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Category:    Home > Reviews > Super Hero > Elektra (Fox Widescreen DVD)

Elektra - Widescreen

 

Picture: A-     Sound: A-     Extras: B-     Film:  C-

 

 

You know I was just thinking the other day, “Boy, we sure could use another comic book-based movie,” and behold Elektra was born!  Hollywood reminds me of a kid who just figured out how to make armpit farts and with his recent amusement decides to do it constantly day and night until it drives everyone nuts.  Likewise once Hollywood makes a film that does some good business they over saturate until everyone wants to puke.  This is not to say that some of the films have been good or entertaining, but the inconsistency is what is frustrating.  Fact of the matter is that filmmaking today is a lot like the automobile.  Cars today are more expensive, faster, made out of cheaper parts, and designed to make you think you are getting more than you end up with.  Similar older films (not all) were once made with good parts and while they weren’t about special effects and trickery they were more interested in the consumer getting a quality product of entertainment.

 

It became abundantly clear to me somewhere about halfway through Elektra (2005) why American action films of late are tired, boring, redundant, and actually go out of their way to be uninteresting.  You know it’s bad when all you wait for is the next action scene and then it comes along and then you count the seconds until the next one comes along.  If the fight/action scenes are boring, well than you have a dud on your hands and ladies and gentlemen Elektra scores high on the dud-o-meter. 

 

Each major studio is getting their hands though on the Marvel franchise, including Columbia TriStar taking on the Spider-Man films, Universal made the mistake of doing The Hulk, New Line has been quite successful with the Blade series, Lion’s Gate is doing all their smaller characters and Paramount just forged a distribution deal with Marvel for the rest of their major characters.  Fox is basically batting .500 though, but when they choose to do Elektra there is no doubt that they were resting their efforts on the hope that people will flock to see Garner more than anything else, similar to Tomb Raider’s fan base, which relies on Angelina Jolie luring in a few extra viewers desperate for another good glimpse of her bod.  If you don’t think that’s true just look at the advertisements for these films and you won’t have to go far to find out just how they market them. 

 

Elektra suffers for a few reasons, most of which are blatantly obvious.  For one we have Rob Bowman behind the wheel directing this film into the drudges of idiocy.  He failed to impress most audience members with his PG-13 film Reign of Fire, which was not very memorable as you can tell by the dust that is lying on top of most copies scattered around any video store you find.  Bowman seems to have a knack for turning just about anything interesting into an over-the-top special effects nightmare that makes each scene less interesting then the next.  Our story bounces back and forth and the narrative itself is so poorly told that most viewers will be confused to the point of no return, which can be blamed partly on the writers, but the director takes the blame.  If you can actually follow this mess and still care then you have succeeded far past the majority.  This is not to say that those watching are clueless, but the entire story could have unfolded a bit better, but oddly enough like I said it was halfway through that I realized why American action films are just painful.

 

The reason for this is the way in which everything is done with intention and motivation that never once lets the audience think.  Everything must be made so obvious for us, like who the good guys are and who the bad guys are.  We have seen these films so many times before and their formula is so familiar that anyone could probably predict the entire film and even guess what half the dialogue will be.  I was refreshed after seen House of the Flying Daggers (reviewed on this site) at the remarkable leaps and bounds that Foreign cinema takes on as it makes action films that are poignant, insightful, witty, charming, daring, entertaining, and for the most part they are crafted with such deliberate intentions to make the audience feel like they witnessed such artistic beauty and magic. 

 

So Elektra is an assassin and is hired to kill people, but that all changes when she becomes personally involved with her next target, which happens to be a father and daughter.  They happen to have some secrets of their own and are running from more than their own fate.  The bad guys after her also have a vendetta after Elektra and will not let her interfere with their plans to bring down the target.  Even the villains like Tattoo and Typhoid are boring and the fight sequences are downright absurd and uninvolved. 

 

The biggest advantage that Elektra has going for it are some good moments with Terrence Stamp and the fact that it is short in length.  Other than that…you are taking a big chance on this one.  However, Fox has supplied the goods for the DVD release in a valiant attempt to lure in some consumers who did enjoy the film or those that if you could call it missing out on the film at the theater. 

 

Let’s begin with the 2.35 X 1 anamorphic transfer, which looks very solid and does its best to give a pleasing quality to the relatively dark film.  I did not particularly like the ‘look’ of the film, which reminded me of episodes of the X-Files, which explains it all since Bill Roe was the director of photography for Elektra and for mostly TV programs including the X-Files.  Colors look sharp and detailed and like Daredevil the color red is very prominent. 

 

While I may not be a fan of the look of the film I certainly enjoyed the sound design, which is available here in both Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 mixes.  The DTS mix allowed for a slightly more enjoyable experience watching some of the fighting scenes with bullets or swords making the surrounds become quite involved.  Dialogue is also well executed and this is one of the few films that managed to get both the bigger sound design and the smaller design segments to gel together well.  Often times we have great sound during the big moments, but then it becomes too quiet and uninvolved during the down times, but not the case here.  You can also notice some really well articulated sound moments that shine through the mix with exceptional quality. 

 

If you have survived the film and are feeling quite ambitious than you will want to venture through some of the extras featured on the DVD.  There are a few deleted scenes, which could have brought the story together a bit better if inserted correctly.  There is also a ‘making of’, which features Garner and Bowman exclusively and is nothing really that in-depth nor does it really need to be in this case, because I don’t that many people really care how this film was made.  There are a few editing room featurettes as well provided, which brings me to another point about the film and that is the poor editing. When we see an action film nowadays it seems like we are being short-changed in just about all aspects, but the biggest breaking point is the use of editing. 

 

Editing Elektra must have been like cutting up carrots.  The film has way too many edits and all of which are in the wrong places and put together with all the wrong segments.  For instance, notice how the fight scenes decide to cut out just about everything interesting about them and insert all the boring moments, or for that matter is rushes the cuts together so fast that you have no clue what you just saw.  This technique is really getting annoying, yet Hollywood seems to keep supplying us with this junk.  The best example of this is in a scene where Garner faces her opponent with white sheets being slashed around and whipped around in the air, which reminded me of the film Hero (another film from the director of House of the Flying Daggers).  However, all the cuts and the use of this scene become more infuriating as the scene wears on. 

 

There is also a Comic-Con presentation from Jennifer Garner located in the extras, which I would speculate would satisfy most.  It’s really sad when some of the worst films receive the best extras or try to add extras just as a gimmick into making you think it must be good.  Anymore they just try to find as much stuff laying around to throw on these discs that it is starting to become a junk format, and more especially with all the ads, promos, and trailers that are put on them. 

 

Elektra gets a “C” in my book, which stands for curious and that is exactly the reason to see it…curiosity.  Hopefully you are not expecting must of else you are setting yourself up for a real letdown.  The film sells itself as a Superhero genre film, but like Warner’s Keanu Reeves disaster Constantine, is really a Supernatural film in hip clothing.  Luckily Fox has done stellar work in the presentation department for this DVD, which will at least assist in trying to tolerate the film.

 

 

-   Nate Goss


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