Two Weeks with Sally Field: DVD Cover

    Two Weeks Director: Steve Shockman, Steve Stockman Cast: Sally Field, Ben Chaplin, Lauren Ellman, Julianne Nicholson

    DVD - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Pan & Scan Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 09/18/2007
    • Original Release: 2006
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 21,754

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Audio Commentary by Writer/Director Steve Stockman and Dr. Ira Byock; Deleted Scenes; Learning to Live Through Dying Feaurette; Two Weeks Group Discussion Guide.

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1, Side A -- Two Weeks - Fullscreen
    1. Main Titles/Remember [1:45]
    2. Day 1/How to Die [2:43]
    3. Morning Routine [3:39]
    4. Checklists [2:54]
    5. The Process [6:30]
    6. Day 4/Instructions [2:33]
    7. Best Friends [3:23]
    8. Is She Dying? [3:34]
    9. Chew and Spit [5:43]
    10. Shut it Down [1:52]
    11. Conversations [6:44]
    12. Day 7/Real Life [4:24]
    13. Hug Her [3:49]
    14. Second Husband [2:08]
    15. The Way it Was [4:04]
    16. Finance and Religion [3:27]
    17. Morphine Decision [6:16]
    18. Don't Overthink [4:34]
    19. Day 11/Tension [4:03]
    20. Slipped Away [4:21]
    21. The Letter [3:02]
    22. Stay Close [3:22]
    23. Day 14/Ashes [9:16]
    24. End Titles [4:14]
    Disc #1, Side B -- Two Weeks - Widescreen
    1. Main Titles/Remember [1:45]
    2. Day 1/How to Die [2:43]
    3. Morning Routine [3:39]
    4. Checklists [2:54]
    5. The Process [6:30]
    6. Day 4/Instructions [2:33]
    7. Best Friends [3:23]
    8. Is She Dying? [3:34]
    9. Chew and Spit [5:43]
    10. Shut it Down [1:52]
    11. Conversations [6:44]
    12. Day 7/Real Life [4:24]
    13. Hug Her [3:49]
    14. Second Husband [2:08]
    15. The Way it Was [4:04]
    16. Finance and Religion [3:27]
    17. Morphine Decision [6:16]
    18. Don't Overthink [4:34]
    19. Day 11/Tension [4:03]
    20. Slipped Away [4:21]
    21. The Letter [3:02]
    22. Stay Close [3:22]
    23. Day 14/Ashes [9:16]
    24. End Titles [4:14]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Director Steve Stockman takes the helm for this semi-autobiographical comedy drama about an estranged family that comes together for one last goodbye, and finds their assumedly brief farewell inexorably dragged out for two excruciating weeks. Aging matriarch Anita (Sally Field) is dying, but before she goes, she has requested that her four grown children travel back home to visit their ailing mother on her deathbed. Eager to gain a better understanding of the dying process, daughter Emily purchases a variety of self-help books on the subject. Though brother Keith (Ben Chaplin) soon arrives determined to float through the process in typical L.A. Zen mode, Emily contends that the only way to be prepared for the future is to consider every detail that can go awry. When PR executive Barry arrives intent on getting some work done before death comes knocking, it appears as if he is more concerned with getting broadband Internet in the house than actually tending to his mother. Meanwhile, youngest brother Matthew sets at the sidelines biding his time as his unlikable wife, Katrina, callously speculates on which of the dying woman's luxurious jewels she will be inheriting. Now, as Anita begins to look back at her life while reflecting on the time spent with her family, the question of who will hold this family together once she is gone casts a melancholy shadow over her fond memories. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    Two Weeksby Anonymous

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    September 22, 2007: 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