Picture's dour take on the dehumanizing process of medical treatment is leavened by black humor and dialogue that always rings true.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Almost as exhilarating as it is depressing. Puiu's filmmaking technique is remarkable, and all the more so because it's almost invisible.
The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, for all its terrible matter-of-factness, produces tumultuous feelings of amazement and revolt.
The Hollywood Reporter by Duane Byrge
In this deep probe into modern-day medicine, the old guy is shuttled from hospital to hospital in a surreal, horrifying ordeal of errors, missed diagnoses and institutional malaise. At two hours and 34 minutes, we, seemingly, also endure his agony -- part of this Romanian film's power and, also, its Achilles heel.
An explicit ode to mortality, not without a certain grim humor.
Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum
Both sad and darkly funny, the film is so sharply conceived and richly populated that it often registers like a Frederick Wiseman documentary, even though everything is scripted and every part played by a professional... This is only the second feature of Cristi Puiu, who claims to have been inspired by his own hypochondria, but he's already clearly a master.
Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mr. Lazarescu is that rich and riveting a film of universal small human moments and big-system failure.
An intoxicating performance piece in which skilled actors pinball off each other with such energy and nuance that the audience almost forgets about the dying man on the edge of the frame. The style alone makes the movie's point.
Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer
A heartbreakingly powerful masterpiece.
Do not, under any circumstance, approach this film lightly. Prepare to be depressed, agitated and shocked. And prepare to see a brilliant work of cinematic art.