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IMDbPro

Drug War

Original title: Du zhan
  • 2012
  • R
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Louis Koo in Drug War (2012)
 A drug cartel boss who is arrested in a raid is coerced into betraying his former accomplices as part of an undercover operation.
Play trailer2:02
1 Video
63 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A drug cartel boss who is arrested in a raid is coerced into betraying his former accomplices as part of an undercover operation.A drug cartel boss who is arrested in a raid is coerced into betraying his former accomplices as part of an undercover operation.A drug cartel boss who is arrested in a raid is coerced into betraying his former accomplices as part of an undercover operation.

  • Director
    • Johnnie To
  • Writers
    • Ka-Fai Wai
    • Nai-Hoi Yau
    • Ryker Chan
  • Stars
    • Louis Koo
    • Honglei Sun
    • Huang Yi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Johnnie To
    • Writers
      • Ka-Fai Wai
      • Nai-Hoi Yau
      • Ryker Chan
    • Stars
      • Louis Koo
      • Honglei Sun
      • Huang Yi
    • 43User reviews
    • 122Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 28 nominations total

    Videos1

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Theatrical Trailer

    Photos63

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    + 57
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    Top cast57

    Edit
    Louis Koo
    Louis Koo
    • Timmy Choi
    Honglei Sun
    Honglei Sun
    • Captain Zhang
    Huang Yi
    Huang Yi
    • Yang Xiaobei
    Michelle Ye
    Michelle Ye
    • Sal
    Yunxiang Gao
    Yunxiang Gao
    • Xu Guoxiang
    Wallace Chung
    Wallace Chung
    • Guo Weijun
    Guangjie Li
    Guangjie Li
    • Chen Shixong
    Tao Guo
    Tao Guo
    • Senior Dumb
    Jing Li
    • Junior Dumb
    Hoi-Pang Lo
    Hoi-Pang Lo
    • Birdie
    Eddie Cheung
    Eddie Cheung
    • Su
    Ka-Tung Lam
    Ka-Tung Lam
    • East Lee
    Suet Lam
    Suet Lam
    • Fatso
    Ting Yip Ng
    Ting Yip Ng
    • Hatred
    Philip Keung
    Philip Keung
    • Darkie
    Tingting Gan
    Tingting Gan
    • Haha's Wife
    Ping Hao
    Ping Hao
    • Bro Haha
    Taishen Cheng
    • Captain Liu (Erzhou)
    • Director
      • Johnnie To
    • Writers
      • Ka-Fai Wai
      • Nai-Hoi Yau
      • Ryker Chan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    7.011.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7cadillac20

    A solid and taut, if ultimately shallow, action thriller

    I'm not terribly familiar with Johnnie To's work, though I know he is one of China's biggest directors. Drug War is his latest film, a critically hailed masterpiece, so to speak, that rivals some of the best American crime films. And for the most part, it is a very good film. Gripping, with a tight rope plot written like a maze, Drug War very rarely lets up as it navigates from one stage of the plot to the other.

    The film opens with Timmy Choi, a drug manufacturer, driving erratically until he runs through the entrance of a restaurant until he ends up in the hands of Captain Zhang. For dealing the amount of drugs that Choi is responsible for, the penalty is death, but Choi cuts a deal to help the police bring down a drug lord responsible for the sale of the narcotics. What follows is a near non-stop mission to get into the heart of the drug dealers and bring them down.

    Drug War is the kind of crime action thriller that is very audience pleasing. There is plenty of suspense and mystery, as you're always on the edge of your seat in anticipation of what will happen next. It doesn't help that you're never quite sure who to trust or who will do what, especially Choi, who remains shifty and unsure. Sun Honglei is especially entertaining as the no nonsense Zhang, whose smart and constantly does his best to stay one step ahead of all those he's trying to bring down, including Choi. The writing for the film is very intricate and full of surprises. Coupling this are several action set pieces, the highlight of which are a middle section involving the police and two very capable partners of Choi and the ending, which is an absolutely crazy finale for this film.

    If I have one real complaint about the film, it's the lack of depth. For all the technical skill and excellent writing and plot, we really don't get to know any of our characters. There is an attempt to make Choi somewhat sympathetic through a plot point about his wife, but Choi himself never really does much to make us like him or get us on his side. The same can be said about Zhang, who is little more than a hard nose cop trying to catch the criminals. There's never any real insight into either of these men, let alone the rest of the cast. It's a very basic and shallow cops and criminals tale, albeit, a very well written and produced one.

    But these are minor complaints in the face of the entertainment at hand. This is arguably one of the best films of 2013, even at it's rating, and I urge anyone looking for to make up for some theatrical thuds to check this out. It's well worth it.
    8motezart

    Crystal Meth in China

    The drab, dusty, industrial backdrop of what is purported as the unglamorous metropolis of Tian Jin, China, tacky haute facades are the setting for Drugs War's series of raw, tension filled episodes. From a country riddled with censorship, Drugs Wars, a film by Johnnie To, is an unbridled glimpse of organized crime and crystal meth in China. Although perhaps a tad sensationalistic, the film delivers a bold statement: the Chinese the drug market is alive and well.

    Louis Koo plays a busted crystal meth baron who has a choice, either help police bust a massive organized crime syndicate, or be executed. He chooses to help police.

    In an elaborate tireless scheme, actor Honglei Sun dazzlingly plays a police officer portraying a criminal in the attempt to infiltrate this upper echelon syndicate. The best scene of the film is when Sun's character is forced to rail two massive lines of crystal meth as part of this act. The effects of the meth play out into a powerful piece of cinema. Post- OD, literally having come back from the edge death, the chase for the criminals continues with out a flinch.

    At times this police tenacity is too exaggerated to be believable. The chase for the bad guys goes on endlessly for days. None of the cops ever eat or sleep. They seem to have inexhaustible resources at their disposal. They are able to commandeer an entire harbor just to put on a show of authenticity for the crooks. The cops risk their lives over and over, and for what? To rid the world of a few truckloads of drugs? The conventional divide between the good guy cops and bad guy criminals doesn't blur, until it does. After an epic final gun battle, we have no idea who's who.

    Drug Wars attains excellence as an action movie and serves as a rare example of a controversial work to emerge from a country that produces so much state-approved propaganda. More @ getthebonesaw.blogspot.com
    8ronchow

    My first Johnnie To film

    I have to confess here in Canada I have no previous exposure to films by Hong Kong directors Johnnie To. Obviously he has done good work before but I just did not have the chance to see them. 'Drug War' was shown in a local art-house cinema and my like-minded friend alerted me to it.

    Well, this was an interesting film experience - a Hong Kong director doing a police/drug dealer drama based in mainland China. Although other fictitious names were used for the cities, it is obvious the final, major shootout took place in a main street in Tianjin, a large city not far from Beijing. And much has been said about the long, protracted shoot-out scene toward the end, done in the John-Woo-ish manner.

    I do not know if the version shown in mainland China - apparently the film did well in the box office there - is the same version that I saw in Canada. However, I suspected the China version has to be slightly edited. Still, (Spoiler Alert!) Johnnie To managed to get a film approved for the Chinese audience despite breaking one important rules: four desperadoes gunning down a large number of police officers, male and female. Now this used to be a big no-no in China. The police had to come up on top and the bad guys punished. The mass killing of cops was never presented to any screen in Chinese cinema. And then there is the lesser scene of RMB (Chinese currency) bills being burnt in place of 'ghost money' to honour the dead. Now this may just be part of drama but one can also argue about its possible political significance.

    All in all, for a cops-against-bad-guys film this is well directed, with action scenes well staged and the cops and criminals well portrayed. There are also finer moments exploring humanity - e.g. a drug dealer's wife, fatally shot, still struggled to put her high-heel boots back on while dodging bullets. The ending is a tad depressing but is mostly likely closer to reality.
    6hkauteur

    HK Auteur Review - Drug War 毒戰

    Police captain Zhang (played by Sun Honglei) partners with a drug lord named Timmy Choi (played by Louis Koo) after he is arrested. To avoid the death penalty, Choi agrees to reveal information about his partners who operate a cocaine ring. Zhang grows suspicious of Choi's honesty as several police officers began a raid on the drug ring.

    Drug War is a crime film made and released in Mainland China by a Hong Kong film company. Naturally there is going to be an element of political compromise. All the policemen are Mainland Chinese and all the drug dealers are from Hong Kong (Take a guess which side wins in the end). Nationalism in movies has never really bothered me unless it borders on being disgusting (i.e. Michael Bay's Armageddon). That is not the case here and I don't have a problem with that. My interest is not the politics, but rather what Johnnie To will bring to drug film set in Mainland China. The answer? Not too much.

    What's missing from Drug War are the Johnnie To quirks. The zany off-the-wall characters who have speech impediments and odd ticks are gone. The dramatic noir lighting, minimalistic stage-like blocking or themes of brotherhood are gone. Even the gunplay is less stylized and presented in a realistic fashion. I don't miss any of these specific quirks or tropes, but without the idiosyncratic Johnnie To stamp, what's left is a very straightforward police procedural.

    The characters are servicing the plot, which is odd for a Johnnie To film because usually it's the other way round. We don't get insight into the distinct personalities of the drug dealers or police officers and their relationships (like in Election, an ensemble piece where it manages to characterize the supporting characters). We don't know if they have family members or girlfriends waiting for them at home or any backstory. The story is simply moving beat-by-beat linearly on the central question of how trustworthy Louis Koo's drug lord character is. There's nobody you're supposed to be rooting for, but things are continually changing and you simply watch awaiting the final outcome.

    To, a director and producer with his own production company, has always been best when he has free reign. The limits of To's free reign authorship is that he is very culturally rooted to Hong Kong and possesses a firm voice regarding to its politics (Election), economic condition (Life Without Principle), daily life in Hong Kong (the office politics in Needing You), or even local nostalgia (Throwdown, Sparrow). As exemplified in 2008's Vengeance, a project which was co- financed by French financiers and starred French rock singer Johnny Halliday, To's directorial voice is weaker when he steps outside of his comfort zone. There is no sense of To's personal perspective on the topic of drug running, drug addiction, crime or how the police work in China through the film's story, themes or characters. That makes a bit tame because To has fared much better in the past.

    In context to Johnnie To's back catalogue, Drug War will be remembered for pushing the boundaries with the Chinese Film Bureau. The Mainland police are shown working undercover and solving crimes, having gun battles with criminals and some even dying in the line of duty; these are all images that were previously not allowed to be shown in a Mainland theatrical release. Yet now we are seeing them on screen. So that is a proper achievement that's worth celebrating. The final product is probably more telling of Chinese film censorship than of To's directorial sensibilities. But I can't help but think that there is a grittier, nuttier version of Drug War lying in the corner of Johnnie To's desk that is stamped "rejected", namely the version of the story that he didn't get to make.

    For more reviews, please visit my blog @ http://hkauteur.wordpress.com
    9nokturnal-rapport

    A battle of both brain and brawn.

    Gripping, smart, and a joy to watch.

    The acting is excellent and the main leads are my favorite. Honglei, a hardened narcotic cop, is collected, methodological, and intelligent. You can tell he has earned his keep and has seen some crazy things behind those eyes. He's like the calm before the storm, readily break loose. He leads a high profiled operation to bust possibly the largest drug ring in the counntry and his lead is Louis, a captured meth supplier. Louis is not to be outshone: calculated, cunning, and above all, selfish. I find his character to be easily one of the greatest villains for he appears harmless but you can't really know what he has in mind. One scene you might think he has repented, another scene he might convince you otherwise. He is a great villain because he's deceptive, cunning, selfish, and he's willing to do anything for survival, including turning against his own kin but the catch is that he doesn't look capable of such evil. That's why he's great. Appearance is deceiving. The two main leads are completely opposite. The cop appears cold, distanced, and seemingly emotionless yet pursues a good cause and cares for his underlings while the crook appears warmer, more expressive, seemingly harmless yet inhuman underneath. Great contrast. The story is tight, the actions are neat - the shootout between the mute brothers and the cops and the grand finale scene are superb. A battle of both brain and brawn.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Marks the tenth time director Johnnie To and actor Louis Koo collaborated in a director / actor relation.
    • Goofs
      In the opening scene when Timmy is driving erratically he vomits on the driver side window. After he crashes the vomit is gone. It is still missing when Captain Zhang arrives on the scene shortly after.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Mo ngai: To Kei Fung dik din ying sai gaai (2013)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Drug War?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 4, 2013 (China)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • Hong Kong
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • Cuộc Chiến Á Phiện
    • Filming locations
      • Tianjin, China
    • Production companies
      • Beijing Hairun Pictures Company
      • Huaxia Film Distribution
      • CCTV Movie Channel
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CN¥100,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $128,195
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,926
      • Jul 28, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $24,676,341
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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