Prison on Fire – Life Sentence | |||||||||||||||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Edmond Yuen | ||||||||||||||
Producer: | Nam Yin | ||||||||||||||
Screenplay: | Nam Yin Rex Hou | ||||||||||||||
Starring: | Ben Wong Iris Wong Tommy Wong William Ho Lee Wai-kei Chapman To Bill Lung | ||||||||||||||
Music: | Mak Chun Hung | ||||||||||||||
Cinematography: | Yip Wai-ying | ||||||||||||||
Studio: | B&S Limited East Entertainment | ||||||||||||||
Distributor: | B&S Films Distribution | ||||||||||||||
Runtime: | 83 minutes | ||||||||||||||
Country: | Hong Kong | ||||||||||||||
Language: | Cantonese | ||||||||||||||
Gross: | HK$18,240 |
Prison on Fire – Life Sentence is a 2001 Hong Kong crime thriller film directed by Edmond Yuen and starring Ben Wong, Iris Wong, Tommy Wong, William Ho, Lee Wai-kei, Chapman To and Bill Lung. Despite the title, this film is not related to the 1987 film Prison on Fire and its 1991 sequel.
A group of prisoners were doing a variety of activities on the courtyard. Big Fool (William Ho) and Crazy Bill (Tommy Wong) were playing basketball where Bill kicks the ball towards Tung (Ben Wong), who kicks it away. Bill felt humiliated by it and stars a fight with Tung where Tung ends out hospitalized. During hospitalization, Tung thinks about the time when his family moved to another house and opened a food stall nearby. However, their stall was burnt by triad leader Sing (Bill Lung), who constantly bullies Tung's family and also raped Tung's girlfriend, Sau (Iris Wong). Unable to tolerate Sing's bullying, Tung kills Sing by chopping him to death, which leads Tung to being imprisoned.
Hong Kong Film Net gave the film a score of 6.5/10 noting the unoriginal plot, but also praising it as a decent triad film that makes a good contrast to the Hollywood inspired Hong Kong films coming out that period despite its low budget.[1]
The film grossed HK$18,240 at the Hong Kong box office during its theatrical run from 8 to 14 March 2001 in Hong Kong.