Movie
Description
In the French-language version of the 1978 animated film Lupin the 3rd: The Mystery of Mamo, the character widely known as Fujiko Mine is renamed Magali. This name change was part of the film's localization for French-speaking audiences, and within that context, Magali is the same character as Fujiko Mine, a central figure in the Lupin III series.

Magali is a beautiful and highly intelligent professional thief and confidence trickster. Her primary motivations are her own self-interest, wealth, and personal gain, which often puts her in direct competition or temporary alliance with the master thief Lupin III. She is a master of manipulation, routinely using her charms and sexuality to deceive others and achieve her goals. Her role in The Mystery of Mamo is pivotal; she is initially hired by the film's antagonist, the ancient and powerful Mamo, to retrieve the Philosopher's Stone. She steals the stone from Lupin after he acquires it in Egypt, delivering it to her client and setting the film's central conflict in motion. Throughout the story, her loyalties remain ambiguous, as she continuously switches between aiding and betraying Lupin and his partners, Daisuke Jigen and Goemon Ishikawa XIII.

The key relationship in Magali's life is her complicated dynamic with Lupin III. While she constantly deceives and manipulates him, knowing he is infatuated with her, she also harbors genuine, if deeply hidden, feelings for him. In The Mystery of Mamo, this is demonstrated when Mamo offers her eternal life and youth. She ultimately refuses his offer, stating that she does not want to be young and beautiful forever if it means she would have to watch Lupin grow old and die. This moment reveals that beneath her calculating exterior, she has a profound emotional connection to Lupin, even if she rarely expresses it openly.

Magali is a skilled operative with several notable abilities. Beyond her powers of persuasion, she is an excellent markswoman, frequently using a firearm when a situation requires direct action. She is also highly proficient in creating and using disguises, is multilingual, and can pilot a wide variety of vehicles. Her primary character development in The Mystery of Mamo is the internal conflict between her opportunistic nature and her deeper, reluctant affection for Lupin, which ultimately leads her to defy Mamo's grand, world-ending plans.