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The Memory of a Killer

De zaak Alzheimer

  • Status: Released
  • 15-10-2003
  • Runtime: 114 min
  • Score: 6.79
  • Vote count: 145

Vincke and Verstuyft are one of the best detective teams of the Antwerp police force. When they are confronted with the disappearance of a top official and the murder of two prostitutes, the trail leads to the almost retired assassin Angelo Ledda. Since Ledda starts showing symptoms of Alzheimer's, it's getting more and more difficult to complete his contracts. When he has to murder a 12-year old call-girl, he refuses and becomes a target himself. While Vincke and Verstuyft are chasing him and counting the corpses, Ledda is taking care of his employers.

Koen De Bouw

Eric Vincke

Werner De Smedt

Freddy Verstuyft

Jan Decleir

Angelo Ledda

Jo De Meyere

Baron Henri Gustave de Haeck

Filip Peeters

Majoor De Keyzer

Hilde De Baerdemaeker

Linda de Leenheer

Geert Van Rampelberg

Tom Coemans

Tom van Dyck

Jean de Haeck

Johan van Assche

Van Parys

Gene Bervoets

Seynaeve

Lucas Van den Eynde

Bob Van Camp

Laurien van den Broeck

Bieke Cuypers

Deborah Ostrega

Anja

Dirk Roofthooft

Vader Cuypers

Patrick Descamps

Gilles Resnais

Anne-Caroline Suberville

Dienster

Jan Dyck

Taxi Driver

Miek Van Bocxtaele

Receptionist

Els Dottermans

Eva Van Camp

Anaïs Terryn

Ine Van Camp

Lone van Roosendaal

Henriette Seynaeve

Roland De Jonghe

Paolo Ledda

Katrien Vandendries

Nurse

Ludo Hoogmartens

Businessman

Bart Slegers

Lemmens

Marc Peeters

Opdebeeck

Tom Waes

Verheyen

Eddy Vereycken

Dr. Abbeloos

Kristine Arras

Housekeeper

Vic de Wachter

Joseph Vlerick

Babett Manalo

Masseuse

Jan Van Looveren

Police Motorcyclist

Jappe Claes

Prosecutor Bracke

Marc Janssen

Chaplain

Peter Borghs

Guard

Charley Pasteleurs

Cela Yildiz

Reporter

tmdb28039023

One could say, and would more often than not be proven right, that European films boast a maturity and sophistication sorely lacking in Hollywood movies. However, now and then Old Continent filmmakers can’t help but succumb to the vices of their American counterparts, and the outcome is something along the lines of this movie – which not only features an appearance by the dreaded Red Digital Readout, but also revolves around a Hitman with a Selective Conscience (who additionally happens to be physically old and mentally infirm, none of which prevents him from being always One Step Ahead). The killer’s name is Angelo, and as the AllMovie overview correctly points out, “it goes against Angelo's principles to kill a child.” I’m pretty sure the word “principles” is used in that sentence for lack of a better term, because as far as tenets go, Angelo’s are seriously warped. From a strictly moral standpoint, there is absolutely no difference between murdering an adult and murdering a child, but somehow we are supposed to be able to tell a ‘good’ assassin from a ‘bad’ one based on whether or not they are willing to make age distinctions. What doesn’t occur to Angelo and his ilk is that children grow up to become adults, so that in a few years it will magically no longer be against his principles to kill the very same person whose life he is currently so hell-bent on preserving (and who’s to say what the cutoff age is anyway? What if I remain a child at heart?). By the same token, we are all somebody’s children – even God’s children if you want to get theological about it –, aren’t we? So technically we should all be off limits. But who knows? Maybe this double standard is a sign of the character’s cognitive decay, in which case director Erik Van Looy is a whole lot more clever than I’m giving him credit for (I sincerely doubt it, though).