Lupin Serie Netflix Direct

Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5) Starring: Omar Sy, Ludivine Sagnier, Clotilde Hesme, Hervé Pierre Creator: George Kay Seasons: 3 (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3)

Sherlock , Money Heist , The Crown (for the French palace intrigue), or any movie where the underdog wins. lupin serie netflix

Lupin isn’t a gun-blazing action show. It’s a puzzle box. Assane’s plans involve fake police uniforms, hijacked livestreams, hidden safe rooms, and exploiting human vanity. You’ll find yourself grinning when a throwaway detail from episode one becomes the key to a heist in episode three. The show respects the intelligence of its audience. Rating: ★★★★☆ (4

The Paris setting is used perfectly. The Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay, the Catacombs, and even the Eiffel Tower become stages for suspense. The cinematography is slick, the fashion sharp, and the jazz-infused score is cool and breezy. It feels unmistakably French. The Paris setting is used perfectly

Hubert Pellegrini is a mustache-twirling billionaire who is evil for the sake of being evil. His daughter, Juliette, is more interesting but underused. You never fear the antagonists the way you fear, say, a Gus Fring. They lack depth, making the revenge plot feel slightly less urgent than it should.

The first two parts (originally released as one 10-episode season) are tightly plotted. Part 3 (Season 3) feels more like a victory lap. The heists are still fun, but the story loses some of its emotional core, introducing new villains and a “one-last-job” structure that feels recycled. It’s still good—just not as essential.

Inspired by the classic French gentleman thief Arsène Lupin (created by Maurice Leblanc), this modern update follows Assane Diop (Omar Sy). As a teenager, Assane watched his father—a chauffeur for the wealthy Pellegrini family—be framed for stealing a priceless diamond necklace and die in prison. Twenty-five years later, Assane uses the wit, charm, and disguises of his literary hero Lupin to exact revenge on Hubert Pellegrini and clear his father’s name. What follows is a cat-and-mouse game across Paris, blending high-stakes heists with a deeply personal vendetta.

Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5) Starring: Omar Sy, Ludivine Sagnier, Clotilde Hesme, Hervé Pierre Creator: George Kay Seasons: 3 (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3)

Sherlock , Money Heist , The Crown (for the French palace intrigue), or any movie where the underdog wins.

Lupin isn’t a gun-blazing action show. It’s a puzzle box. Assane’s plans involve fake police uniforms, hijacked livestreams, hidden safe rooms, and exploiting human vanity. You’ll find yourself grinning when a throwaway detail from episode one becomes the key to a heist in episode three. The show respects the intelligence of its audience.

The Paris setting is used perfectly. The Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay, the Catacombs, and even the Eiffel Tower become stages for suspense. The cinematography is slick, the fashion sharp, and the jazz-infused score is cool and breezy. It feels unmistakably French.

Hubert Pellegrini is a mustache-twirling billionaire who is evil for the sake of being evil. His daughter, Juliette, is more interesting but underused. You never fear the antagonists the way you fear, say, a Gus Fring. They lack depth, making the revenge plot feel slightly less urgent than it should.

The first two parts (originally released as one 10-episode season) are tightly plotted. Part 3 (Season 3) feels more like a victory lap. The heists are still fun, but the story loses some of its emotional core, introducing new villains and a “one-last-job” structure that feels recycled. It’s still good—just not as essential.

Inspired by the classic French gentleman thief Arsène Lupin (created by Maurice Leblanc), this modern update follows Assane Diop (Omar Sy). As a teenager, Assane watched his father—a chauffeur for the wealthy Pellegrini family—be framed for stealing a priceless diamond necklace and die in prison. Twenty-five years later, Assane uses the wit, charm, and disguises of his literary hero Lupin to exact revenge on Hubert Pellegrini and clear his father’s name. What follows is a cat-and-mouse game across Paris, blending high-stakes heists with a deeply personal vendetta.