12 Citizens (2014) Poster

(2014)

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6/10
Unintentionally revealing social science study of a struggling society in a country without common identity and values
kluseba24 December 2015
"Twelve Citizens" is the Chinese version of Reginald Rose's legendary drama "Twelve Angry Men" from 1954. Instead of reinventing the content to assimilate it to China's contemporary culture, law system and society, the movie is almost an exact copy of the original masterpiece. The only important difference is that this movie shows us a fake trial inspired by the American law system held by parents of law school students who have worked on a case where a son is supposed to have killed his father and found him guilty. The parents have to debate whether the students did a good job and pass their exam. This means that the initial tension of the original where a man's life was at stake is completely missing in this movie. Another part that changed is that in this film, a rich boy living in the city killed his poor father in the countryside. Since China still has a restrictive communist government, rich young men are the same kind of outsiders that criminal slum kids were sixty years earlier in the United States of America. This speaks volumes for the contemporary conditions in this country but instead of honestly criticizing, exposing and solving these problems, the movie rejects the American law system and the ideology of democracy.

This modern movie has almost nothing of the outstanding settings of the original movie with Herny Fonda among others. Even though most of this movie is also shot in one room, it's a very large one where people can walk around and away from each other at any time instead of a small jury room where tensions arise rather quickly. The heat is not as extreme as in the tense original film. Even though there are weather changes in this movie, they aren't very present and don't serve as guiding line to the story. The clever camera angles of the original are almost completely absent in this film since the cameras rarely film from above in the beginning and there aren't many close-ups either towards the end. The soundtrack is even more limited than the original and not memorable at all. At certain points, this movie feels as if it had been directed by some overambitious law school students and unexperienced movie fans that didn't exactly understand why the original version worked so brilliantly and still does until today.

Despite being a copy of a great script that comes six decades too late, the movie is still enjoyable because the story is almost timeless and the original drama has an incredibly strong character development and perfect dialogues. The Chinese actors aren't as perfect but they are really solid and their performances are clearly better than many other television remakes of the original. Some characters have slightly different background stories if compared to the original which adds at least a handful of interesting new elements. We get to know an old man whose family got wrongfully criticized by an entire village due to Mao Zedong's failed reforms, a bitter, conservative and poor iceman who despises an entire Generation and a rational communist state prosecutor who obviously plays the protagonist of the story. This little detail is only revealed in the very last scene of the movie and that's why it's so important.

This propaganda movie basically spreads three messages. First of all, the American law system is flawed and can't work in the People's Republic of China. Second, China's law system is better and the men and women who represent it are fair, impartial and modern. Third, China still has to move forward and deal with the demons of its own past, notably the impacts of Mao Zedong's reforms and the prejudices it spread and that still persist. The movie also tries to show more or less that contemporary young millionaires without any identity deserve as much respect as working men who have built an entire nation which is acceptable for this particular courtroom drama but debatable as a general statement.

This movie unintentionally exposes China's heart and soul to the viewers and shows a generation caught between a restrictive system with obsolete values of the past and an egocentric globalized world where it's challenging to find your own place. It portrays a society without any common identity, values and virtues. From that point of view and if you read between the lines and go beyond the plot itself, this movie has a certain interest and almost feels like a social science study while the story itself is simply stated a cheap ripoff. The analysis of this flawed propagandistic perspective is what makes this movie much more interesting than anything else and the main reason for my generous Rating. This movie made me explore the past and contemporary struggles of a directionless yet fascinating country.
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7/10
Above the standard, but not excellent.
yoggwork19 February 2019
Above the standard, but not excellent. The reason for localization is the lack of social basis for the whole set-up. In order to be able to tell the story, there are many confusing conditions, such as 12:0, such as the fall of the prosecution certificate, such as theatrical actors'exaggeration, excessive expression and action. In addition, there is no logical defect in the setting of the case. What's worse is that the audience lacks overall information, so there is no pleasure in deduction and decryption.
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10/10
sb kluseba
edgahoover10 October 2018
He does not understand China at all. The understanding of China is limited to Western reports and has no personal experience. This is very important. If you have not come to China personally, your political judgments about China and the people's feelings are completely incomprehensible. From a global perspective, China is developing rapidly and socially. Compared with the few so-called developed countries in the world, we have taken different paths and paid different prices. Today, you are holding these right. People in Chinese social prejudice should also Look at whether their country is as beautiful as the ones you portray, democracy, freedom, legal system, and security. I think many things are relative, there is no real Eden.
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Totally ridiculous ripoff of the legendary original
nanananalalalala27 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
We all know that the original 12 Angry Men is the best film ever about the common law system. The jury, the reasonable doubt principle and the highly compacted one room conflict, it both features highly talented Sidney Lumet and 12 unforgettable actors. However, in this Chinese remake, the setting of the story is a joke by all means. In a communist country where there never has an independent legal system, the story is about 12 boring parents (coincidentally, all male, not a single female) who just pretend they are jurors to finish their children's western legal system re-exam. The director show no special talent when he clearly just copies everything from the original film like the 1997 TV remake. Unlike Russian remake by Nikita Mikhalkov, the storyline is not changed at all. The details is indeed modern Chinese urban area, the audience sure can learn something if he wants to know modern China, but from the cinematic perspective, this film it's a total cliché. The most unbelievably ridiculous thing of this film is that, in this version, juror no.8, original played by Henry Fonda, is not an architect but a COMMUNIST STATE PROSECUTOR.
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9/10
A gripping "legal drama" that slyly reveals itself to be something profoundly more trenchant and humane..
jorgebenavides-9573631 July 2022
Notwithstanding what could only be suspected, perhaps a bit cynically, to be yet another tacked-on and politically-driven final insert shot(sigh.. I can almost feel the script-writers' excitement building upon receiving and scanning through the censor-approved final script, only to dejectedly discover that in the end one fleeting shot "suggestion" could only tie such a fine storyline together with a nice little red bow) still very effectively succeeds as a gripping and unexpectedly humane legal drama. For such pleas for self-awareness and nuanced tolerance to come from a part of our world where some staunchly embrace an aversion to interweaving into it's cultural and legal fabric anything even remotely resembling the "rule of law", makes the presence of this film all the more compelling. By cleverly imagining a scenario that sharply examines both its romantically noble aspirations and its often inherent and inevitably frustrating deficiencies, the filmmakers successfully posit that even a presumably egalitarian and blindly unprejudiced system of dispensing justice must always take into account the vastly capricious and exquisitely imperfect nature of even the most decent, well-meaning and fair-minded human being. This disparate group of strikingly rich and multi-layered personalities are seemingly thrust together and left to their own devices to undertake what in any other film would be a conventionally familiar and painfully predictably clothesline of a narrative, and yet here quite refreshingly we sense these sweaty, claustrophobic and nakedly vulnerable inhabitants claw, cry, contradict and touchingly empathize each of their own storylines with such raw honesty and yet in no way ever neither sacrificing nor stripping each other of their imperishable human dignity.
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4/10
The same as twelve angry man
acehao26 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
What a terrible film it is. It's my first time in my life to watch two films with the same episode. What on earth does the screenwriter do. I have a high expectation about the film because 12 angry man has a high rating in my heart and it is an adaptation from 12 angry men. To my surprise, it is not an adaptation, they are the same. The same episode, the same 12 man, same personality, same position, same age, same case, same cripple, same shortsighted woman, same dagger. I know what will happen in the next hour when I see the film for ten minutes.

To be honest, it's wonderful without 12 angry men, but terrible when you know you can't surpass a film 50 years ago.
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