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Viral Factor

Original title: Jik zin
  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Viral Factor (2012)
Trailer for The Viral Factor
Play trailer1:17
1 Video
24 Photos
Gun FuActionDramaThriller

International Security Affairs agent Jon is on a dangerous mission to escort a criminal scientist to another country. En route, a member of his team, Sean, turns out to be a traitor and shoo... Read allInternational Security Affairs agent Jon is on a dangerous mission to escort a criminal scientist to another country. En route, a member of his team, Sean, turns out to be a traitor and shoots Jon in the head while kidnapping the scientist. When Jon wakes up in the hospital, a do... Read allInternational Security Affairs agent Jon is on a dangerous mission to escort a criminal scientist to another country. En route, a member of his team, Sean, turns out to be a traitor and shoots Jon in the head while kidnapping the scientist. When Jon wakes up in the hospital, a doctor tells him that within weeks, the bullet in his brain will cause complete paralysis. J... Read all

  • Director
    • Dante Lam
  • Writers
    • Dante Lam
    • Candy Leung
    • Wai-Lun Ng
  • Stars
    • Jay Chou
    • Nicholas Tse
    • Peng Lin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dante Lam
    • Writers
      • Dante Lam
      • Candy Leung
      • Wai-Lun Ng
    • Stars
      • Jay Chou
      • Nicholas Tse
      • Peng Lin
    • 23User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
    • 32Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 12 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Viral Factor
    Trailer 1:17
    The Viral Factor

    Photos24

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Jay Chou
    Jay Chou
    • Jon
    Nicholas Tse
    Nicholas Tse
    • Man Yeung
    Peng Lin
    Peng Lin
    • Rachel
    Bing Bai
    Bing Bai
    • Ice
    • (as Michelle Bai)
    Andy On
    Andy On
    • Sean
    • (as Andy Tien)
    Kai-Chi Liu
    Kai-Chi Liu
    • Man Tin
    Carl Ng
    Carl Ng
    • Ross
    Tin-Chiu Hung
    Tin-Chiu Hung
    • Mark
    • (as Sammy Hung)
    Philip Keung
    Philip Keung
    • Russell
    Crystal Lee
    Crystal Lee
    • Man Cheung Sing
    Elaine Jin
    Elaine Jin
    • Jon's Mother
    Deep Ng
    • Man Yeung's former partner
    Jawed Berni
    • Tyler's Henchman
    • (as Jawed El Berni)
    Daniel Garcia
    Daniel Garcia
    • Jon
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Issam M. Husseini
    • Jordanian Doctor
    Man Biu Lee
    Man Biu Lee
    Rami Rjoub
    • Wael Hussein
    Jared Robinsen
    Jared Robinsen
    • Tyler
    • (as Jared Robinson)
    • Director
      • Dante Lam
    • Writers
      • Dante Lam
      • Candy Leung
      • Wai-Lun Ng
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.92.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    rightwingisevil

    heavily flawed Hong Kong/China co-production

    well, 3 stars is for the nice action stunt carried out seamlessly. 7 stars minus is for the lousy casting job and the moronic screenplay that messed up the whole nine yards.

    here are the problems:

    1) if the small pox bio-virus so important, why use ground transportation instead of air lift? 2) why the scene is originated from Jordain? Jordain is not war-torn country, it's Iraq, stupid. 3) a bullet resided in the brain where is non-operable and the nerve center would be totally messed up within 2 weeks, after the guy stayed in the hospital for 3 months, and the guy was able to walk out the jordanian hospital, went back to china. well, that journey would have wasted how many days? the math was somewhat confusing a lot, dude. 4) if the young son (the one who carried a bullet in his brain) was brought up by his mother, why his mandarin pu-tong-wha with an Taiwanese accent? if the mother's hometown was Beijing, why her accent was without any Beijing tone? 4) so the younger brother was a police, what country's police force he belonged to? 5) then again, same problem happened again. the female bio-chem doctor spoken a common mandarin pu-tong-wha, her mother spoke typical Cantonese. why her daughter could speak the mandarin Chinese pu-tong-wha without any Cantonese dialect accent? no Cantonese could speak mandarin without any localized Cantonese accent. absolutely impossible! 6) so the brother was a dangerous criminal, in Malaysia? so, the father had migrated from Beijing(?) or hongkong(?) or canton (?) to Malaysia? the elder son became a local criminal. and the younger brother would be so accidentally got involved in his caper right after he landed in the twin-tower city? how convenient, dude.

    this is a movie typically treated viewers as brainless morons without any reasoning logic. but after all the criticism been said, lets sit back and enjoy the nicely shot exotic locations this movie's lens carried around and also try to appreciate the well managed stunts and special effect of the fighting scenes, the flying bullets, the nicely done explosions, the car jack and so on.

    this is an action movie full of heavily flawed scenarios and plot twists, some way too shallow, some way over the top. strongly recommend to watch but you must turn off your i.q. reasoning function first.
    6DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: The Viral Factor

    One of Hong Kong's rising film directors, Dante Lam has gained prominence over the last few years for his lavishly produced, hard hitting cop action thrillers underlined by thick melodrama between the main characters. His latest film The Viral Factor is obvious in having Lam's signature plastered all over, that this could be Dante's spiritual interpretation of John Woo's A Better Tomorrow with brothers on opposite sides of the law having to put aside their obvious differences to work together against a common enemy and goal.

    The story bore some shades of intention from Woo's Mission: Impossible 2, where a virus got created to hold the world ransom at the breakout of an epidemic. In The Viral Factor, this comes in the form of weaponizing a variant of the smallpox virus, where a corrupt pharmaceutical company had employed thugs to obtain one of the last remnants of the virus, and to fund both its viral nature, and to come up with the medicine and the vaccine, thereby earning itself billions in profits, and adulation from the world for its cures. Talk about being both the devil and angel at the same time, and making tons of money from it.

    With Dante Lam and Ng Wai Lun sharing screenplay responsibilities from a Candy Leung story, The Viral Factor soon has this premise put on the back-burner as it focused instead on the brotherly bonds or the lack thereof between international cop Jon Wan Fei (Jay Chou), introduced through his dream of getting yanked out of trouble by an invisible hand, and that of perennial robber Wan Yang (Nicholas Tse), a consistently wanted man in Malaysia who commits the largest of crime, and with the backing of corrupt cops, almost always finds a way out of either the court house or the jail. With the Beijing based cop learning from his Mother (Elaine Jin) about her wanting to seek forgiveness from his dad (Liu Kai-chi) and brother for walking out on them, Jon makes the trip to Malaysia to track them down, despite nursing a "bullet-in-the-head" injury that decided to rear its ugly head only during flights (for product placement purposes), or when it's plot convenient.

    And it is in Kuala Lumpur that the film spends significant time in, with Jon finally reconciling with his dad, his brother amidst under testy situations since both come from different sides of the law, and getting themselves in the way of the villains led by Andy On in full typecast, who are all after a scientist Rachel (Lin Peng) who has the skillset to weaponize the virus, and Wan Yang's daughter who gets captured as collateral. The two brothers have little time to get to know each other since a number of tasks get put in their way that requires plenty of shoot- em-ups to complete, but given this is a Dante Lam film, he'll craft enough emotional scenes in between for the building of camaraderie, and one of the better dramatic moments come when both brothers have to hide at an abandoned construction site and open themselves up, one who's brought up in Malaysia thus very fluent in Cantonese (thankfully and curiously the censors here allowed this to be in full and without dubbing), and the other conversing in Mandarin only. Some may find this a little bit unbelievable, but trust me I'd just appreciate that Nicholas Tse wasn't dubbed over.

    I would liken Dante Lam to Hollywood's Michael Bay for his penchant of blowing things up, and almost always featuring some of the latest toys in weaponry for their characters to gear up and use. From the get go in Jay Chou's scene in Jordan where his extradition of a doctor and his family goes awry no thanks to an ambush, it's full on military mode and precision as he tackles this sequence, and every other action sequence later, with craft to rival the best of the West. No doubt some scenes may be overly long and indulgent just to showcase what Lam can do, repetitive even, but amongst his filmography The Viral Factor demonstrates just how Lam has continued to improve upon his action delivery. And what makes him stand out is the insistence to focus on the human emotion, so that his characters don't pass off as one dimensional and having an emotional void.

    Jay Chou has come out to proclaim that this would be his final action film, but to that I'd say never say never. He's more of a singer than actor, although I have to admit he does have screen charisma and have progressed quite nicely from his rather wooden outing in Curse of the Golden Flower. Nicholas Tse on the other hand shows why he's top dog now, with that ability to balance the more dramatic moments and holding his own during the action sequences. His acting has developed from when he first started out, relying on his "idol" looks and poser attitude then, to grow into a bona fide actor now, with some of his best work done under the watch of Dante Lam.

    It's a surprise to have lined this up for the Lunar New Year since this is a period for comedies and family friendly entertainment, but if you're in the mood for some action, The Viral Factor lives up to expectation despite minor plot quibbles and loopholes and underlines Dante Lam's ambition and capability to helm large action spectacles, with the promise of more to come.
    moviesbest

    Full of actions & unconvincing coincidental happenings

    This is another typical action movie from HK that will be loved by those who watch with their right-sided brain but not those with left-sided brain. Better still if watch without working on the brains.Anyway, you have no time for the brain. Scenes are fast, action start right from the beginning till end, mostly well filmed, fast paced but the whole story, main plots and sub-plots right to the action details are full of multi-layered coincidental happenings or actions and events all in the nick time that the audience will find it unconvincing and unbelievable. If only they have paid more attention to the script instead of the action. Revealing the characters or more of the story will spoil the fun, there are also too many loose ends. One important role's mum actually got lost in the middle of the action. Most of the acting are good except for Jay Chou who look lost throughout the movie but it's OK considering his "problem". The location of KL(Kuala Lumpur) made the movie better; instead of usual HK.
    6paulclaassen

    Great action sequences compensate for over-complicated script.

    'The Viral Factor' could have been so much better had they kept the premise simple. They tried so hard to complicate the film. With so many characters and back stories, the film is complicated on another level, though.

    This film has a number of issues. There's too much unnecessary killings (like a John Woo film). The background actors were very bad. They did not act realistic at all. Even during gunfire scenes, they simply stood there passively watching. They were stocky and seemingly had no idea what to do. They didn't act or react to the circumstances.

    Despite these flaws, though, this is not a bad movie. The photography is stunning and the action sequences are sensational. This fast-paced action-packed thriller is pure adrenaline and worth watching for the action alone. 'The Viral Factor' truly is exciting entertainment.
    8mayurdeepz

    An action fan's dream come true

    There was a time not very long ago, when movies from Hong Kong meant one thing : "ACTION" sometimes an overdose of it. But regardless of the naysayers, they were quiet brilliant at it. But then they grew either too frivolous or too serious and sometimes too pretentious for their own good. Dante Lam (one of the better ones out there) in the face of this gradual change has earned himself a name for sticking to his "guns"; literally. & if the experience of his latest offer is anything to go by, the trend may just catch up again. I for one will not be complaining.

    The GOOD : This potentially could be the most accomplished HK "action" movie in a contemporary sense of the word and setting. There have been a few masterclasses but most of them are either from the age of the Kings & Queens or of characters with super powers (yawn inducing). "The Viral Factor" does not have any gravity defying stunts nor does it have a single shot which is used to glamorise the protagonist or the antagonist. With all due respect to Donnie Yen, considered the best action man in town and my favourite too, there have been too many caricatured villains in his movies. Nothing like that in TVF. Its bare knuckles, blood splattered walls, rusty nails / water pipes, plenty of body bags, big guns in extended street chase sequences, car crashes, rocket launchers, helicopter chases and the list goes on. You absolutely have to give it to the director for his no holds barred approach from start to finish. He does not pretend its anything else. The leads Jay Chou & Nicholas Tse, have done a fantastic job and quite possibly have produced their best work yet. Chinese lads are not known for histrionics but some demanding & long single shots have brought out the best in them. Nicholas Tse in my book has grown to be in a different league compared to his "Dragon Tiger Gate" days and character.The story although not a pathbreaker has a sense of nobility in it with a platform for a large spectrum of emotions. The almost unseen city skyline that of KL (in a movie before this) is used as a backdrop and that adds on the rare but tingling after taste that the movie leaves. I was very curious to see how it'd turn up and its fair to say I am mighty impressed as I have lived right in the middle of almost all the places the story evolves through. The BAD : The screenplay does not do any huge favours to the story and is the biggest let down of the movie. It stands as the biggest deterrent to what it could have been. Mostly because, the 2nd n 3rd acts which is the glue that holds the end to the start tends to give a convoluted feel. There is nothing wrong in the story, but the sequence of events and there by its impact could have been spot on with some crisp writing. The editing leaves a little to be desired coz if that was snappy, TVF could have been an immortal piece of ACTION cinema. All these also mean that the runtime could do with some some chopping. Another sore point of the proceedings esp. for the non English speaking crowd, is the amount of English used in the script. Some of them were necessary and fits well. But I could not digest the main baddie delivering almost all his lines and most importantly the ones that mattered to the eventual development of the story, in English. And if it counts at all, I don't speak Cantonese or Mandarin nor understand 1 bit. Considering this is predominantly aimed at the Chinese with a more than liberal approach begging the westerners to pay a visit, the subtitles alone would have sufficed.

    The FINAL WORD : Its recommended for the action fan. Go and have Yourself a great time at the theater. One of the best ways to kick off a new year.

    Read more reviews http://mayurdeep.com

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Promoted in german television with "Budget 250 million Euros, 150 just for insurance!"
    • Connections
      Referenced in Yuen Loeng Taa 77 Chi (2017)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 19, 2012 (China)
    • Countries of origin
      • Hong Kong
      • China
      • Lebanon
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
      • English
      • Arabic
      • Malay
    • Also known as
      • The Viral Factor
    • Filming locations
      • Jordan
    • Production companies
      • Beijing Universe Starlight Culture Media
      • Emperor Motion Pictures
      • Huayi Brothers Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $220,496
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $63,235
      • Jan 22, 2012
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,712,014
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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