"It was ok", I tried to really like this, the story was a ok even though the artwork was good for me to keep on turning the pages. The entire book is a homage to that 1970s/1980s Kung Fu flicks and Blaxploitation movies that became a hit in the pop culture norm of the U.S. in those times. I really like the black and white art as if Kagan Mcleaod's intention was that thick ink flow that was common in the Chinese scriptwriting that was also became popular in Kung Fu movies. The pacing was a letdown for there are major parts were somewhat confusing and the the blaxploitation homage was kinda lame in my taste, I'd rather left it out for I preferred the straight up Kung Fu story, unless if you are a fan of RZA. Still a good read for a weekend. It's a kung fu comic with zombies. I'm not sure I have to say more. But Kagan McLeod has created an incredibly fun and inventive book here, one in which the action never stops or - more importantly for anyone who's sat through a martial arts movie in which the same moves are recycled over and over againg - becomes tedious. It wears its wushu film foundations on its sleeve, but remains distinct; not only distilling the entire tradition (even down to the Chinese film genre's effect on blaxploitation films, in the character of Moog Joogular) but adapting it effectively in a new medium. The result is a comic more epic than any Chinese martial arts film I've ever seen, and I've seen a lot of them.
What do You think about Infinite Kung Fu (2011)?
Very interesting blacksploitation / wuxia mix. We need more in this genre
—brenda
mind blowing Kung Fu styles... the zombies really add a new ingredient.
—Diana
Overly convoluted through the use of combining too many nerd genres.
—mitchellinglady
Kung fu and zombies. What more could you possibly want?!
—wertwert
so entertaining! and the art is rich and exciting.
—Sahar