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The Memory of a Killer

Original title: De zaak Alzheimer
  • 2003
  • R
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Koen De Bouw and Jan Decleir in The Memory of a Killer (2003)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:44
1 Video
14 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

Vincke and Verstuyft are the best detectives of the Antwerp police department. They are confronted with the murder on a leading executive and put all their effort to catch the murderer.Vincke and Verstuyft are the best detectives of the Antwerp police department. They are confronted with the murder on a leading executive and put all their effort to catch the murderer.Vincke and Verstuyft are the best detectives of the Antwerp police department. They are confronted with the murder on a leading executive and put all their effort to catch the murderer.

  • Director
    • Erik Van Looy
  • Writers
    • Jef Geeraerts
    • Carl Joos
    • Erik Van Looy
  • Stars
    • Koen De Bouw
    • Werner De Smedt
    • Jan Decleir
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Erik Van Looy
    • Writers
      • Jef Geeraerts
      • Carl Joos
      • Erik Van Looy
    • Stars
      • Koen De Bouw
      • Werner De Smedt
      • Jan Decleir
    • 58User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Memory of a Killer
    Trailer 1:44
    The Memory of a Killer

    Photos14

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Koen De Bouw
    Koen De Bouw
    • Eric Vincke
    Werner De Smedt
    • Freddy Verstuyft
    Jan Decleir
    Jan Decleir
    • Angelo Ledda
    Laurien Van den Broeck
    • Bieke Cuypers
    Dirk Roofthooft
    Dirk Roofthooft
    • Vader Cuypers
    Hilde De Baerdemaeker
    • Linda de Leenheer
    Geert Van Rampelberg
    Geert Van Rampelberg
    • Tom Coemans
    Patrick Descamps
    Patrick Descamps
    • Gilles Resnais
    Anne-Caroline Suberville
    • Dienster
    Jan Dyck
    • Taxi Driver
    Miek Van Bocxtaele
    • Receptionist
    • (as Miek Van Bocxstaele)
    Deborah Ostrega
    • Anja
    Gene Bervoets
    Gene Bervoets
    • Seynaeve
    Els Dottermans
    • Eva Van Camp
    Lucas Van den Eynde
    Lucas Van den Eynde
    • Bob Van Camp
    Anaïs Terryn
    • Ine Van Camp
    Lone van Roosendaal
    • Henriette Seynaeve
    Jo De Meyere
    Jo De Meyere
    • Baron Gustave De Haeck
    • Director
      • Erik Van Looy
    • Writers
      • Jef Geeraerts
      • Carl Joos
      • Erik Van Looy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    7.210.8K
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    Featured reviews

    9Travis_Bickle01

    Belgian top thriller with outstanding performances

    I was surprised to read several negative comments on this site about "De Zaak Alzheimer". Some people seem to think that the movie wasn't worth the hype, but I disagree with this. I think this is the best Belgian cop thriller ever made. The story (based on the novel of Jef Geeraerts) is brilliantly written and the cast is outstanding. Our best Belgian actors give top performances. Jan Decleir, Koen De Bouw, Werner De Smedt and Jo De Meyere are wonderful.

    When I would see an American movie who is similar to "De Zaak Alzheimer", I'd probably give it 8/10. What so special about "De Zaak Alzheimer"? It is a Belgian production, made with a limited budget and a cast and crew who doesn't have that much experience in making cop thrillers in an American style. So I'm convinced the movie is really worth the hype. Also that fact that the movie was nominated and won several awards in other countries, proves Erik Van Looy really made a good impression with his movie. I also heard they're negotiating for an American adaptation of the book, what also proves the value of the movie and the book.

    A sequel? No, not a sequel but an adaptation of another book of Jef Geeraerts would be suitable. Erik Van Looy is also planning on doing this, but I read it is possible we will have to wait several years for this adaptation because the expectations will be high and Van Looy of course doesn't want to disappoint the audience.

    To conclude my comment I can only repeat the fact that "De Zaak Alzheimer" is a great movie and I can't hardly wait to see the American adaptation (they talked about Morgan Freeman for one of the leading roles) and the next adaptation of a Jef Geeraerts-novel by Erik Van Looy.

    9/10
    10btyson-1

    Noirish police story as twisted as the killer's mind

    This Belgian film was titled "The Memory of A Killer" when it played in Austin in September. Known in Europe as "The Alzheimer Case," it's a police procedural about an aging hit man with early Alzheimer's who agrees to complete what he knows is his last assignment. Movies featuring a character with Alzheimer's are often somber, bittersweet weepers. "The Memory of a Killer" is nothing like that.

    It's a taut, fast-paced noir with a protagonist who lives by the same code as that of Alain Delon in Jean Pierre Melville's "Le Samourai" or Jean Gabin in "Touchez Pas Au Grisbi." The hit man Angelo Ledda is portrayed by Belgian actor Jan Decleir. He won his country's top acting award and other European festival honors for his nuanced, empathic performance.

    How Ledda knows what's happening to his mind is explained in a way totally credible to anyone who has known someone suffering from this disease. Even as his mind slips away, he retains his morality about certain crimes and that code eventually sends him in directions that surprise and anger his employer. Ledda's crimes and related crimes drive two police investigators - and Ledda - in a race against time. The plot threads become as tangled and mysterious as the tangles in Ledda's diseased mind and unravel in a stunning conclusion.

    This film was made by Belgian director Erik Van Looy, whose stylish work won top honors along with Decleir. The film is based on the novel "De Zaak Alzheimer" by popular Belgian detective novelist Jef Geeraerts. Hopefully, it and his other novels will be translated into English. Geeraerts' psychological approach evokes another Belgian writer, the incomparable Georges Simenon. This is the first of Geeraerts' stories to reach the big screen, and Hollywood has bought the rights to a remake. Don't wait; see the original. Decleir's portrayal should not be missed.
    8claudio_carvalho

    In the Swamp of Corruption and Children Prostitution

    I bought this DVD without any reference, and for my surprise it is an excellent thriller. The theme about children prostitution is very well exposed, the beginning of the movie is very impressive, and the actress Lauren Van de Broeck that plays Bieke Cuypers really looks like a little Lolita. The story of an old hit man that has a code of honor and does not accept the job of killing a teenager, turning against the powerful men that hired him, is magnificently disclosed, in a right pace and with stunning performances. The emphatic character of Angelo Ledda is played by the unknown actor Jan Decleir, and I was really impressed with his acting. I have just seen in IMDb that "De Zaak Alzheimer" won seven prizes and three nominations in European Festivals and this movie certainly deserved these awards. The character of Baron Gustave De Haeck , living in a swamp of corruption and children prostitution, would certainly not adapt living in the jungle, as mentioned in the story. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Alzheimer Case"
    7mcnally

    Best of the Flemish Police Thrillers (!)

    I saw this film at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival. Although based on a novel, this stylish police thriller's main conceit ("hit-man has Alzheimer's") could have been lifted from a Hollywood film executive's idea of "high concept". Except that it would have made a forgettable Hollywood picture. Instead, director Van Looy sets this story in his native Belgium. Police detectives Vincke and Verstuyft are like a modern day Starsky and Hutch, without the bad haircuts. Who knew that Antwerp even had police, never mind such cool ones? Their job is to track down the man who's killed several high-profile politicians and a young child prostitute.

    Reminding me a lot of Terence Stamp in The Limey, veteran actor Jan Decleir portrays aging hitman Angelo Ledda, whose refusal to kill the young girl leads him to seek revenge on the people who want her dead. His deterioration is a cause for sympathy as well as a plot device. He must complete his "mission" before he forgets his reasons for carrying it out. He also plays a cat and mouse game with the police who are trying to solve the killings, staying one step ahead until he can no longer think clearly.

    Van Looy admitted his fondness for "police thrillers with a soul" and especially for the work of Michael Mann, and the influence of Mann is everywhere. If you like Mann, you'll like this film. Well-developed characters, moody cinematography and fine acting didn't completely save this film, though. I thought the plot was a little too straightforward, and the film itself was about 20 minutes too long, with a couple of false endings that could have been re-cut. I think I would have given a shorter version of this film an 8, but even if it was a slightly derivative cop film, it was a slightly derivative cop film IN FLEMISH, which has to count for something!

    (7/10)
    8noralee

    A Stylish Roller Coaster Ride of a Police Thriller

    "The Memory of a Killer (De Zaak Alzheimer)" is a sophisticated synthesis of several genres into a stylish thriller. There's the opening shots of a steam engine, saluting European film noir contrasting with the sharp sunlight of corrupt Marseille; the Georges Simenon-like police investigation contemporized with gritty Brit mystery crimes and the hunky bantering buddy cops where one is a wild rule-breaker and his boss is an Eliot Ness straight arrow; the samurai code of honor; the Western where the old gunslinger takes on one last conflict, like "The Unforgiven" and already adapted to "Man on the Train (L'Homme du Train)"; a revenge showdown, like the recent "Four Brothers"; the memory stream of consciousness tricks of "Memento" and the snappy editing of Hong Kong crime thrillers like "Infernal Affairs (Wu jian dao)." And we even get a "The Sopranos"-like psychological profile of a hit man.

    While director Erik Van Looy smoothly integrates all these elements together in adapting what must have been a complex novel, this is terrific, intelligent popular entertainment and only its subtitles keep it in limited release in the U.S. in art houses. Too bad a Hollywood adaptation is inevitable.

    The film has an exciting dual structure of following the cops and the criminal as they get intertwined and chase each other, as each sorts out vengeance and some justice (with surprising collateral damage) ever higher up the responsibility ladder so that our sympathies, and theirs, are compromised. While we atypically don't see anything of the cops' personal lives (except with an amusing visual twist that it's the guy in the shower), we do get thrust into their quite believable bureaucratic and legal wranglings, which, while a bit confusing for an American audience, can be inferred to be similar to the jurisdictional conflicts between local police departments and the FBI that we've seen in plenty of movies and TV shows. The English subtitles seem pretty good at communicating the localisms, though some of the cultural conflict in Belgium between French and Flemish speakers is lost, particularly when it is significant which language is being spoken.

    The twist that is given away in the original title of the film, translated as "The Alzheimer Affair," is that the highly intelligent and perceptive criminal, the charismatic Jan Decleir, realizes he is losing his memory, and sees his near future clearly in his hospitalized brother. We get inside his head as he is trying to out race not only the cops, his traitorous client and duplicitous boss, but himself, so that his taunt of "too slow" takes on a double meaning. His professionalism takes over even when the flashy cinematography indicates he doesn't quite remember what he's done.

    While the body count is high, the violence is one on one and is not gratuitous. Each death ratchets up the tensions and complications as what at first seems street level crime has cynical political implications. Much of the film takes place in the dark, like "Collateral," and while there's a fair amount of sudden coming up from behind scares, that's usually the start of a suspenseful scene where cat and mouse decisions ricochet off in surprising ways.

    The music very effectively supports the action, particularly when the story continues in an unexpected direction, though the choice of a Starsailor song over the credits didn't seem to fit.

    It's a bit perplexing that "The Beat That My Heart Skipped (De Battre mon coeur s'est arrete)" is getting wider distribution (probably because it's a remake of an American film and has a young hunk at the center), when this is the better European crime thriller of the summer.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The director (a big RAFC supporter) insisted that actor Gene Bervoets (a Beerschot supporter) whistle the anthem of RAFC in a scene where he's in the car (Beerschot and RAFC are both football clubs in Antwerpen, with 100 years of enmity dividing their fans). Gene Bervoets, however, agreed to do as requested immediately. Since his character is a complete bastard, he thought it quite logical that he would be an RAFC-fan.
    • Goofs
      Bieke's father who gets shot resisting arrest at the beginning of the film, is clearly shot on his left side of the chest. But in the shot right before he lays still, we see the gunshot wound on the other side, then it flips back again when he's down. This was a deliberate act by the director, paying tribute to John Wayne westerns where the chase between Indians and Cowboys was flipped (caused by money problems between director and producers).
    • Quotes

      Freddy Verstuyft: [while practicing his French] Vincke, why do you have to know French to pass the commisioner's exam?

      Tom Coemans: To be able to read the menus in the fancy restaurants, Freddy.

    • Connections
      Featured in Zomergasten: Episode #20.4 (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Some Of Us
      Performed by Starsailor

      Courtesy of EMI Music Ltd.

      Published by EMI Music Publishing Ltd.

      Played during end credits

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 26, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • Netherlands
    • Official sites
      • official site
      • Sony Classics
    • Languages
      • Dutch
      • French
      • Flemish
    • Also known as
      • The Alzheimer Case
    • Filming locations
      • Antwerp, Flanders, Belgium
    • Production companies
      • MMG Film & TV Production
      • PVPictures
      • TROS Bridge Rights
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €2,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $333,707
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $41,254
      • Aug 28, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $712,387
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 3 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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