9 / 10
Mesrine is Jean-François Richet’s 2008 two-part French gangster epic depicting the criminal career of Jacques Mesrine, the French criminal who became one of the country’s most-pursued fugitives across the 1960s and 1970s. Vincent Cassel plays Mesrine across both films. Killer Instinct, the first film, depicts his early criminal career and Canadian operations. Public Enemy Number One, the second film, depicts his French celebrity-criminal period before his death by police ambush in 1979. The screenplays were written by Abdel Raouf Dafri and Richet, adapted from Mesrine’s 1977 prison autobiography. The films were produced by La Petite Reine and released in France in October and November 2008.
The combined work works as crime biopic and as study in self-mythologizing criminal celebrity. The film refuses the heroic outlaw register that French and American crime cinema typically deploys. Mesrine is depicted as charismatic but unstable, capable but cruel, politically engaged but finally committed to personal mythology rather than to political action. The structural design uses the two-film approach to develop the broader argument across approximately four hours of runtime. The work stands as one of the most accomplished French gangster films and as foundational text for contemporary biopic that refuses simple heroic structure.
The Cassel Performance
Vincent Cassel’s performance as Jacques Mesrine is among the great central performances in French cinema. The character requires the actor to portray approximately twenty years of biographical development across two films. Cassel gains and loses real weight across the production. The physical transformation maps onto the character’s accumulated experiences and the period’s changing fashion. The actor commits to the physical work that the role requires across the extended production schedule.
The performance also requires the actor to portray Mesrine’s particular charismatic register without either endorsing or condemning the character. Cassel plays the charisma as observed phenomenon rather than as performed seduction of the audience. The audience reads Mesrine as someone other characters find compelling without the film requiring the audience to find him compelling itself. The technique allows the work to engage with criminal celebrity without endorsing it. The performance demonstrates how character work can present compelling individuals without requiring audience endorsement of the individual’s actions.
For Writers
Character work can present compelling individuals without requiring audience endorsement. Mesrine’s Cassel performance depicts the character’s charisma as observed phenomenon rather than as seduction of the audience. This applies to fiction. Consider whether your charismatic characters require audience endorsement or operate as observed phenomena. The observed-phenomenon approach allows broader engagement with complex characters whose actions the work does not endorse. The endorsement approach limits the work’s capacity to engage critically with the character.
The Two-Film Structure
The work’s two-film structure allows serious development of Mesrine’s biographical arc that single-film treatment could not have accommodated. The first film establishes the character’s early criminal development across France, Canadian operations, and Quebec radical political engagement. The second film depicts the character’s French celebrity period across multiple escapes, robberies, and media manipulation. The two-film structure allows each phase to receive adequate runtime development rather than requiring compression that would damage the broader argument.
The structure also allows particular tonal differentiation between the two films. The first film works at more conventional gangster register. The second film works at more elaborate celebrity-criminal register. The differentiation supports the broader argument about Mesrine’s transformation across his career rather than treating the entire career as single dramatic situation. The work demonstrates how multi-film structures can support biographical material that single-film treatment would have compromised. The combined work works at scale that conventional biopic structures rarely attempt.
For Writers
Multi-work structures can support biographical or extended dramatic material that single-work treatment would compromise. Mesrine uses two films to develop biographical arc that single-film treatment could not have accommodated. This applies to fiction with biographical or extended dramatic ambition. Consider whether your work benefits from single-work structure or from multi-work structure. Multi-work structure requires careful preparation but allows depth that compressed single-work treatment cannot match. The structural choice should be made based on the material’s actual demands rather than on production convenience.
The Media Engagement
The second film engages considerably with Mesrine’s particular manipulation of French media coverage of his criminal career. The character understood that media celebrity provided protection that traditional criminal anonymity could not deliver. The depicted media engagement works as both character work and as broader argument about how late-twentieth-century media systems amplify rather than expose criminal celebrity. The work’s broader argument about the relationship between media coverage and criminal celebrity emerges from depicted particular situations rather than from stated commentary.
The media engagement also produces distinct dramatic tension. Mesrine’s celebrity provides protection that limits police response. The same celebrity provides identification that limits Mesrine’s operational flexibility. The character’s manipulation of media coverage becomes increasingly elaborate as the celebrity grows. The eventual police ambush that ends his career was made possible partially by the predictability that his celebrity required. The structural design uses the media engagement to develop both character and broader argument simultaneously.
For Writers
Specific cultural or media engagement can develop both character and broader argument simultaneously. Mesrine uses depicted media manipulation to develop both Mesrine’s character and broader arguments about media systems. This applies to fiction. Consider whether your work’s distinct cultural engagement supports both character development and argumentative content. The strongest cultural engagement works at multiple levels rather than serving single dramatic functions.
Craft Note
Richet’s structural decision to produce the work as two films required serious planning that single-film production would not have demanded. The director and producers needed to maintain budget across the extended production. The actors needed to commit to schedule across the extended period. The production design needed to maintain consistency across two films released sequentially. The cinematography needed to develop both consistent visual register and particular tonal differentiation between the two films. The completed work works because the production approach supported the structural ambition. The lesson applies to creative work broadly. Multi-work projects require production planning proportional to the structural ambition. Reactive production cannot sustain multi-work projects that exceed conventional single-work scope.
Verdict
Mesrine is one of the most accomplished French gangster films and one of the strongest biopics of its decade. The Cassel performance works as benchmark for charismatic criminal portrayal without audience endorsement. The two-film structure supports biographical material that single-film treatment could not have accommodated. The media engagement develops both character and broader argument simultaneously. The work is essential viewing for audiences interested in French cinema, in gangster cinema, in biopic, or in films that systematically refuse heroic outlaw structures. Viewers should engage with both films as integrated work rather than as discrete productions.
FAQ
How does Mesrine compare to American gangster biopics?
Mesrine works at higher structural ambition than typical American gangster biopics through its two-film approach. The work refuses the redemptive arcs that American biopics often impose. The depicted character is presented as complex but not heroic. American biopic traditions typically require either heroic or anti-heroic framing. Mesrine refuses both and offers observed criminal life without endorsement structure.
Should I watch Killer Instinct or Public Enemy Number One first?
Killer Instinct first. The two films operate as sequential biographical arc. Watching them in chronological order allows the character development to register as intended. Watching them in reverse order damages the structural design that the two-film approach requires.
How does the film handle its source material?
Mesrine’s 1977 prison autobiography provided primary source material. The film treats the autobiography as untrustworthy source that requires dramatic shaping. The work does not endorse Mesrine’s self-presentation. The film engages with the autobiography while maintaining critical distance from Mesrine’s self-mythologizing. The approach distinguishes the work from biopics that uncritically adopt subjects’ self-presentations.
How does the film fit French gangster cinema?
Mesrine represents the strongest contemporary French gangster film and one of the principal works in the broader French crime cinema tradition. The work sits within established French gangster vocabulary while extending the tradition through its two-film biographical structure. Audiences interested in French gangster cinema should engage with Mesrine alongside earlier works including Le Cercle Rouge and Le Samouraï.
How does the runtime function?
The combined runtime of both films is approximately four hours and twenty minutes. The extended runtime supports the biographical material that compressed treatment would have damaged. Viewers should approach the work as committed engagement rather than as casual viewing. The runtime is appropriate to the structural ambitions the work attempts.
What is the cultural impact of the film?
Mesrine produced wide cultural impact in France and significant international cultural impact through international distribution. The work elevated Cassel’s international reputation and demonstrated French cinema’s capacity for ambitious gangster biopic. The film’s standing has grown across the years since its release and remains widely cited in gangster biopic discussions.