Saturday, August 10, 2024

WOLVERINE versus ELEKTRA
Top of The World, Ma! (Marvel)
Where:
Wolverine #103 When: July 1996
Why: Larry Hama How: Val Semeiks

The Story So Far...
The trauma of being forcibly stripped of the metal that once coated his entire skeleton has thrown Wolverine into an increasing series of unforeseen challenges.

Although he regained the full use of his mutant ability to rapidly repair once trivial wounds -- his mind & body have reverted to a feral state in the wake of a vicious showdown with his arch-nemesis Sabretooth.

A failed attempt by Genesis to re-bond his skeleton with adamantium has revealed the metal was responsible for retarding an animal mutation. 
A feral state that is not befitting a righteous warrior. If his path is to be restored, then intervention must be staged. The Chaste master Stick has taken an interest in Wolverine's fate and directed skilled assassin, Elektra, to find and redeem his lost soul. It is a path she herself once walked. Now it is Wolverine's turn.

Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Wolverine 3 (Athlete)
Intelligence: Draw 4 (Tactician)
Speed: Elektra 3 (Athlete)
Stamina: Wolverine 6 (Generator)
Agility: Elektra 4 (Gymnast)
Fighting: Wolverine 6 (Warrior)
Energy: Elektra 2 (Projectiles)
Total: Wolverine 26 (Metahuman)

Our stats say Wolverine has the edge against super-assassin Elektra, but just how far will advantages like a mutant healing factor and berserker fighting impulse take him? Today's fight will give us a partial answer - but first let's explore beyond that.

Elektra Natchios began her martial training in childhood. Showing natural acumen for the fighting arts; her discipline continued through adulthood, but not before she was rejected by The Chaste, and tempted by their evil rivals The Hand.

Tragedy tainted Elektra's life - beginning with the murder of her mother, and much later her father. A wild & reckless temperament grew within her, earning skeptical scorn from the master known as Stick. His rejection helped place her on a path close to the edge -- the life of a bounty hunter and mercenary.

You probably know Elektra by reputation, and although her most famous battle ended in mortal defeat at the hands of Bullseye -- she was resurrected to continue as one of the deadliest fighters in the world. You could even say multiverse: one of our earliest entries showed Elektra dominating DC anti-heroine - Catwoman!

Our file is shamefully shallow, but the inter-company crossover is a fine example of how respected the skilled technique of Elektra is. As for that loss to Bullseye -- we recorded a much later team-up with Daredevil that scored payback for that.

Wolverine has had comparable struggles with his own inner nature, not to mention encounters with The Hand, but the mutant gift that allows him to survive strikes from Elektra's trademark sai weapons - and fight with a ferocity we deem beyond martial skill - has also been known to make him a little sloppy.

Your mileage for how quickly and effectively Wolverine can heal will probably influence your expectations here, but we must remember that history is littered with examples of bladed weapons, and skilled fighters, getting the better of him.

Razorfist slashed an exhausted Wolverine to breaking point, Deadpool skewered his lungs with twin swords, the Winter Soldier kept him at bay with a dagger, and The Gorgon found a killing strike with a katana that allowed The Hand to render him their personal killer. Black Panther didn't even need claws to match him in hand-to-hand combat, and Daredevil scored a controversial win with a harsh enough blunt force bonk on the head! Just because a fella can heal any wound -- doesn't mean he isn't first going to suffer the effects of sustaining them!

Of course, there are those who haven't fared quite so well: Lady Deathstrike's cybernetic claws couldn't stop Wolverine cutting her down, Silver Samurai's katana missed vital organs - costing him dearly, and Blade wasn't even able to slow Wolverine down with his skillful sword.

So which side will Elektra fall on? It's about time we got into this thing to find out, but one more important note: This is a strange time for Wolverine. It's a few years since the adamantium was ripped from his skeleton by Magneto, and he's succumbed to his feral side -- physically devolving in the process. It's what's brought Elektra to him, but what effect did it have? Let's see!

The Tape: Wolverine Ranking: Wolverine (#5)

What Went Down...
High atop the second tower of the World Trade Center awaits Elektra. The wind blows in her flowing hair as a hairy, squat figure grunts his way onto the rooftop to join her. She asks "its" name. "It" responds with the name of a lowly beast.

She challenges him: "A wolverine is a beast. Was it the man or the beast who climbed the "mountain"?" She strikes -- proving her point.


The backhanded strike with the butt of Elektra's sai handle provokes feral fury in Wolverine and he bears his bone claws. She walks away, toward a doorway into the building, unimpressed by his unrefined response.

The upper level of the Trade Tower once fed tourists, but now will feed the mind and soul of a student. It is the dojo in which Wolverine's body & spirit will be tested as Elektra returns him to the path of a righteous warrior. A path of "obligation, duty and honor" that "puts him above the beasts and the savages."

She pins a scroll to the wall and its symbols stir old memories to the front of the man-beast's mind. He can sense something is missing, but that is a test for another time. First he must answer the challenge of tempering.


Elektra isn't concerned with titles. She responds to defiance of the process with swift action -- another smack to the head with the base grip of her sai weapon.

The feral Wolverine attempts to strike back -- lunging with his left hand claws extended. Easily avoided by the agile teacher, who vaults over his squat form to land behind him -- weapons at the ready.

She quotes another who once tempered the feral mutant - Lord Shingen Harada. A reference that stokes the flame of fury within Wolverine. The fight is on!

Again the beast leads with his claws - swinging savagely with his right hand!


Elektra's left is knee is raised as she easily dances beyond the bone tips and returns fire with a launching kick to the face!

Wolverine is momentarily staggered by the blow that sent him falling backwards, but he isn't stayed for long.


Animal aggression compels Wolverine to charge at his opponent with a staff weapon, but the primitive lunge simply leaves him open to a low attack from the expert wielding of Elektra.

Has it been hours? Days? Months? Or Wolverine's entire life? The fight is for more than one simple victory. The combat is an existential crisis of the soul. If the animal fury within him is not hammered out, he will never be the man he once was. All that he could be.


The Wolverine leaps through the air behind Elektra, with staff weapon raised above his head in both hands.

Again it is child's play for Elektra to simply raise her sai weapons and block the staff with the defensive catch holds innate to the weapon's design.

His claws are equally meaningless. She simply leaps over his squat frame as he brutally and feebly lunges with the boney protrusions extending from his hands. The lessons of his time in Japan and fighting Shingen must be re-learned.

The Hammer...
It could be presumed that this was a continuous conflict in the makeshift dojo Elektra created on a floor of the Twin Towers, but the single page we've broken into thirds [above] also might suggest a montage of multiple sparring sessions.

How quickly do you undo a literal and metaphorical de-evolution of a man? Usually it wouldn't matter, but for our purposes we'll assume this was all one session. Either way - the work isn't done. 
Wolverine #103 plays out as a series of philosophical and physical challenges to Wolverine, with one final fight awaiting.

As usual, I fully intend to return to the issue eventually to see what happened in their second encounter. These might not be bitter showdowns for all the marbles, but these characters also aren't pulling all their punches. This is valid data.


This wasn't a period of Wolverine I've ever regarded very highly. For the most part I managed to avoid the short-lived 'noseless runt' stretch, which felt like a bridge too far during the bone claws years -- but I wasn't especially thrilled about the character and his solo series in the short run just before that, either.

I was buying off the newsstand back then, and I know I dipped in to Wolverine somewhere around this time, give or take eight issues. 
I mostly encountered the strangely deformed version of the character in the main X-books, where the details eluded me. He still had the bandana-mask and excess hair when Onslaught kicked off, but there were plenty of other things to wonder about there!

I remember [Wolverine #103] coming out, and probably even considering buying it, but the combination of Wolverine and Elektra -- while eye catching -- seemed a little cheesy and haphazard. They weren't characters that had anything to do with each other at that point, and it seemed like an egregious, inorganic aside at a time when nothing about the character seemed sufficiently iconic, or coherent.

Coming back to it now - I really enjoyed it. This issue in particular stands alone as a very satisfying, classic martial arts night of the soul. An existential crisis dressed up with fist fighting, flowery metaphor, and examination of the nature of man.

Back in '96 I was resistant to the 'Marvel Comics' of the meeting, but I see now that the DNA of Larry Hama's work on GI Joe is also present. It's a presumption of Elektra as a figure in this world, and a thematically convenient excuse to bring two cool characters together. Elektra's redemption arc was a bit weightier than a furball growing back his nose, but hey. Whatever gets it done, man.

This is still pretty early in Marvel's attempts to reincorporate Elektra as a regular figure in the Marvel Universe. Frank Miller had kept her spiritually alive in series positioned away from the regular grind [eg; Daredevil: Man Without Fear], and for almost a decade Marvel had remained hands-off, with some uncertainty of whether or not the character was truly living. They were all-in after a 1993 return.

Elektra isn't the only thing layering this issue with Miller grandiosity. Invoking Lord Shingen and the lessons of the sword from the first Wolverine mini-series is a more direct and appropriate bit of depth, but that comes through in the rematch.

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Winner: Inconclusive (Draw)
#95 (+2) Elektra
#5 (--) Wolverine

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