Eye For Film >> Movies >> Racer And The Jailbird (2017) Film Review
Racer And The Jailbird
Reviewed by: Owen Van Spall
This stylish and sexy crime epic from Oscar-nominated director Michaël R Roskam (Bullhead, The Drop), is quite a strange beast. With a plot set against the backdrop of high-speed racing and high-stakes heists France, and featuring the very good-looking duo of Adele Exarchopoulos and Matthias Schoenaerts, it's easy to imagine this will be a French-language remix of The Getaway or Out of Sight.
Certainly the first half seems to set the ball rolling in that direction. As a member of a slick, professional Brussels gang renowned for their expertly-executed robberies (think Robert De Niro's crew in Michael Mann's Heat), Gigi (Schoenaerts) operates as the respectable front and finance-handler; running a luxury automobile import-export business in his downtime. However, in keeping with the classic heist-movie trope, this male crime pro gets his 'code' whacked out of alignment when when he meets glamorous and affluent race car driver Bibi (Exarchopoulos), and despite their wildly different backgrounds, the pair fall instantly (and I mean instantly, it happens in literally two successive short scenes) in love. Among some genuinely thrilling car race and heist sequences (one highlight involves a container dropped off a bridge onto a armoured convoy), we see a somewhat predictable plot rhythm emerge as Gigi attempts to break away from his gang so he can stop lying to an increasingly suspicious Bibi and settle down, with 'one last job' threatening to put him behind bars for good.
As entertaining as the above is with its two charismatic leads, it is not an especially novel path for a 'crime couple' thriller to take, and it is in the last act that Racer kind of goes off the rails, with strange character motivations and what feel like too many plot contrivances muddying things. That being said, the film refreshingly keeps steering towards a critique of the male entitlement inherent in a life spent lying to your female partner. Bibi's father, a smarter-than-he-looks garrulous type who didn't earn a fortune by being stupid, actually signals the direction the film is going in early on, warning Gigi when he asks for his daughter's hand that being a real man is really about learning not to lie.
Reviewed on: 22 Jul 2018