HE KI//S FOR A LIVING — BUT HIS MEMORY IS FAILING. 🔥
Patrick Dempsey detonates expectations in Fox’s new thriller as a hitman racing against his own fading mind. Playing Angelo, he juggles a secret family, a violent double life, and the terrifying signs of inherited Alzheimer’s — all while working under a crime boss who can’t afford betrayal.
Michael Imperioli’s Dutch isn’t just his boss, but his oldest friend — and as memories slip, loyalty turns lethal. Every forgotten detail risks exposing everything. Survival isn’t about pulling the trigger anymore… it’s about remembering who you are before someone else decides for you.
This isn’t just action — it’s paranoia, pressure, and collapse in real time.
Watch the tension unravel below 👇
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Patrick Dempsey’s Hitman Battles Fading Memory in Fox’s Explosive Thriller — A Double Life on the Brink of Collapse as Loyalties, Secrets, and Survival Clash in a High-Stakes Game of Betrayal
In Fox’s gripping new thriller Memory of a Killer, Patrick Dempsey delivers a career-shifting performance as Angelo Doyle (also known as Angelo Flannery or Ledda in varying sources), a feared New York City hitman whose meticulously compartmentalized double life begins to crumble under the weight of early-onset Alzheimer’s. What starts as a high-octane crime drama evolves into a tense psychological battle where fading memories become the deadliest enemy. Michael Imperioli co-stars as Dutch, Angelo’s lifelong friend and ruthless crime boss who operates from the front of his upscale restaurant, unaware of the suburban family Angelo has kept hidden for years. As loyalties fracture, secrets spill, and survival hangs by a thread, the series explores how a man who once controlled every detail now fights to hold onto his identity—before it all unravels.

Premiering on January 25, 2026, with a special two-night event (Sunday premiere after the NFC Championship Game, followed by its regular Monday slot at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT on Fox, with episodes streaming the next day on Hulu), Memory of a Killer is an American adaptation inspired by the 2003 Belgian film De Zaak Alzheimer (The Alzheimer Case) and the novel by Jef Geeraerts. The show blends intense action, mob intrigue, and poignant family drama, creating a thriller that feels both visceral and deeply human.
Angelo’s worlds couldn’t be more contrasting. In the gritty underbelly of New York, he’s a precise, stone-cold assassin executing hits for Dutch’s shadowy operation—his restaurant serving as the perfect cover for criminal dealings. In sleepy upstate Cooperstown, he’s a mild-mannered photocopier salesman and devoted father to his daughter Maria (Odeya Rush), a young woman building her own life while grieving her late mother. Angelo has maintained this brick wall between identities flawlessly—until the symptoms begin: forgotten details, momentary blanks, the terrifying realization that he’s following the same path as his brother Michael (Richard Clarkin), who’s already in the late stages of Alzheimer’s in a care facility. Angelo confides in his brother during visits, using him as a safe outlet for secrets he can’t share elsewhere.
The stakes skyrocket when an attack targets his family—specifically Maria—turning the disease from a personal nightmare into an immediate threat to everyone he loves. Angelo must investigate the hit while concealing his deteriorating condition from Dutch, whose trust is absolute but whose world has no room for weakness. Imperioli’s Dutch is a compelling mix of charm and menace: a childhood friend turned crime lord, he relies on Angelo’s reliability, making any slip a potential betrayal. Gina Torres appears as FBI Agent Linda Grant, probing the crimes and adding layers of external pressure as Angelo’s worlds collide.

Dempsey, long known for his charismatic “McDreamy” role on Grey’s Anatomy, sheds that image entirely here. He portrays Angelo with quiet intensity—charming in suburbia, lethal in the city, and increasingly vulnerable as memory lapses force improvisations during high-stakes jobs. The performance captures the horror of losing control: a man who once orchestrated perfect kills now second-guesses simple routines. Imperioli brings gravitas to Dutch, infusing their bond with authenticity and tension—loyalty tested as Angelo hides more than just his job.
The series excels in building suspense through Angelo’s internal struggle. Every forgotten name or misplaced detail raises the risk of exposure. A refused hit or delayed execution could unravel the operation, while family moments become fraught with unspoken fear. The show doesn’t shy away from the emotional toll of Alzheimer’s—visits to his brother provide heartbreaking benchmarks of the disease’s progression, grounding the thriller in real dread.
Critics have mixed views: some praise the compelling premise and strong leads, calling it engaging with a “Batman-like” duality in Angelo’s dual lives, while others note it can feel muddled or silly in execution, with dialogue and pacing issues preventing it from fully soaring. Metacritic sits around 55/100, reflecting a solid but not groundbreaking entry in the genre. Still, the cast elevates it—Dempsey’s return to broadcast TV after years away feels fresh, and Imperioli’s presence adds Sopranos-level depth to the mob dynamics.
Behind-the-scenes buzz highlights the tension: cast interviews reveal the challenge of balancing action with emotional vulnerability. Dempsey has spoken about exploring a “dark side” long suppressed, while Imperioli warns that “loyalties get tested” in ways that push characters to extremes. Exclusive first-look videos and trailers tease explosive moments—sniper threats, interrogations, and desperate cover-ups—promising twists as Angelo races to protect his family before his mind betrays him completely.
Memory of a Killer isn’t just another hitman story; it’s a high-stakes exploration of identity, legacy, and the fragility of control. Memories fade, but danger never does—and in Angelo’s world, forgetting could be fatal. Catch new episodes Mondays on Fox, stream on Hulu, and dive into the chaos before the next twist erases everything.
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