The Crime Is Mine Review: Ozon's Parisian Farce Has Huppert and Style to Spare
★★★½☆ 3.8/5
Stylish entertainment that critics prefer to audiences.
Is The Crime Is Mine good?
Yes, with reservations — this is confident, good-looking entertainment rather than a major achievement. The Critic Score sits at a lofty 98, while the Audience Score lands at a cooler 72 and the Metascore at 74, a spread that suggests reviewers responded to the film’s craft and wit more warmly than everyday viewers did. Letterboxd (3.4) and IMDb (6.5) tell a similar story: this is a movie people enjoy without falling head over heels for.
What is The Crime Is Mine about?
It’s a 1930s-set murder farce about a struggling actress who turns a false confession into a career break. In Ozon’s Paris, a broke young performer is accused of killing a powerful producer, and rather than deny it outright, she and her closest friend see an opportunity in the scandal. As the case snowballs into a media sensation, the two women — and a faded star looking to reclaim the spotlight — start bending the truth to their own advantage, turning a potential tragedy into a sly commentary on ambition, image, and who gets to control a story.
Should you watch The Crime Is Mine?
Watch it if you’re in the mood for a stylish, playful caper rather than a gripping whodunit. The gap between the enthusiastic Critic Score and the more tepid Audience and Metascore numbers is a useful signal: this is a film that rewards viewers tuned into its arch, theatrical sensibility, and may underwhelm anyone expecting genuine suspense or emotional weight. Judged as a breezy period comedy carried by a scene-stealing performance, it earns its place on a watchlist; judged as prestige drama, it will feel slighter than its pedigree implies.
How does The Crime Is Mine compare to Knives Out?
Both films use a murder as a pretext for social satire rather than pure mystery-solving, trusting a starry ensemble and sharp production design to carry the entertainment value. Knives Out wraps its class commentary in a tighter, twistier plot engine, while The Crime Is Mine leans more on atmosphere, period glamour, and a scenery-devouring supporting turn to hold attention. Viewers who enjoyed Knives Out for its ensemble energy and knowing tone, more than for its puzzle-box mechanics, are the likeliest audience to embrace this one too.