Article 20

6.9
20242h 21m

Tells the story of prosecutor Han Ming who is involved in a difficult case where the intentional injury of people is turned into a legitimate defense.

Production

Logo for Beijing Enlight Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official International Trailer

Official International Trailer

Cast

Photo of Lei Jiayin

Lei Jiayin

Han Ming

Photo of Ma Li

Ma Li

Li Maojuan

Photo of Zhao Liying

Zhao Liying

Hao Xiuping

Photo of Gao Ye

Gao Ye

Lu Lingling

Photo of Liu Yaowen

Liu Yaowen

Han Yuchen

Photo of Wang Xiao

Wang Xiao

Deputy Inspector Tian

Photo of Chen Minghao

Chen Minghao

Li Maoquan

Photo of Pan Binlong

Pan Binlong

Wang Yongqiang

Photo of Zhang Yi

Zhang Yi

Director Zhan

Photo of Fan Wei

Fan Wei

Liu Bingren

Photo of Yu Hewei

Yu Hewei

Wang Jian

Photo of Xu Yajun

Xu Yajun

Secretary Cao

Photo of Li Naiwen

Li Naiwen

Class Teacher

Photo of Jiang Qiming

Jiang Qiming

Lawyer Chen

Photo of Alan Aruna

Alan Aruna

Liu Wenjing

Photo of Yang Haoyu

Yang Haoyu

Zhang Guisheng

Photo of Qiao Shan

Qiao Shan

Owner of the Commissary

Photo of Jiang Shimeng

Jiang Shimeng

Lady of the Commissary

Photo of Wang Peilu

Wang Peilu

Tang Xiong

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

The topic here is quite an interesting one. A CCTV camera captures a man being attacked and stabbed multiple times. The police apprehend the perpetrator, but as the hastily partnered prosecutors - "Han Ming" (Jiayin Lei) and "Liu Lingling" (Ye Gao) start to investigate, they discover that the victim was actually quite an odious creature who probably deserved his fate - despite the vocal protestations of his family. Meantime, the former is also having some family drama after is son "Yuchen" (Liu Yaowen) intervenes in a school bullying incident and finds himself faced with making an humiliating apology or a court-ordered detention. Poor old "Han" is now under mounting pressure from his bosses, his partner and from his rather strong-willed wife "Li Maojuan" (Li Ma). Juggling plates isn't really his forte, and for most of the drama we vacillate between the increasingly hysterical and bickering marital relationship that starts off quite funny but ends up quite grating, and a police investigation that ultimately has a political point to make about the voracity of Chinese justice to the audience. It does have it's moments, and at times I did feel a bit sorry for "Han" as his problems accumulate with no obvious solution for a man who just wants to get to his retirement in one piece. Otherwise, though, it's all a bit messy. The narrative doesn't really flow and it becomes just a but too much of a soap for me as it begins to run out of steam. It is watchable, and at times does raise a smile - but the stories are all just a bit too thin.

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