

Just as the Doctor on Doctor Who is technically one guy, but as each season has passed and different writers have gotten a hold of the character, everyone has “their” Doctor, so it is for other long-running characters. Writing characters is about creating, but it’s also about interpreting characters. In 1979, 22-year-old Frank Miller began drawing for Marvel’s bi-monthly Daredevil comic book.


No one, not even the creator of a character has the ability to determine the “real” character, because no one can control what people will respond to and gravitate toward. While I understand that, as a writer, it’s tough to let your babies go, the fact is that it’s up to the fans at the end of the day to decide whose rendition of Elektra resonates with them more. All he has to go by is the same information we have to go by, press releases from Netflix and photos. What’s interesting is that, according to Collider, Miller has yet to even watch the first season of Daredevil, let alone know how they’re handling Elektra in Season Two. Miller used Elektra for less than two years in his run on Daredevil, but his operatic arc of her love. But Elektra's death was only the foundation for one of Frank Miller's most staggering sagas of the Man Without Fear! The Hand and the Chaste are in a race for Elektra, body and soul, and Natasha Romanova, the Black Widow, almost follows her rival into the grave while Daredevil's trapped in a coffin of his own design! Can his sarcastic sensei Stick rescue him from sensory overload, just in time for hand-to-Hand combat? Plus the continuing tragedy of Heather Glenn, Foggy Nelson's foray into organized crime, a path not taken to the SHIELD Helicarrier, and the only villain who gets less respect than Stilt-Man.a second Stilt-Man! Featuring the Kingpin, Bullseye, and Hydra! Collecting DAREDEVIL #185-191, #219 DAREDEVIL: LOVE & WAR and WHAT IF? #28.“They can call it whatever you want, but it will not be the real Elektra.” He then added, “Yes, I’m her father.” The first half is entirely written by Frank Miller.
