THE CRIME IS MINE: Friendship, Feminism And The French
by Lee Jutton
December 20, 2023

Lee Jutton
Lee Jutton has directed short films starring a killer toaster,…
If you, like me, often find yourself nostalgic for the manic screwball comedies of yesteryear—especially those that also happen to contain a healthy dose of murder and mystery—then you’ll enjoy François Ozon’s latest, The Crime is Mine (Mon Crime in French). A loose adaptation of the 1934 play Mon crime by Georges Berr and Louis Verneuil, which has previously been made into two Hollywood movies—True Confession in 1937 and Cross My Heart in 1946—the film centers on two female friends who get tangled up in a murder case and all of the notoriety that ensues. A period piece set in the 1930s Paris rendered so delightfully decadent in classics such as Ernst Lubitsch’s Trouble in Paradise and Mitchell Leisen’s Midnight, The Crime is Mine boasts lush Art Deco production design, gorgeously lit cinematography, and an ensemble cast packed with both up-and-coming and established French talent—including the legendary Isabelle Huppert, chewing the scenery to bits as a faded silent film star who still craves the spotlight. (To be fair, she deserves it!) And while the story may take place in the past, with all of the visual trappings that entails, it’s impossible to not see parallels to today’s scandal and social media-obsessed world, in which there is increasingly no such thing as a bad reason for becoming famous.
So This is Paris
Madeleine (Nadia Tereszkiewicz, winner of the César Award for Most Promising Actress for Forever Young) is a struggling actress who can’t get a role. Pauline (Rebecca Marder, who was nominated for the César Award for Most Promising Actress for Radiant Girl but lost to Tereszkiewicz) is an unemployed lawyer who can’t get a case. Together, they live in a tiny Parisian flat where they are months behind on the rent. Madeleine thought things were about to turn around when she was invited to meet with the great theatrical producer Montferrand about a part; instead, she ends up fleeing in tears after he tries to force himself on her. Meanwhile, her boyfriend, André (Édouard Sulpice), the layabout heir to a failing tire empire, wants to marry a rich girl to save the family business and keep Madeleine around as his mistress.
Girls About Town
Fast-paced and funny, The Crime is Mine is carried by its two sparkling young stars, who are incredibly likable even when doing questionable things like committing perjury for the sake of celebrity. Pauline prepares Madeleine for the trial as though it were a play in which she has the starring role, even drafting a script for her to deliver on the stand and helping her decide what dress would make the most appropriate “costume.” From the way they talk about the case, one would almost assume they don’t realize the severity of the consequences should they fail in their endeavor; seemingly blinded by the spotlight, their optimism verges on delusion as they giddily scan the headlines from the trial, debating the pieces written about them as one would discuss drama criticism. But if you fail on the stage, the worst you can get is a bad review, or an early closing date – not the death penalty. The contrast between the severity of their situation and the almost frivolous way in which they talk about it is a large part of what makes The Crime is Mine so morbidly amusing.

Conclusion
While The Crime is Mine doesn’t reach the lofty heights of the classic comedies that influenced it, it’s all too easy to enjoy such a screwball vision of the past. The Crime is Mine opens in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago on December 25, 2023, before expanding nationwide.Does content like this matter to you?
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Lee Jutton
Lee Jutton has directed short films starring a killer toaster, a killer Christmas tree, and a not-killer leopard. Her writing has appeared in publications such as Film School Rejects, Bitch: A Feminist Response to Pop Culture, Bitch Flicks, TV Fanatic, and Just Press Play. When not watching, making, or writing about films, she can usually be found on Twitter obsessing over soccer, BTS, and her cat.