Kraman - Personal Assistant, Marcie Larson - Personal Assistant, Adam Olmsted - Personal Assistant, Brian Olson - Personal Assistant, Sarra Watts - Post Production Assistant, Chad Buckmaster - Post Production Assistant, Milan Basic - Scenic Artist, Joe Caveno - Scenic Artist, James Tainton - Scenic Artist, Randy Morton - Second Assistant Camera, Carrie Wilson - Second Assistant Camera, Magalie Boulerice - Second Assistant Camera, Elvina Meret - Second Assistant Camera, Shelly Theaker - Second Assistant Editor, Brian G. Addie - Second Assistant Editor, Thom M. Kyle - Second Assistant Editor, Donald Likovich - Second Assistant Editor, Steve Lamare - Set Dresser, Ling Yang - Storyboard Artist, Ricardo Delgado - Storyboard Artist, Rhythm & Hues Studios - Visual Effects, Pixel Magic - Visual Effects, Rainmaker Animation and Visual Effects UK - Visual Effects, Peter Lando - Set Decorator, Bridget Hoffman - ADR Loop Group, David Cowgill - ADR Loop Group, Elisa Pensler Gabrielli - ADR Loop Group, Erica Beck - ADR Loop Group, Brian Herskowitz - ADR Loop Group, Steve Apostolina - ADR Loop Group, Toshiya Agata - ADR Loop Group, Helen Luttrell - ADR Supervisor, William Unrau - Cable Person, Jim Passon - Color Timing, Sam McMaster - Construction Foreman, Greg Beaton - Focus Puller, David Betancourt - Foley Mixer, John Murray - Foley Supervisor, Robert L. Redford - Generator Operator, Tom Watson - Generator Operator, Gary Burritt - Negative Cutter, Jodi Sigsworth - Negative Cutter, Zara Chun - Set Medic/First Aid, Nancy Kress - Set Medic/First Aid, Lars Lenander - Special Effects Foreman, Warren Hanna - Third Assistant Director, Quincy Wheeler-Hendren - Third Assistant Director, Ania Musiatowicz - Third Assistant Director, Casey Macintyre - Video Assist, Derrick Mitchell - Visual Effects Editor, Brigitte Daloin - Visual Effects Editor, Loop Group - Voice Casting, Sharon Thompson - Art Department Coordinator, Warren Hendriks - First Assistant Sound Editor, Blake Cornett - Second Assistant Sound Editor, Dean Sherriff - Illustrator, Brentan Harron - Illustrator, Richard Barrett - Scenic Carpenter, Jonathan Bell - Scenic Carpenter, Dave Laprise - Scenic Carpenter, Rob Waterbeek - Scenic Carpenter, Chris Wills - Scenic Carpenter, Mathew Krentz - Compositor, Carmen Pollard - Compositor, Jordan Benwick - Compositor, Tom Burney - Compositor, Keegen Douglas - Compositor, Patrick Flanagan - Compositor, James Gorman - Compositor, Nate Haggard - Compositor, Geoff Hancock - Compositor, James David Hattin - Compositor, Richard Kratt - Compositor, John R. McConnell - Compositor, Brad Moylan - Compositor, Geordie Spradling - Compositor, Matthew Talbot-Kelly - Compositor, Lisa McNichols - Rotoscope Artist, Scott Calderwood - Assistant Set Decorator, Alec Gillis - Puppeteer, Tom Woodruff, Jr. - Puppeteer, Yuri Everson - Puppeteer, Oliver Scholl - Visual Consultant

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Wikipedia: Elektra (2005 film)
Top
Elektra
Directed by Rob Bowman
Produced by Avi Arad
Gary Foster
Arnon Milchan
Written by Screenplay:
Zak Penn
Stuart Zicherman
Raven Metzner
Comic Book:
Frank Miller
Starring Jennifer Garner
Goran Višnjić
Kirsten Prout
Will Yun Lee
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
Terence Stamp
Music by Christophe Beck
Cinematography Bill Roe
Studio Regency Enterprises
New Regency
Marvel Enterprises
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) January 14, 2005
Running time Theatrical Cut:
96 minutes
Director's Cut:
99 min.
Country United States, Canada
Language English
Budget $43,000,000
Gross revenue $56,681,566[1]
Preceded by Daredevil

Elektra is a 2005 action movie directed by Rob Bowman. It is a spin-off to the 2003 movie Daredevil, starring the Marvel comics character Elektra Natchios (played by Jennifer Garner). The story follows Elektra, an international assassin whose weapon of choice is a pair of Sai.

For the screenplay, Zak Penn, Stuart Zicherman and Raven Metzner received "written by" credit. Mark Steven Johnson received credit for "motion picture characters" and Frank Miller for "comic book characters."

Contents

Plot

The film continues the storyline of the film Daredevil where in Elektra was killed by Bullseye. The story is introduced by a man's voice (later revealed to be the martial arts master Stick) explaining that there is an ancient war being fought between good and evil. The evil is introduced as a group called The Hand, whilst the good follow Kimagure, a martial art that supposedly makes its practitioners able to foresee the future and control life and death.

The next scene introduces Elektra dispatching a squad of bodyguards and assassinating of a character named DeMarco. DeMarco is sitting in a larger armchair resigned to his fate and is killed by Elektra throwing one of her Sai into the back of the chair and through him. It is later revealed that the dead Elektra was revived by Stick. For a while she was trained as his student, but soon she is asked to leave; thus beginning her life as an assassin.

Elektra receives an assignment to assassinate Mark Miller (Goran Višnjić), and his 13-year-old daughter, Abby. As part of the contract, she is required to stay for some days on their island refuge before the targets are revealed. In this time she unknowingly meets and befriends the two people she has been hired to kill. When told Mark and Abby are the targets, her feelings for them leave her unable to kill them and goes to leave the island, in the process noticing two new assassins. Instead of leaving the island, Elektra returns to Mark and Abby's house and kills the two newcomers, in the process discovering they have been sent by The Hand.

Under the misapprehension it is Mark that The Hand wish dead, she leads the pair to Stick (Terence Stamp), as he is apparently leading the fight against The Hand. In a pool club, she confronts Stick by trying to grab his throat, but he grabs hers and slams her onto a pool table. He then tells her she has not changed since she left his tutorship. Elektra also discovers Mark knows why The Hand is following them, although viewers do not learn the reason at this point.

After the failure of the two Hand assassins, the leader of the group gives the task of capturing the "Treasure" to his son Kirigi and his fellow warriors.

Elektra leaves the pool club in anger and is followed by Abby and Mark. Noticing an eagle appearing out of graffiti art on a wall, she realises The Hand has found them and decides to help the pair again. She drives them to the house of McCabe, her negotiating agent. In the form of a bird Kirigi follows them to the house and after killing McCabe, hunts down the trio in the forest. Elektra kills Stone tricking him into breaking down a large tree, crushing him. Abby and Mark kill Kinkou with one of his own daggers. Elektra discovers Abby has martial arts skills. Distracted by this knowledge, Elektra is attacked by Typhoid, who gives her the poisonous Kiss of Death. Abby attempts to intervene, but is stopped by Kirigi.

At this point Stick and his pupils intervene, rescuing Abby, Mark and Elektra from the Hand warriors. They all return to Stick's training camp. Here Stick confirms that Abby is the 'Treasure', a martial arts prodigy whom the Hand want for their own purposes. He tells Elektra, who has been cured of Typhoid's attack, that Abby must remain under his protection as long as Kirigi is alive. She also realizes it was Stick who originally hired her to kill Mark and Abby, apparently as a psychological trick. She questions whether everything that has happened since Stick had expelled her from the camp has been a test, to which Stick merely replies that some lessons have to be lived to be understood.

Abby tells Elektra she doesn't want to have to stay in the camp forever. In an effort to let Abby lead a normal life, Elektra makes a deal with Kirigi: a fight between the two which will decide Abby's fate. If Elektra is defeated, Abby is given to Kirigi. If Kirigi is defeated, then Abby is free forever.

Elektra returns to the house where her mother was killed (by Kirigi, as she soon discovers), and battles Hand warriors and Kirigi himself. Kirigi quickly and easily beats her and is about to kill her when Abby appears, having followed Elektra. They escape Kirigi and hide in a hedge maze. After they are separated in the maze, Elektra kills Tattoo, who has summoned snakes to capture Abby, by breaking his neck while he is in his animal-controlling trance. Elektra then searches for Abby. In the center of the maze, Elektra once again encounters and fights Kirigi, this time anticipating his speed and killing him with one of her Sai and dropping his body in a well, where he turns to dust. Meanwhile Abby has been attacked and killed in the vine maze by Typhoid who says she is jealous of Abby for being the new Treasure, because Typhoid was once the Treasure herself. Elektra senses this and throws one of her Sai, flying through the plant walls between them and killing Typhoid.

Elektra carries Abby's body back to the house, where she successfully revives her, completing her journey to becoming a Kimagure master. The film ends with Elektra and Stick discussing her and Abby's lives. Stick tells her that second lives can often be better than the first.

Cast

  • Jennifer Garner as Elektra Natchios, assassin for hire
  • Terence Stamp as Stick, a blind martial arts master and practitioner of Kimagure, a martial art that supposedly makes its able to foresee the future and control life and death. He revives Elektra and trains her for a time but makes her leave when he can no longer teach her.
  • Goran Visnjic as Mark Miller, father of Abby. He is named in homage to Frank Miller original creator of Elektra.
  • Kirsten Prout as Abby Miller
  • Will Yun Lee as Kirigi, a member of the mysterious evil group known as The Hand
  • Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa as Roshi, father of Kirigi and master of The Hand
  • Colin Cunningham as McCabe, Elektra's negotiating agent for her services as an assassin
  • Hiro Kanagawa as Meizumi
  • Natassia Malthe as Typhoid has the ability to poison anything in her path. Her breath or touch can kill whatever they came into contact with, she can even poison her weapons by breathing on them. She was once a skilled ninja called the Treasure.
  • Bob Sapp as Stone has the ability of superhuman strength and is physically invulnerable to anything that is brought to him
  • Chris Ackerman as Tattoo as the ability to summon immortal animals from the tattoos on his body
  • Edison T. Ribeiro as Kinkou has incredible speed and agility through perfect balance
  • Jana Mitsoula as Elektra's mother
  • Kurt Max Runte as Nikolas Natchios, Elektra's father
  • Jason Isaacs as DeMarco (uncredited), a character who has in his career "gained many enemies" and is assassinated by Elektra early in the film.
  • Ben Affleck as Matt Murdock / Daredevil, a cameo was filmed but cut from the final film. The scene was included on the DVD as a deleted scene and later included in the Director's Cut.[2]

Character development

Just as Daredevil was for Matt Murdock[citation needed], the film is about Elektra coping with her childhood experiences and putting them behind her[citation needed]. Throughout the film we are shown her childhood discovery of her mother's murder. The memory appears to be hazy and the assassin she sees becomes clearer every time the memory is shown. Towards the end of the film, the memory properly surfaces and she realises it was Kirigi who killed her mother, just as Daredevil realized it was the Kingpin who killed his father.

There are also a few scenes in reference to her father. This man does not seem to be similar to the one shown in Daredevil (who treats his daughter well) as he is shown forcing her to tread water without use of her hands for long periods of time. However, it is likely that Elektra's father might have changed toward her, probably because Kirigi killed his wife.[citation needed]

It is suggested[by whom?] that the death of her mother and the behavior of her father caused deep emotional problems for Elektra, possibly causing Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). She denies having OCD to Abby toward the end of the film.

There are also many similarities between Abby and Elektra. Both have lost their mothers at an early age, both are good martial artists, and both may suffer from OCD. It is possible that, in Abby, Elektra sees and begins to understand her childhood self, allowing her (as Stick says in the film) to forget her rage and anger.

References to Daredevil

There are a few references to the Daredevil movie in this film. Besides Jennifer Garner returning to the role of Elektra Natchios from the first film, there is a deleted scene in the DVD area of the film which involves Elektra having a dream sequence once she is cured from Typhoid's poisonous kiss where she sees her ex-lover, Matt Murdock, the alter ego of Daredevil in the previous film, say he wants her to come back to live with him. As well, a flashback sequence which shows Stick reviving Elektra back from the dead after she was killed by Bullseye in the first movie. In the flashback, Elektra is still wearing the costume she wore in the original film. There is also a graffiti drawing of Daredevil outside the biker bar.

Release

Box office performance

Elektra opened on 14 January 2005 in the United States in 3,204 theatres. In its opening weekend it ranked 5th, taking $12,804,793.[1] In its second weekend it took $3,964,598, a drop of 69 percent.[3] Domestically the total gross was $24,409,722 again the lowest since Howard the Duck, and had a worldwide total of $56,681,566.[1]

Critical reception

Based on 143 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes Elektra earned a 10% "rotten" rating.[4] Also Metacritic gives it a metascore of 34 out of 100 which means it has "generally negative reviews".[5] Reportedly Jennifer Garner was critical of the film.[6]

Home video

The DVD of Elektra was released on 5 April 2005. It featured several deleted scenes such as one featuring a cameo Ben Affleck, who starred as the title character in Daredevil, which preceded this film. An extended and slightly refined two-disc unrated edition director's cut DVD was released in October 2005, featuring a cut detailed for a home video. However unlike the Daredevil director's cut which added about 30 minutes of material not in the original theatrical release this director's cut added only approximately three minutes of footage. It was also criticised for poor video transfer.[2]

Video game

Elektra was also supposed to have a video game based on the movie with support from the comics. The game was never released, as publishers felt it would not be popular enough. However, there is a game based on the movie that was released for mobile.

Soundtrack

References

External links


 
 

 

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