The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Though it is modest, almost anecdotal, in scale, 12:08 East of Bucharest is also characterized by a precise and sneaky formal wit.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Romania · 2006
1h 29m
Director Corneliu Porumboiu
Starring Mircea Andreescu, Teodor Corban, Ion Sapdaru, Mirela Cioabă
Genre Comedy, Drama
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It's the 22nd of December. Sixteen years have passed since the revolution, and in a small town Christmas is about to come. Three men confront their history, trying to answer for themselves a question which, for sixteen years, has not had an answer: "Was it or wasn't it a revolution in their town?"
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Though it is modest, almost anecdotal, in scale, 12:08 East of Bucharest is also characterized by a precise and sneaky formal wit.
The buoyant little comedy 12:08 East of Bucharest puts its finger on the problem in the best tradition of East European humor, savvy but concrete, gentle but sharp as a knife.
This brilliantly caustic movie -- easily the best in a burgeoning and fertile effort to come to grips with post-Soviet malaise in Central and Eastern Europe -- offers living proof that when it comes to politics, comedy is the sincerest form of dissidence.
A casually bleak and neatly structured ensemble comedy--at once deadpan and bemused.
Wonderfully droll, Cannes Camera d'Or winner.
Porumboiu starts off making a mordant slice of life, but he gradually entwines the personal and the historical, then ends on a poignant note. The story and situation are slight, but in the best possible way.
Washington Post by Philip Kennicott
A remarkable film from Romania.
Entertainment Weekly by Scott Brown
12:08 East of Bucharest is a shrewdly built comedy, but the characters are broad-verging-on-cheap unholy hick fools.
For all its pessimism, the movie prompts a viewer to search his or her own memories for actions rather than reactions, and to mull over the differences between the two. It's a dark little ride, but at the end the lights hesitantly flicker back on.
Porumboiu, who also produced and wrote, elicits remarkably deadpan performances from Teo Corban (as the show's host), Ion Sapdaru (the professor) and - especially - Mircea Andreescu, as the old man. Even the subtitles cracked me up.
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