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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe decapitated corpses of six women are found near Antwerp. A team of investigators tries to track down the killer to prevent a seventh murder.The decapitated corpses of six women are found near Antwerp. A team of investigators tries to track down the killer to prevent a seventh murder.The decapitated corpses of six women are found near Antwerp. A team of investigators tries to track down the killer to prevent a seventh murder.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
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I watched this movie without subtitles in its original language given as Dutch. Being able to speak Dutch I had great difficulty in understanding what was actually being said, only to discover it was a mixture of Dutch and a Flemish dialect which I couldn't understand.
This spoilt the movie to a great extent but I pressed on watching. It is a slow paced thriller, with lots of dialogue. It has a number of twists but the movie is much too long. In the end it reached a conclusion with a bit of action which probably saved the movie from failure.
Make sure that you watch it with subtitles, which is bothersome to read but would make the film more understandable. I was robbed of this but would not want to see it again with subtitles. It is no more than an average movie at best.
This spoilt the movie to a great extent but I pressed on watching. It is a slow paced thriller, with lots of dialogue. It has a number of twists but the movie is much too long. In the end it reached a conclusion with a bit of action which probably saved the movie from failure.
Make sure that you watch it with subtitles, which is bothersome to read but would make the film more understandable. I was robbed of this but would not want to see it again with subtitles. It is no more than an average movie at best.
"Double Face" is the third, and presumably final, adaptation of a crime/thriller novel by the Belgian author Jef Geeraerts and revolving around the Antwerp police duo - and best buddies - Vincke and Verstuyft. The first one, "De Zaak Alzheimer" (aka "Memory of a Killer") got released in 2003 and was quite an international success, thanks to the surefooted direction of Erik Van Looy and the reasonably simple fact that people weren't used to seeing such type of violent and spectacular thrillers coming from Flanders. The follow-up in 2009, "Dossier K.", was already a lot less popular even though very exhilarating as well, and the replacement director Jan Verheyen also being a skilled professional. The release and reception of this "Double Face" went largely unnoticed in 2017, and the film itself barely surpasses the level of mediocrity as well.
I read a few books by Jef Geeraerts when I was younger, including "Double Face", and they feature a lot of perverse sex and extreme violence. This film also isn't for overly sensitive viewers, I'd say, as my wife suffered from some nightmares about human heads on poles and nasty car crashes. You can either take that as a warning, or as a recommendation! In a meadow near Antwerp, the headless and naked corpses of six woman are discovered, and another girl is narrowly rescued when she's found wandering half-naked, drugged, and very confused in a little village 20 kilometers further. Chief commissioner Vincke doesn't think the cases are related, but his impulsive assistant Verstuyft is convinced the girl was meant to become the killer's next victim if he hadn't been interrupted. While Vincke seeks the help of a Dutch and acclaimed Interpol profiler to find out more about the serial killer, Verstuyft digs into the life of the girl and - of course - falls madly in love with her.
Although director Jan Verheyen and scriptwriter Carl Joos try very hard to constantly mislead the audiences with red herrings, false leads and new clues, the film has severe difficulties to keep the audience alert and interested. There's a list of reasons for this. The plot features too many dreadful clichés, for starters. The impulsive and unorthodox cop rebels against the profiling methods, the cop sleeps with an important witness in the case, the friendship between the life-long partners is pressurized, etc. The best actors, including Belgium's finest Koen De Bouw, are also reduced to supportive characters. Commissioner Vincke's role barely exists of more than blindly following what the Interpol profile suggests and unsuccessfully forcing his buddy Verstuyft to obey. The rest of the police team, all good actors and actresses, are just glorified extras. The (eventual) climax is unpredictable, I'll admit that, but also very unsatisfying. Call me crazy, but I still think that every killer - even deranged serial killers - need to have some sort of motive or plausible background story, especially the extreme ones that chop off heads and store them in freezers. Here, there isn't any sort of clarification whatsoever.
I read a few books by Jef Geeraerts when I was younger, including "Double Face", and they feature a lot of perverse sex and extreme violence. This film also isn't for overly sensitive viewers, I'd say, as my wife suffered from some nightmares about human heads on poles and nasty car crashes. You can either take that as a warning, or as a recommendation! In a meadow near Antwerp, the headless and naked corpses of six woman are discovered, and another girl is narrowly rescued when she's found wandering half-naked, drugged, and very confused in a little village 20 kilometers further. Chief commissioner Vincke doesn't think the cases are related, but his impulsive assistant Verstuyft is convinced the girl was meant to become the killer's next victim if he hadn't been interrupted. While Vincke seeks the help of a Dutch and acclaimed Interpol profiler to find out more about the serial killer, Verstuyft digs into the life of the girl and - of course - falls madly in love with her.
Although director Jan Verheyen and scriptwriter Carl Joos try very hard to constantly mislead the audiences with red herrings, false leads and new clues, the film has severe difficulties to keep the audience alert and interested. There's a list of reasons for this. The plot features too many dreadful clichés, for starters. The impulsive and unorthodox cop rebels against the profiling methods, the cop sleeps with an important witness in the case, the friendship between the life-long partners is pressurized, etc. The best actors, including Belgium's finest Koen De Bouw, are also reduced to supportive characters. Commissioner Vincke's role barely exists of more than blindly following what the Interpol profile suggests and unsuccessfully forcing his buddy Verstuyft to obey. The rest of the police team, all good actors and actresses, are just glorified extras. The (eventual) climax is unpredictable, I'll admit that, but also very unsatisfying. Call me crazy, but I still think that every killer - even deranged serial killers - need to have some sort of motive or plausible background story, especially the extreme ones that chop off heads and store them in freezers. Here, there isn't any sort of clarification whatsoever.
This movie is one of the better Belgian crime movies I've seen so far. In the beginning the movie has its flaws with some unclear scenes or stereotypes, but the more you get involved in the murder case, the more clear it becomes how excellent the cinematography fits with some exciting action scenes. Towards the climax of the movie there are some very well directed action scenes and the movies becomes more tensive and the story as well proves to be more ingenious.
The acting and the pacing help this movie rise above the underlying script, a hackneyed, contrived story of the search for a serial killer. It has all the usual elements? Do we have a methodical, team oriented policeman in conflict with an intuitive cop with no impulse control? Yes. Do we have a list of stereotyped suspects that fit the bill perfectly? Yes, including (!!!) a psychiatric patient with a pet claw hammer.
Some things are easy to see through and I would say, if you've seen a couple of thrillers, you won't have any issues seeing where this is heading. Still the characters are interesting and you can mostly understand their motivation and also can relate in general.
That is until the very end, where it all blows up. Well at least a little bit. Depending on your views of how it ties things together at the end and especially how it resolves them, you may have a problem with the movie. If not, you will be enjoying a crime drama, that is predictable but still has class and good actors in it.
That is until the very end, where it all blows up. Well at least a little bit. Depending on your views of how it ties things together at the end and especially how it resolves them, you may have a problem with the movie. If not, you will be enjoying a crime drama, that is predictable but still has class and good actors in it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first adaptation of a "Vincke & Verstuyft" novel to be released after the death of author Jef Geeraerts in 2015, which is why the movie is dedicated to his memory.
- GaffesWhen looking at the security tapes with Verstuyft, Rina lowers her left hand from her left cheek. In the next shot, the hand is again against her left cheek.
- ConnexionsFollows La mémoire du tueur (2003)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Control
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée2 heures 7 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Double face (2017) officially released in India in English?
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