Both explore the gray zones of justice by focusing on characters who challenge the system from within.
In Anti-Hero, a lawyer defies Japan’s 99.9% conviction rate by securing acquittals even for seemingly guilty clients, raising questions about what justice truly means. Meanwhile, Okura follows detectives relegated to a “graveyard” department tasked with cold cases, where outcasts use unconventional methods to uncover hidden truths.
Both dramas highlight outsiders working against rigid institutions
In Anti-Hero, a lawyer defies Japan’s 99.9% conviction rate by securing acquittals even for seemingly guilty clients, raising questions about what justice truly means. Meanwhile, Okura follows detectives relegated to a “graveyard” department tasked with cold cases, where outcasts use unconventional methods to uncover hidden truths.
Both dramas highlight outsiders working against rigid institutions
Both tackle the theme of fighting entrenched injustice by bending or breaking the rules of the system.
Both dramas center on protagonists who operate in the legal sphere, blur the line between right and wrong, and highlight how persistence and unconventional tactics can shake institutions that appear untouchable.
Both dramas center on protagonists who operate in the legal sphere, blur the line between right and wrong, and highlight how persistence and unconventional tactics can shake institutions that appear untouchable.
if you liked Anti-Hero, 99.9: Criminal Lawyer is worth watching. it’s about a group of stubborn lawyers who take on “impossible” cases in Japan’s 99.9% conviction system. like the anti-hero, the group bends rules, challenges authority, and fights for truth for their clients. the 99.9 drama is brilliant and funny.



