Underground MMA fighter Dani Libra fears nothing... except for the recurring blackouts that spark memories of a bloody past. When her sister is kidnapped, Dani must shine a light on the darkness in her own mind. Only question is -- can she keep her own demons at bay for long enough to save her sister?
Pound for Pound collects issues 1-6 of the series written by Natalie Chaidez with art by Andy Belanger.
An underground MMA fighter must fight gangs and CTS in order to save her kidnapped sister.
Unfortunately, I was not a fan of this book. The story is just bad and felt like it should be a parody but I think it is actually taking itself serious. Bad humor, too many character twists, a lame villain that doesn't show up until the end with no connection to the characters, and some characters that could be considered discriminating. The only saving grace is the colorful art. Just skip it.
(4 of 5 for decent run & revenge action comics) After The Banks, which was a huge waste of time I feared to continue with another TKO book. But as they say, luck favours the bold. I feared the worst, though. But Pound for Pound started with a kick and nice escalation of story and from there it rolled for pretty awesome search and revenge action. The art is good and the comic has a pretty nice atmosphere. It mixes bits from thinks like Taken, Sicario, Rambo Last blood (the good parts of the first half) with Rodriguez-ish ease and humour. The style of the dynamics in this comic leaves me not surprised that Natalie Chaidez is a film school graduate and works in this industry. Well, making a movie is closer to creating comics than being a writer. Andy Belanger's art is more than decent, I like his thick inks and how good he deals with action and human characters alike. Daniela Miwa is the important name here and name to remember. Her colouring here is great and I must say she did a major service for Dr Fang's art. Pound for Pound is pretty great if you're looking for some action drama from Mexico-USA border.
Llegó la segunda ola de títulos de TKO Studios, y obviando el evidente y merecido ruido mediático que está haciendo el Sentient de Jeff Lemire y Gabriel Hernández Walta, desde que se anunció esta remesa puse mi punto de mira en Pound for pound. Las historias fronterizas me atraen, y la obra de Natalie Chaidez y Andy Belanger prometía ese sucio aire del desierto que lo cubre todo de polvo y crudeza, y ese eterno enfrentamiento entre el Sur y lo que está por debajo. Una vez leída, en cierto modo Pound for pound se interna en esos terrenos que anticipaba, aunque la manera en que se desarrolla su trama termina generando sensaciones encontradas.
Nos situamos en el mundo de la MMA —artes marciales mixtas—, donde Dani, la protagonista, sobrevive haciéndose un nombre gracias a su récord de victorias. En una de las peleas, amañada para que la pierda, Dani sufre uno de sus habituales blackouts y termina derrotando a su rival. Esto le va a acarrear una tremenda deuda, y Dani va a tener que hacer frente a una consecuencia terrible: el rapto de su hermana pequeña. Tenemos por tanto una historia de venganza. Venganza por una serie de malas decisiones, de esas que pueden truncar vidas. El carácter luchador de Dani le va a llevar a emprender una odisea salvaje aún a sabiendas de que su coste puede ser inmenso. A todo ello asistimos mientras se nos escupen recurrentes imágenes del pasado, un pasado distorsionado en el que la familia de Dani atraviesa el desierto con la intención de llegar a la tierra prometida, solo para encontrarse con un monstruo que acabó con ese sueño en un abrir y cerrar de ojos.
Dani, a tenacious, bad-ass, Latinx, underground-MMA fighter, pisses off the wrong gangster so they kidnap her little sister.
Rodriguez/Tarantinoesque plotting mixed with Cormac McCarthyish southern gothic comedy à la Outer Dark (The Patriot Council?!) topped off with absurdity reminiscent of Garth Ennis' Preacher. Whoa. I didn't expect the story to take the turn into to Crazy Town but it did and that kept it fresh.
Great story, plotting, pace, art, detail, framework, and coloring. Lots of Spanish cursing and I love Spanish curses; it's a beautiful language.
Once more TKO has done! They are able to consistently deliver five stars titles. With pound for pound you emerge yourself into a Grindhouse b-movie Mexican environment. With a compelling story that leaves you wanting more after each issue. We follow the journey of Dani Libra in a twistfull away, seeking answers and revenge. The art is wonderfully suited for the argument. Of course there are some improvement points...the lettering could be a lot better (it feels a bit disconnected from the art) and some more extras would be appreciated. However, try something different and threat yourself with a tko book.
This story of an MMA fighter in Mexico going all out for revenge against the monsters who stole her sister has a lot of familiar elements to it, and honestly, you don’t get a sense that you lose anything when you quit reading the dialogue altogether. The art is skillfully done, but feels stiff and heavy.
Andy Belanger's art is astounding. The layouts, the rendering of detail, and the action scenes are all a delight to behold. Daniela Miwa's color provides a tremendous amount of atmosphere and really makes the desert setting come to life.
Andy Belanger's art is what brought me here. I wasn't disappointed by it, but parts of the story didn't quite work for me. Generally pretty entertaining, but some story points don't make sense or are entirely glossed over. Seems to me like this could have been a much longer series. Check it out for Andy's kick ass art. On a side note, Andy is a pro wrestler as well, so he REALLY knows how to do dynamic action/fight art.
The art is decent . That being said, the story was plain and not original. There are things they do in the story that are inexplicable. For instance the main characters attacks the enemy wearing wrestler masks just because. Plus too, I'm tired of the main character being a woman who can casually kick the butts of an army of jacked dudes. Can there be something new please?
Really quick punch of a story, super engaging art, lots of twists that kept me immersed in the story. This would have really worked as a more drawn out series I think, just to explain and thread through some elements more tightly, but still was a good, snappy read.
A female MMA fighter has to go after the cartel who took her little sister. There's a lot of twists and turns here, some of them not making the most sense. It's over the top graphic action. It reminded me some of Machete but less cheesy.
Kickass action, brutality, awesome art... It only loses a star because I felt the end was a little rushed, as was the revelation of the "mastermind"....