The thriller Maldoror has hit the screens — a film by Belgian director Fabrice du Welz, inspired by the real-life case of serial killer Marc Dutroux.
In the film, a gendarme named Paul Chartier, the son of a prostitute and a convict, tries to catch a serial killer. He goes against the system, sinking into a swamp of corruption and bureaucracy — and nearly drowns in it. Most of the events in the film are drawn directly from reality, albeit under fictional names.
Maldoror: filmed to send chills down your spine
Director Fabrice du Welz has created something close to a documentary. He takes one of the darkest chapters in Belgian history and gives it a new voice. The young gendarme Paul Chartier follows the trail of a pedophile protected by mafia ties, political power, and the silence of an entire country. Evil grows under the cover of indifference. This isn’t fantasy — it’s reality, only with different names.
The film is shot in the spirit of Dogme 95 — shaky handheld camera, little to no artificial lighting, and an absence of glossy images. It’s a style familiar from Lars von Trier. At times, it feels more like news footage than a narrative feature. The actors are local non-professionals. The only scene that briefly hints at joy — a wedding, filmed like a home video — is quickly swallowed by the surrounding darkness.
Maldoror: when one man stands alone
Paul Chartier is no action hero. He doesn’t shoot, doesn’t shout, doesn’t seek revenge. He simply continues, step by step, until the system itself stops him. It doesn’t matter that he finds the truth — he’s punished for it, truth here is merciless. It heals nothing — it only cuts deeper.
Maldoror Case isn’t about the investigation. It’s a film about how evil seeps into the cracks when we pretend it isn’t there. It’s a story that doesn’t want to be watched to the end — but refuses to let you go. Because it’s real. Because it’s based on what happened — and what may still be happening.