Pros: The actions sequences
Cons: Pretty much everything else
The Bottom Line:
Action scenes were great
But weak characters ruin
For this film lacked heartJennifer Garner is a Heartless Assassin in Elektra - a Movie with No Heart
Like many others, I suspect, what I know about comic book
superheroes comes from the movies. So I
hadn't heard of the character Elektra until Jennifer Garner was cast as her in
the 2003 DareDevil movie. When this spin
off focusing on her character was announced, I was excited, until the reviews
started coming out. While it dropped off
my must see list, it stayed on my radar because of my love of Jennifer
Garner. I finally got around to seeing
it. The amount of time and money I spent
not rushing out to see this turned out to be just about right.
After dying (in DareDevil), Elektra (Jennifer Garner) has
been resurrected and trained in martial arts.
She can manipulate time, making her a deadly assassin. But while Elektra travels from one assignment
to another, she is haunted by nightmares from her past.
Nearing Christmas, she wants to take a few days off, not to
spend them with family, but to try to fight off her personal demons. But she gets a job that pays more than she
can turn down, so she settles into a cabin in the middle of nowhere to await
her target.
After befriending the neighbors, Mark Miller (Goran Visnjic)
and his daughter Abby (Kirsten Prout), she finds out her mission is to kill
them. But her heart awakens instead, and
she winds up protecting them from others also sent to kill them. But there are even more powerful figures
after the Millers. Can Elektra keep them
safe?
The problem with this movie is it truly has no heart. No matter how absurd the story, we need to
identify with someone to get into the story.
But that never happens here.
Elektra would be the obvious choice, but she is so cold, we just don't
care. Mark isn't developed enough, and
Abby is annoyingly stupid. The end
result is that we spend 97 minutes watching stuff happen to people we don't
care about.
I'm not going to put this completely at the feet of the
acting, but it could have been better. I
do think the cast was trying, but they didn't have much to work with script
wise. Goran Visnic and Kirsten Prout
certainly do what they can to make their characters come to life. The rest are pretty much one note characters
set up to be moved around by the plot. A
cardboard cutout would have done just as well as the cast. Please note, I'm not saying the cast was
bad. I'm just saying they didn't have
characters to portray.
Even Elektra falls into the one note trap. I get the fact that she is dealing with some
pretty heavy stuff. But Jennifer Garner
seems to be sleepwalking through the film.
I'm sure she was told to play her character emotionlessly, and as such
she did a great job. But it was a poor
choice since we needed emotion to connect with her.
Then there's the director's weird lighting choice. Almost every scene involves heavy use to
shadow. I'm sure it was supposed to set
the mood and be symbolic, but all it did was annoy me to death. I spent much of the film trying to see what
all was happening. If a character ever
got more than half of themselves properly lit, it was unusual. I mean, really, if you are going to put Jennifer
Garner in a tight red leather outfit, let us see it. Please!
If you are just looking for some action scenes, you will be
rewarded. There are some nice edge of
your seat scenes scattered throughout the film.
One of the villains has some very cool tattoos, and I loved any time he
was on screen. Granted, most of the
action wasn't realistic, but it was fun to watch.
Unfortunately, those action scenes weren't enough to save an
overall dismal film. If you absolutely
must watch Elektra, wait until you can see it for free.
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