The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
Performs the unlikely trick of being both taut and plotless.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France, Canada · 2008
Rated R · 2h 13m
Director Jean-François Richet
Starring Vincent Cassel, Ludivine Sagnier, Mathieu Amalric, Gérard Lanvin
Genre Action, Crime, Drama, Thriller
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Brazen bank robberies and perplexing prison escapes are just two of many entries on the criminal record of Jacques Mesrine, France's Public Enemy No. 1 in the 1970s. After years of successfully evading the law, Jacques must finally face the music, but he won't go down easy.
The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
Performs the unlikely trick of being both taut and plotless.
Vincent Cassel sets a new standard for Gallic cool as the title character.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Although Killer Instinct is the better of the two parts, Public Enemy No. 1 is a worthy continuation, providing closure to a tale that was interrupted just as things were getting really interesting.
Simply skip the first part entirely: "Killer Instinct" bulges with a disconnected jumble of nightclub attacks and fence-clipping escapes you've seen better elsewhere. Yet a tide change happens with the superior Public Enemy No. 1, which takes the subject's raging ego as its cue.
An instant gangster classic.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Director Jean-Francois Richet shows a career in crime with pulse-pounding moments of pure cinema, then lets you decide what to make of this homicidal sociopath.
San Francisco Chronicle by Mick LaSalle
The films never lose sight of Mesrine the man, a fascinating character in that he's brutal yet extremely intelligent, has a skewed but discernible conscience, and, under the right circumstances, can be warm and generous.
Village Voice by Nicolas Rapold
Mesrine's promised end in November 1979 arrives as history recorded it, but, by that time, you're hoping the next vogue in biopics is the short film.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
In most movies, we know the police bullets will never find their target. With Mesrine, (1) sometimes they do, and (2) in real life, he survived an incredible 20 years with the police firing at him at least annually.
The A.V. Club by Tasha Robinson
Public Enemy openly raises the question of why officers of the law hated Mesrine so much that they were willing to turn his death into a block party.
You can't be Public Enemy No. 1 without making enemies of your own.
Which one of us is really crazy?