Aftermath and spoilers

Alysha 2022-03-21 09:01:58

Not as suspenseful as Twelve Angry Men. The story is very good, but the narrative method is too simple ~ there are surprises at the end. Justice may be really blind. The law is nothing but a man-made game, and the strong can always overturn it. Only the strong can maintain justice. A firearms company sells firearms for profit, even to some criminals, some irrational children. As a result, all kinds of tragedies in the society were caused. Finally, someone called the court to file a lawsuit and asked the company to claim compensation. But there are also some people who support the sale of guns, so that they can get weapons more easily. The lawsuit has thus become ambiguous. Lawyer Ruhr has been preparing for this lawsuit for a long time and believes that the odds are in sight. Attorney Lan Jin has a very tricky skill. He has a special team that can see and manipulate the jury. The two sides selected 12 jurors and 3 alternates from the 100 people provided by the court. Blue Gold's team soon noticed that a neurotic person who was extremely opposed to gun sales was found during the selection process, and opposed the hiring. When the male protagonist was chosen, it was an unknown factor against his undisciplined nature. However, the main character, Zhizhi, was hired after participating in the jury for deliberately revealing the purpose of greed for money. Although I don't know that the male and female protagonists are also trying to make money by manipulating the jury. At the beginning of the trial, the hostess anonymously sent two lawyers a bridging jury win rate. Ruhl ignored it, but Lan Jin felt threatened and investigated the matter. The female lead and the two lawyers described feeling patriotic, and as a result, the jury in the court took the patriotic oath under the influence of the male lead. This is enough to prove that the heroine can really manipulate the jury. Lan Jin issued a killer attack and stole from the male protagonist, but the male protagonist who happened to be discovered but could not be caught. The hostess threatens Lan Jin with a phone call, and plans to withdraw one of the jury members that Lan Jin can control. The angry Lan Jin finally sent a killer to assassinate the heroine, but was counter-killed when he tried. The heroine earnestly demanded an increase in the transaction price. The lawsuit developed multiple twists and turns, and Blue Gold bought Ruhr's important witnesses. Therefore, Ruhr was a little shaken by the method of buying the jury. In the end, the lawsuit was still in favor of Ruhl, and the blue gold had no choice but to pay the female lead for the transaction. As soon as the payment was made, he received a call from a spy sent by him, stating that the two were victims of similar lawsuits before, and warned that the transaction should be terminated immediately. But it was too late, the money had been sent. After receiving the money, the hostess immediately contacted the FBI to report the illegal team. The male protagonist uses a police officer as a breakthrough point to persuade other jurors. So Ruhr won the lawsuit that should have been won. Since then, Lan Jin has no more lawsuits that can be trusted with his methods. This is where the two Avengers use darker means for justice to bring down the gangsters who do not obey the law.

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Extended Reading
  • Horacio 2021-12-11 08:01:36

    The middle process is very tight. Part of the film’s success is to reveal the purpose of the two people at the end. The director is not without a political purpose. Eliminating the portrayal of the villain, the film itself is still very exciting. The villain's lawyer is innocent. As he said, his job is to win the lawsuit. Considering too many ethical factors, instead of being a good lawyer. Why did good lawyers end up spending no money?

  • Horacio 2022-03-28 09:01:03

    I can't stand this movie the most, it made me cry. . . . . . . . .

Runaway Jury quotes

  • Rankin Fitch: Gentlemen, trials are too important to be left up to juries.

  • Rankin Fitch: ...the thing of it is, I don't give a shit. What's more... I never have.