Review of Two Weeks

Two Weeks (2006)
One has to wonder, "why was this movie made?"
25 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
There isn't anything actually "wrong" with this movie, "2 Weeks", but by the same token, it is hard to find anything "right" about it. While all the actors are good here, the story doesn't seem to have a point other than how 4 grown children might get back together while they wait for their 60-something mother to die.

I have always liked Sally Field, all the way back to her days on TV as the "Flying Nun." Here she is good as Anita Bergman, diagnosed with ovarian cancer. One of the symptoms of dying by her particular cancer is the inability to eat, because her intestinal tract is apparently blocked. So she has to be fed through her veins. She is not totally bedridden, but she is confined to her home.

There is an attempt to lighten the mood when Anita sees all the others eating ribs and wants some too. So she chews the meat, and then spits it out after chewing it. So, around the table everyone else chews their food and then spits it out. That scene didn't work for me, it didn't make the movie any better.

Ben Chaplin is her older son, a filmmaker who earlier had filmed Anita as he asked her questions, to save for posterity. His character is Keith Bergman. Tom Cavanagh of TV's "Ed" fame is the next brother Barry Bergman. The lone sister is Julianne Nicholson as Emily Bergman. And the youngest, with the young wife from hell, is Glenn Howerton as Matthew Bergman.

So much of the movie was to see how 4 adult siblings might handle being together for their mother's last 14 days. Marginally interesting, but when I asked my wife what was the message, she answered, "I don't really know." I could not recommend this movie to friends.
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