Slant Magazine by Christopher Gray
A dour and withholding character study, Michel Franco's film invites more questions than it’s willing to answer.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Mexico, France · 2015
Rated R · 1h 33m
Director Michel Franco
Starring Tim Roth, Sarah Sutherland, Robin Bartlett, Rachel Pickup
Genre Drama
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David is a nurse who works with terminally ill patients. Dedicated to his profession, he develops strong relationships with the people he cares for. But outside of the workplace, it's a different story altogether, as he struggles to connect with his daughter and draw the line between his work and personal life.
Slant Magazine by Christopher Gray
A dour and withholding character study, Michel Franco's film invites more questions than it’s willing to answer.
This quiet, difficult little movie — so stubbornly opaque that its torpedo of a last shot almost makes it feel as though Franco has been trolling us the whole time — is the rare film that has the courage to stomach the reality of life after death.
The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney
While Chronic is a depressing sit, it's a sobering window into the self-sacrifice and psychological strain of the caregiver, as well as a provocative contribution to the ongoing debate about humane assisted suicide.
Franco’s script teases out the character’s tangled ambiguities with immaculate control: even as the story proceeds in the lowest of keys, our nerves never settle.
An unnecessarily loud ending is an unwelcome jolt that will likely divide audiences down the middle, but Chronic is an otherwise unique character study of endearing depth.
The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo
When Chronic premiered at Cannes in 2015 (where it unexpectedly won Best Screenplay), one tweet waggishly retitled it Caring Is Creepy, and it really does play, for better and worse, like a lengthy exploration of that Shins song’s thesis.
The Playlist by Oliver Lyttelton
It's a stinker of an ending tacked on to a disappointing third act (which is at least lifted up by Bartlett's performance), and it's a shame because so much of what went on before was so good: a tender, unsentimental, unexploitative look at an existence that all too many people have, and what it is to be someone who looks after them.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
Tim Roth is excellent as David: impassive and enigmatic, withholding the truth about himself, but radiating in repose a sadness and a swallowed pain.
Chronic may be a demanding movie to watch, but it’s also one with enormous potential for audiences to personalize, expanding in the hours and days that follow.
Screen International by Tim Grierson
Tim Roth gives a meticulously withdrawn performance that speaks volumes, and although filmmaker Michel Franco can be too fussy in his starkly somber design, Chronic is nonetheless a captivating work.
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