An awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurance
2012
Theatre
The show has suddenly become quite wonderful, and the galvanising factor is the terrific stage debut of Melanie C
Blood Brothers
Music
The British pop music industry may be eating itself but if Muse are the pick of what it can offer the world in 2010 then British music is in rude health indeed
Muse
I was smitten by both Gilberts enormous luxuriant moustache and the intelligence and nuance of this highly entertaining play
I totally recommend Babbo to anyone who is looking for really good and traditional Italian food
Always been a fan but never seen them live. I was ecstatic to be part of this epic event. WOW!
London,




Dir: Jean-Francois Richet.
Cast: Roy Dupuis, Gerard Depardieu, Elena Anaya, Cecile De France, Gilles Lellouche, Vincent Cassel
Description: The first chapter of a brutal tale of crime and punishment inspired by the true-life exploits of one of France's most notorious criminals. Jacques Mesrine and his girlfriend Sylvie try to sneak out of '70s Paris in disguise, only to be ambushed by the police. The action rewinds to 1959 Algeria to trace Mesrine's tour of duty in the French army before he returns home to develop his skills for crime boss Guido.
Country: FR. 2008. 113mins
Public enemy: Mesrine and Jeanne (Vincent Cassel and Cécile de France) get pulled over
Jean-François Richet’s two-part movie about Jacques Mesrine, France’s most notorious criminal, is substantially true — and you certainly couldn’t have invented it.
Everyone has their own idea about what made him tick. Richet’s is that Mesrine (Vincent Cassel), having been brutalised as a soldier in the Algerian war, returned to France to find petit-bourgeois life with his parents a bore and fell under the sway of an underworld boss (Gérard Depardieu) who encouraged him to rob banks and take one or two other laws into his own hands.
Despite occasional short breaks where he attempted to go straight, his life spiralled into racism, thuggery, crime, prison and escape that made him a world-renowned public enemy. We leave him at the height of his powers, with two fingers up to the Canadian and French police and Interpol (the second part of the film, released on 28 August, deals with his demise).
Richet’s work has been injudiciously but perhaps understandably compared to both Coppola’s The Godfather and Scorsese’s Goodfellas. The truth is that, one or two sequences apart, it hasn’t the consistent cinematic flair of either. But it remains totally watchable and, in Cassel, it has an actor as strong as anyone in either of those films.
He gives a remarkable performance, suggesting a gambler who couldn’t help taking risks — such as robbing a bank, waiting for the police to arrive and then making off to rob another one nearby while they investigate the first break-in.
He knew in his mind that there are no heroes in crime but refused to admit it in his heart. It was not for nothing that he called the autobiography he wrote in prison Death Instinct.
Mesrine was apparently charming enough to fix himself up with the women he wanted and hateful enough to treat the Spanish woman (Elena Anaya) who bore his children with appalling cruelty when she pleaded with him to live a normal life.
Film Trailers by Filmtrailer.com
He killed without compunction but remained the faithful friend of François Besse (Mathieu Amalric), a fellow criminal who refused to have blood on his hands but became known as the King of Escape.
Cassel accomplishes a difficult, sometimes contradictory part with huge skill. All the other parts are well played, including those of his women (Cécile de France is the Pigalle prostitute Jeanne and Ludivine Sagnier is his last love Sylvie, dubbed “the beautiful Italian” by the press).
Of itself, the film is no masterpiece; despite its fine production values, it is short on the mores of the time, which extends from the Fifties to the Seventies. However, there are moments when Richet surpasses himself, in particular the sequence in which Mesrine is incarcerated in a brutal Canadian maximum security prison and thrown into the harshest solitary confinement before organising a ridiculously daring escape.
Mesrine once wrote: “In hell you can really have fun. Only people who wouldn’t get bored out of their minds on earth get to go there.”
Who knows what is truth and what is fantasy? But as Richet says: “There was practically no need to invent. He was a movie character.”
Details are correct at the time of publication - please check with venue before booking.