Lawyer Lawyer | |
Director: | Joe Ma |
Producer: | Joe Ma |
Starring: | Stephen Chow Eric Kot Karen Mok Chingmy Yau |
Cinematography: | Cheung Man-Po |
Editing: | Cheung Ka-Fai Kong Chi-Leung |
Music: | Lincoln Lo |
Distributor: | Cameron Entertainment |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Country: | Hong Kong |
Language: | Cantonese |
Lawyer Lawyer is a 1997 Hong Kong comedy film produced, directed and co-written by Joe Ma.
Stephen Chow stars as Chan Mong-Gut, a famous Chinese lawyer who was killed in the Qing dynasty. He must defend his apprentice, Foon, who has been framed for murder in Hong Kong. Being the third worst lawyer in China, he challenges the British legal system with no evidence on hand and manages to identify the killer in a hilarious way.
The film was released during the same year as the Transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong. As the film deals specifically with the issue of justice, it can be interpreted as responding to the fears of the PRC takeover and to the general uncertainty of what that meant to the people of Hong Kong, as long as you ignore the content of the movie itself, which implicates the UK as the source of injustice. The film promotes a normative vision of justice that can prevail over any tyranny, suggesting that knowledge of law, and the freedom to express it, is more important than brute strength (as embodied by the trials and tribulations of Chang Mong-Gut over countless foes).