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ActionDramaCrimeThriller

The Prosecutor

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A poor young man is wrongly charged with drug trafficking after being deceived. An ex-prosecutor investigates the case, uncovers a corrupt lawyer team's scheme, and restores justice despite obstruction from evil forces.

Release Date : 2024-12-08

Language :CantoneseMandarinEnglishJapanese

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Mandarin Motion PicturesChina’s Huace PicturesSuper Bullet Pictures

Production Country : ChinaHong Kong

Alternative Titles : MisjudgementThe Prosecutor

Cast

Donnie Yen

Character Name : Fok Chi Ho

Original Name : 甄子丹

Gender : Male

Francis Ng Chun-Yu

Character Name : Yueng Dit Lap

Original Name : 吳鎮宇

Gender : Male

Julian Cheung Chi-Lam

Character Name : Au Pak Man

Original Name : 張智霖

Gender : Male

Kent Cheng Jak-Si

Character Name : Bao Ding

Original Name : 鄭則仕

Gender : Male

Michael Hui Koon-Man

Character Name : Judge George Hui

Original Name : 許冠文

Gender : Male

Lau Kong

Character Name : Uncle Ma

Original Name : 劉江

Gender : Male

Mason Fung Ho-Yeung

Character Name : Ma Ka Kit

Original Name : Mason Fung Ho-Yeung

Gender : Male

MC Cheung

Character Name : Lee King Wai

Original Name : MC Cheung

Gender : Male

Yu Kang

Character Name : Kim Hung

Original Name : 喻亢

Gender : Male

Adam Pak Tin-Nam

Character Name : Lau Siu Keung

Original Name : Adam Pak Tin-Nam

Gender : Male

Locker Lam Ka-Hei

Character Name : Chan Kwok Wing

Original Name : Locker Lam Ka-Hei

Gender : Male

Tommy Chu Pak-Hong

Character Name : Cheung Ho Yin

Original Name : 朱栢康

Gender : Male

Shirley Chan Yan-Yin

Character Name : Lee Sze Man

Original Name : Shirley Chan Yan-Yin

Gender : Female

Ray Lui

Character Name : Yin Sang

Original Name : 呂良偉

Gender : Male

Mark Cheng Ho-Nam

Character Name : Mak Chun Tung

Original Name : 鄭浩南

Gender : Male

Justin Cheung Kin-Sing

Character Name : Cheung Man Bing

Original Name : 張建聲

Gender : Male

Liza Wong Ming-Chuen

Character Name : Director Selina Cheung

Original Name : 汪明荃

Gender : Female

Sisley Choi

Character Name : Leung May Yee

Original Name : Sisley Choi

Gender : Female

Mandy Wong

Character Name : Defense Lawyer of Robbery Trial

Original Name : Mandy Wong

Gender : Female

Leung Chung-Hang

Character Name : Barrister Wong

Original Name : Leung Chung-Hang

Gender : Male

Max Cheung Tat-Lun

Character Name : Benny

Original Name : 張達倫

Gender : Male

Yuen Yee-Man

Character Name : Kendy

Original Name : Yuen Yee-Man

Gender : Female

Koji Nakamura

Character Name : Nakamura

Original Name : 中村浩二

Gender : Male

Philip Chan Yan-Kin

Character Name :

Original Name : 陈欣健

Gender : Male

German Cheung Man-Kit

Character Name :

Original Name : 張文傑

Gender : Male

Max Cheung Tat-Lun

Character Name :

Original Name : 張達倫

Gender : Male

Li Kit Wa

Character Name : Assistant

Original Name : Li Kit Wa

Gender : Male

Yuen Yee-Man

Character Name :

Original Name : Yuen Yee-Man

Gender : Female

Reviews

C

Chris Sawin

@ChrisSawin

2025-01-17

In the Hong Kong action thriller The Prosecutor, a young man named Ma Ka-kit lives with his Uncle Ma in a low-income home. He rents out his address in an effort to make some extra money, but he receives a package containing a kilogram of cocaine and gets arrested for drug smuggling. Chan Kwok-wing, the second defendant in the drug smuggling case, is found to be the one who purchased Ma Ka-kit’s address. Ma Ka-kit (Mason Fung) is convinced by his defense lawyer Li Sze-man ( Shirley Chan) and legal executive Au Pak-man (Julian Cheung) to plead guilty to reduce his sentence. But once the case reaches leniency court, Ma Ka-kit is sentenced to 27 years in prison while Chan Kwok-wing (Locker Lam) is acquitted. Now, Ma Ka-kit’s fate rests in the hands of Fok Chi-ho (Donnie Yen), a former narcotics police detective turned public prosecutor. Written by Edmond Wong (Ip Man 1-4, The Monkey King: Havoc in Heaven’s Palace), The Prosecutor is inspired by the real case that transpired in 2016. The film is also directed and produced by Donnie Yen (who also directed Sakra). Fok Chi-ho is brought to the DOJ or Department of Justice under the tutelage of pupil master Bao Ding (Kent Cheng) and is told flat out upon arrival that the DOJ typically leaves decision-making in the hands of chief prosecutor Yeung Dit-lap (Francis Ng). Surprisingly, Donnie Yen was hesitant to accept this role since most of the action was injected into the film once he signed on. Yen wasn’t familiar with legal dramas initially, but worked with Edmond Wong and his stunt team to create a film that is dramatically engaging with dynamically unique action sequences. In foreign martial arts films, it’s often that the action is great but the story and acting are pure trash or lackluster at best. But The Prosecutor is a thrilling and engrossing drama first highlighted by its action. Donnie Yen turns 62 this year, but his martial arts is as hard-hitting and breathtaking as ever. What works in The Prosecutor’s favor is a solid script from Edmond Wong and Yen being surrounded by a talented cast. There’s an ongoing conflict between how the legal system and DOJ specifically operate and how Fok Chi-ho is as a new prosecutor. Fok fights hard for Ma Ka-kit and this one case specifically solely because he’s a young man with a bright future who is stuck thanks to his practically nonexistent relationship with money. Everyone at the DOJ is constantly ribbing Fok over Fok’s troublesome mindset of giving the little guy a fair shake despite whether or not it’s normal protocol. It’s essentially the government with endless wealth at its disposal and a cut-and-dry mentality versus the financially destitute underdog. The Prosecutor isn’t overloaded with action but features several memorable sequences that should be considered some of Donnie Yen’s best. The opening is a drug bust that shows Fok on his last big outing as a police officer. He gets a hold of a police shield and demolishes everyone as the camera shifts to a first-person POV. Donnie Yen throws in a few dropkicks for good measure. Once Fok shifts careers, former subordinate Lee King-wai (MC Cheung Tin-fu), takes over as police inspector. The two collaborate on an insane action sequence in an alley that features Lee King-wai doing MMA takedowns not unlike what Yen did in Flash Point. The scene is highlighted by Yen Tokyo Drifting a white car into the tiny alley flawlessly followed by jumping out of the car and beating everyone down with a hockey stick. There’s also the club sequence that’s already eye-catching thanks to its dynamic lighting, but features some crazy drone camera shots and Fok holding off 100 men on his own. The absolute best sequence in the film is the subway finale. Seeing so much bone-crunching action in a tiny moving space is jaw-droppingly great. My initial desire upon hearing about The Prosecutor is that Donnie Yen would shout OBJECTION! or OVERRULED! regularly and then he’d beat up criminals with a flurry of punches, no less than 17 dropkicks, and top it off with an emphatic suplex. That’s basically what you get with The Prosecutor, but it’s also surprisingly well-written with solid acting from an all-around superb cast.