I'd say you're close. Constructor functions (and prototypes) in JavaScript are the closest thing to Java classes that we have in JS; but they're certainly not "equivalent".
You can dynamically add or remove properties and methods to the prototype of a JavaScript constructor; you can't add or remove things from a Java class at runtime.
Example:
function Foo() {}
Foo.prototype.hello = function() { alert('hello'); };
var f = new Foo();
f.hello(); // alerts 'hello'
delete Foo.prototype.hello;
f.hello(); // throws an error
You can achieve "inheritance" at runtime in JavaScript simply by assigning the prototypes of constructor functions to arbitrary objects. In Java you declare inheritance at compile-time and it cannot be changed at runtime.
Example:
function EnglishSpeaker() {}
EnglishSpeaker.prototype.greet = function() { return 'hello'; };
function SpanishSpeaker() {}
SpanishSpeaker.prototype.greet = function() { return 'hola'; };
function Me() {}
Me.prototype = EnglishSpeaker.prototype;
var me = new Me();
me instanceof EnglishSpeaker; // true
me.greet(); // 'hello'
Me.prototype = SpanishSpeaker.prototype;
me = new Me();
me instanceof EnglishSpeaker; // false
me instanceof SpanishSpeaker; // true
me.greet(); // 'hola'
In JavaScript a prototype is simply an object. So a "class" (constructor function) can "inherit" from any plain object; thus there is a much looser distinction between "types" and "values".
Example:
function Thing() {}
var randomObject = { foo: 1, bar: 2 };
Thing.prototype = randomObject;
var thing = new Thing();
thing.foo; // 1
In Java you can define an interface which some class must implement. JavaScript doesn't really provide any such mechanism.
These are just some of the differences off the top of my head. Point is: they're similar, and you're right to draw a connection. But they are definitely not the same.