Beginnings and breakthrough (1998–2001) Mendes started her acting career after a
talent manager saw her photograph in a friend's portfolio. Her first film role was as part of a group of young people who become lost in middle America in the direct-to-video horror film
Children of the Corn V: Fields of Terror. Mendes was disappointed in her performance and soon hired an acting coach. She subsequently took on the roles of a bridesmaid in the comedy
A Night at the Roxbury (1998) with
Will Ferrell and
Chris Kattan, a housekeeper in the fantasy family film
My Brother the Pig (1999) with
Scarlett Johansson, and an ill-fated film student in the slasher film
Urban Legends: Final Cut (2000). She was considered for a role in the film
Piñero (2001) by director
Leon Ichaso but did not get the part. Mendes appeared in the
Steven Seagal action thriller
Exit Wounds (2001), which made over US$73 million worldwide. According to Mendes, her voice was dubbed in the editing after a producer told her she "didn't sound intelligent enough". Her breakthrough came later in 2001 with her performance as the mistress of a corrupt cop in
Antoine Fuqua's crime thriller
Training Day alongside
Denzel Washington and
Ethan Hawke. She described her role as pivotal in her career, motivating her to keep going as an actress after she had become bored doing "terrible, cheesy horrible films."
Training Day was a box office hit, grossing US$104.5 million.
Worldwide exposure (2002–2009) Her role in
Training Day led to larger film parts and Mendes soon established herself as a
Hollywood actress. While her sole film release in 2002 was the crime comedy
All About the Benjamins, in which she played the girlfriend of a con artist, Mendes had roles in four studio feature films released throughout 2003.
2 Fast 2 Furious teamed her with
Paul Walker and
Tyrese Gibson while portraying a
United States Customs Service agent working undercover for a notorious Argentine drug lord. The film gave Mendes much wider exposure, grossing over US$236 million globally. The Western action film
Once Upon a Time in Mexico saw her star as the daughter of a Mexican drug lord, alongside
Antonio Banderas and
Salma Hayek. While reviews for the film were mixed, it made US$98.1 million. Mendes reunited with Denzel Washington for the thriller
Out of Time, in which she played the soon-to-be ex-wife of a well-respected chief of police. The film was a moderate commercial success, and
Roger Ebert, in his review for the film, described Mendes' role as a "curiously forgiving character, who feels little rancor for the straying [husband] and apparently still likes him; maybe there would have been more suspense if she were furious with him". Her last 2003 film was the comedy
Stuck on You, with
Matt Damon and
Greg Kinnear, in which she played an aspiring actress. and
Detroit Free Press remarked: "Smith and Mendes are terrific together. He brings her game up so high you'd think she has had as many good parts as Smith."
Hitch made US$368.1 million in its global theatrical run. In 2005, Mendes also starred in the little-seen films
The Wendell Baker Story and
Guilty Hearts. In the romantic comedy
Trust the Man (2006), Mendes starred with
David Duchovny,
Billy Crudup,
Julianne Moore, and
Maggie Gyllenhaal, playing what
The A.V. Club described as a "vapid sexpot". The much criticized
Ghost Rider (2007), based on the
Marvel Comics character, featured Mendes as the love interest of the titular character (
Nicolas Cage). The film fared well commercially, opening atop at the North American box office, with earnings of more than US$45 million; it eventually made over US$228 million worldwide. She starred opposite
Joaquin Phoenix and
Mark Wahlberg in the thriller
We Own the Night (also 2007), as the girlfriend of an
NYPD captain's brother. Critic
Peter Travers found the film to be "defiantly, refreshingly unhip" and noted that "sizzle comes naturally" from Mendes. In 2007, she also starred in the films
Live! and
Cleaner, both of which went unnoticed by audiences, and made an uncredited
cameo appearance in the comedy
Knocked Up. In 2008, Mendes took on the role of a perfume salesgirl in
Saks Fifth Avenue in the all-female comedy
The Women, opposite
Meg Ryan,
Annette Bening,
Debra Messing, and
Jada Pinkett Smith. Though a commercial success,
The Women was panned by critics, with Mendes earning a nomination for the
Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress for her performance. She also played the
femme fatale Sand Saref in 2008's
The Spirit, based on the newspaper
comic strip of
the same name by
Will Eisner. It received lackluster reviews from critics, who deemed it melodramatic, unoriginal, and sexist. Her only 2009 film release was the crime drama
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, which reunited her with Nicolas Cage, playing a prostitute, and again, his love interest. While the film found a limited audience in theaters, it garnered acclaim, appearing on many top ten lists of the year.
Further roles and retirement (2010–2014) premiere of
The Place Beyond the Pines Mendes reunited with previous collaborators
Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg for the action comedy
The Other Guys (2010), in which she portrayed the wife of a mild-mannered forensic NYPD accountant (Ferrell). It was a commercial success, grossing US$170.4 million globally. In 2010, she also played the co-worker and the love interest of a committed man in
Massy Tadjedin's romantic drama
Last Night, alongside
Keira Knightley and
Sam Worthington. While she was initially reluctant to star, worrying that the character would "lack originality" and was "too seductive", she agreed to play the role after meeting with Tadjedin; she said: "It was great to connect with a female director and talk about this woman and not objectify her as the other woman but give her a real true life and make her honest ... Thank God I did." In 2011, Mendes appeared in an uncredited cameo in
Fast Five, reprising her role from
2 Fast 2 Furious. In 2012, she starred in the dramedy
Girl in Progress, as a single mom raising her fourteen-year-old daughter, and in the art fantasy drama
Holy Motors, as Kay M, a role originally written for
Kate Moss. While
Girl in Progress earned Mendes an
ALMA Award nomination for Favorite Movie Actress, she described
Holy Motors as "the coolest, most creative thing I've ever done". In
The Place Beyond the Pines (also 2012), a drama directed by
Derek Cianfrance and alongside
Ryan Gosling and
Bradley Cooper, Mendes portrayed the former lover of a motorcycle stuntman. The film was a moderate commercial success, and
Entertainment Weekly, in its review, described her performance as "quietly heartbreaking". She also visited Sierra Leone and was featured in the
PBS documentary
Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, which aired in October 2012. In 2013, Mendes appeared in the
HBO comedy film
Clear History as a formerly heavy-set woman, and in 2014, she starred as a cabaret show performer in Ryan Gosling's directorial debut
Lost River, which competed in the
Un Certain Regard section at the
Cannes Film Festival. Thereafter, she retired from the film industry. Speaking of her retirement in 2022, Mendes said: ==Other endeavors==