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IMDbPro

Two Weeks

  • 2006
  • 18
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Sally Field and Ben Chaplin in Two Weeks (2006)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:32
1 Video
15 Photos
ComedyDrama

In this bittersweet comedy, four adult siblings gather at their dying mother's house in North Carolina for what they expect to be a quick, last goodbye. Instead, they find themselves trapped... Read allIn this bittersweet comedy, four adult siblings gather at their dying mother's house in North Carolina for what they expect to be a quick, last goodbye. Instead, they find themselves trapped-- together -- for two weeks.In this bittersweet comedy, four adult siblings gather at their dying mother's house in North Carolina for what they expect to be a quick, last goodbye. Instead, they find themselves trapped-- together -- for two weeks.

  • Director
    • Steve Stockman
  • Writer
    • Steve Stockman
  • Stars
    • Sally Field
    • Ben Chaplin
    • Julianne Nicholson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Steve Stockman
    • Writer
      • Steve Stockman
    • Stars
      • Sally Field
      • Ben Chaplin
      • Julianne Nicholson
    • 23User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
    • 44Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Two Weeks
    Trailer 2:32
    Two Weeks

    Photos14

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Sally Field
    Sally Field
    • Anita Bergman
    Ben Chaplin
    Ben Chaplin
    • Keith Bergman
    Julianne Nicholson
    Julianne Nicholson
    • Emily Bergman
    Lauren Aboulafia
    Lauren Aboulafia
    • Flight Attendant
    • (as Lauren Ellman)
    Tom Cavanagh
    Tom Cavanagh
    • Barry Bergman
    James Murtaugh
    James Murtaugh
    • Jim Cranston
    Amy Leigh Hubbard
    Amy Leigh Hubbard
    • Betsy Straight
    • (as Amy Hubbard)
    Terrence E. McNally
    • Gerald Corwin
    • (as Terrence McNally)
    Michael Hyatt
    Michael Hyatt
    • Carol
    Glenn Howerton
    Glenn Howerton
    • Matthew Bergman
    Clea DuVall
    Clea DuVall
    • Katrina
    Jenny O'Hara
    Jenny O'Hara
    • Julia
    Susan Misner
    Susan Misner
    • Sherry Bergman
    Anna Grace Smith
    Anna Grace Smith
    • Sarah
    Jeffrey Reagan Johnson
    • Ben
    • (as Jeffrey Johnson)
    Lori Beth Sikes
    Lori Beth Sikes
    • Suzanne
    • (as Lori Beth Edgeman)
    MoonPie Eller
    MoonPie Eller
    • Jessica
    • (as Savannah Eller)
    Peggy Walton-Walker
    Peggy Walton-Walker
    • Airline Ticketing Agent
    • (as Peggy Walton Walker)
    • Director
      • Steve Stockman
    • Writer
      • Steve Stockman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.42.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8gradyharp

    Death as an Exodus and an Epiphany

    TWO WEEKS may put a lot of viewers off as it deals confrontationally with the issues of death and dying and yet finds the very human humor that always serves as a relief sidebar in stories (and life incidents) such as this. Steve Stockman wrote, directed and produced this little film and his inspiration and efforts are well served by a fine ensemble cast. It is a story about dying and the effects the finality of that event have on a family that has dispersed in different directions life.

    Anita Bergman (a phenomenally effective Sally Field) is under hospice care as she faces her last days of dying from gastrointestinal cancer. Knowing that she has little time left she calls upon her four children to return home to North Carolina for goodbyes. Her children are a mixed lot: Keith (Ben Chaplin) is a Zen-influenced California man who has decided to video his mother for posterity; Barry (Thomas Cavanagh) is a workaholic who attempts to piece together time for this inconvenient disruption in his work routine; Matthew (Glenn Howerton) is the baby of the family dominated by a tactless wife whom the rest of the family detest; Emily (a luminous Julianne Nicholson) is the sole sister who has collected all the books on the dying process for her brothers' education and is the stalwart one who holds the family together. Anita divorced the children's father and remarried a quiet man Jim (James Murtaugh) who is essentially ignored or tolerated by the children. Anita shares memories, both tender and hilarious, about her life with her family, and as the hospice nurse Carol (Michael Hyatt) tenderly leads the children through the instructions regarding final care, the four bond again, become more accepting of their disparate directions, share some very funny conversations to relieve the gloom of the event, and interact more than they have since childhood. By the time of the inevitable event come each of the children and their current father have found vulnerabilities and expanded the tokens of love left to them by Anita, now able to carry out Anita's wishes with a modicum of grace and a lot of warmth.

    Using the last two weeks of life as a platform for coming together provides the film ample opportunity to address many issues - marriage, children, family, religion, and individuality. The film is balanced by the superb performance of Sally Field on the one end and the wholly realized characterization by Julianne Nicholson on the other end. In many ways it is the continuity between the lives of these two women that make the story memorable. There are some fine lessons to be heard in this film, and the telling of the story is very satisfying to watch. Grady Harp
    imdbob-2

    Wonderful dramedy

    Saw this film at an exclusive NYC advance screening presented by Gen Art, with the writer/director present, and I gotta say: if you've ever lost a loved one, this film will have you nodding in remembrance. If you've yet to lose a loved one...it's a good primer on how to handle it.

    Great performances all around, and I liked the way the film expertly balances comedy with drama. It's a fact of life that we all have to deal with this subject sometime...and a film like this deserves attention because it's one of the few to tackle a delicate subject with grace and humor.
    7Isaac5855

    Funny, warm, touching, and deeply moving...

    TWO WEEKS is a quietly exquisite, deeply moving, and surprisingly hopeful drama centered on some very unpleasant subject matter. Writer and director Steve Stockman struck gold with this story of four adult siblings (Ben Chaplin, Julianne Nicholson, Tom Cavanaugh, Glenn Howerton)who return to their hometown in North Carolina to be at the bedside of their mother (beautifully played by Sally Field), who is dying of ovarian cancer. This drama of the family's final time together is juxtaposed with a videotaped interview with Mom done by the eldest son (Chaplin) as sort of a final tribute to his mom before she gets too sick to remember things she wants to pass on.This film offers surprises at every turn because it is more than the "sturm und drang" one would expect from such a story. Stockman puts a very human face on the subject of death and dying and because it is human, there is humor involved. There are laughs to be found here and they aren't the kind of laughs where you wonder whether or not being amused is appropriate. These are odd little moments throughout the film that we can all relate to...like one brother finding the cowboy sheets that were on his childhood bed and stashing them to take with him, or dealing with the problem of all the casseroles that well-intentioned friends and neighbors stuff the refrigerator with, or arguing with your siblings over the things Mom wants you to have and nobody wants. The direction is a little static, but the screenplay has a deft quality to it and the performances are uniformly first-rate, with standout work from Field and Chaplin. A very special film experience...treat yourself.
    10drdowrite

    "Two Weeks" takes you from laughter to tears and back again

    I saw "Two Weeks" at the Hampton Film Festival in a packed theater. While "Two Weeks" is a serious film about a family going through a tragic experience, it is also very funny and true. Stockman, who wrote and directed the film, manages to capture the humor and emotion of a family as they cope with of the impending loss of their mother. It is a brave and honest film. Sally Field is wonderful as the strong and funny matriarch who stares death down. Her performance is powerful and complex. Ben Chaplin, Tom Cavanaugh and Julianne Nicholson deliver honest and subtle performances. They truly seem like a family sharing all of the affection, sorrow and conflict you would expect of siblings going through such a difficult experience. The film is funny and moving. I will be going to see it again when it opens in NYC on March 2nd.
    5EUyeshima

    Sally's Field Day as a Dying Mother Surrounded by Shallow Characters and Forced Humor

    The humor is way too forced, superficial and well-trodden to add the well-intentioned black comedy elements this otherwise bittersweet soap opera needs, but this 2007 film offers a vanity-free Sally Field giving a powerhouse performance as Anita Bergman, the dying mother of four grown children. The movie's title refers to the amount of time her character is expected to live before succumbing to ovarian cancer. With the clock ticking, the four children gather at her North Carolina home from different parts of the country and respond differently to the imminent tragedy. Directed and written by Steve Stockman as a series of vignettes, the characterizations represent different archetypes, and the actors are left to flesh them out to some human dimension. The results of their efforts are variable.

    Affecting an unrecognizable American accent, Ben Chaplin fares the poorest as eldest brother Keith, an LA-based filmmaker whose sarcastic jokes are meant to shield him from feelings of insecurity and guilt. His character has the most screen time, yet his constantly jokey facade gets in the way of any sympathy we have for him. At first, Tom Cavanaugh plays Ben, the son Anita has dubbed the responsible one, as an obnoxious yuppie workaholic who gradually reveals his fears of loss but fades in the background. As only daughter Beth, Julianne Nicholson is terrific in unconditionally embracing her role as chief caretaker given that her mother is really her best friend, for better or worse. Youngest brother Matthew is drawn in the broadest strokes as the picked-upon baby of the family, and his resentment has manifested itself with a shrewish wife whom everybody else hates.

    On the sidelines is Anita's second husband of 13 years, Jim, played by James Murtagh, who glowers in resentment as her children take over their house with nary a thought in his direction. Anita's first husband and the father of her children exists as a shadowy figure in the story, and Anita - in one of many revealing videotaped excerpts - has obviously not fully come to terms with her divorce. These clips - showing Anita recorded by Keith in an earlier stage of her cancer - are used as a dramatically effective framing device for the story, and Field shows herself to be at the height of her artistry in these scenes even when the material gets mawkish. Stockman based the story on the death of his own mother in 1997, and this experience informs a lot of the moments in the film, especially the brutalizing scenes of Anita's rapid decline under hospice care.

    The 2007 DVD is two-sided split between full and widescreen versions and with the extras divvied up. Stockman provides an informative commentary track accompanied periodically by Dr. Ira Byock, a physician specializing in treating those knowingly facing death. There's also a solid 23-minute making-of featurette, "Learning to Live Through Dying", and four scenes labeled deleted though truthfully only one is deleted while the other three are extended. There is a group discussion guide included in each version that provides text questions to help the viewer face the death of a loved one.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Wil Wheaton read for the part of Keith Bergman.
    • Goofs
      The family is supposed to be in the area of Charlotte, North Carolina. Yet when Barry tries to retrieve his baggage from the airport and gets arrested and Keith ends up bailing him out, you can clearly see that they are actually at the Sumner County courthouse, which is in northern Tennessee, above Nashville.
    • Quotes

      Keith Bergman: You forgot to tell them how to wipe their asses. Is it front to back or back to front?

    • Connections
      Featured in Two Weeks: Learning to Live through Dying (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Somewhere Only We Know
      Performed by Keane

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 20, 2006 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dos semanas
    • Filming locations
      • Nashville, Tennessee, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Custom Productions
      • Two Weeks
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,400,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $47,986
    • Gross worldwide
      • $47,986
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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