The film explores these full events in the aftermath of the violent theft of Columbia University philosophy professor on a snowy night in New York City. It is a private life for this man to live in while facing in a different setting a different place where his wife's daughter fights cancer, a student who suffers from problems of self-harm, and an addict is drawn to rehabilitation and other events.
Unfortunately, the script of Anesthesia supports the ballast of an excessive verbosity and the proposed subplots don't acquire a greater dramatic density. [Full review in Spanish]
A film that, although is well acted, ends up being scattered, discursive, somewhat disoriented and never finishes articulating. [Full review in Spanish]
I want to recommend Nelson's film in spite of how misconceived it is simply because it asks interesting questions, albeit in some of the most banal ways imaginable.
A bunch of important sentences always said by characters in a serious and lavish tone, who will inexorably be submerged in their worst hardships that the script capriciously chains, in causal rather than casual way. [Full review in Spanish]
A pile of incomprehensible existential gibberish by the vastly untalented actor-writer-director Tim Blake Nelson about the meaning of life in an age of technology, told in the tiresome style of multiple characters who intersect at odd angles ...