
Two fathers with opposing personalities come together to celebrate the wedding of their children. They are forced to spend the longest week of their lives together, and the big day cannot come soon enough.... (Full plot summary below)
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Two fathers with opposing personalities come together to celebrate the wedding of their children. They are forced to spend the longest week of their lives together, and the big day cannot come soon enough.
Leave your thoughts about The Week Of.
| Yahoo! MoviesKen TuckerIf you're willing to take The Week Of on its own terms, it's a goodhearted, sentimental comedy that wants to be The Father of the Bride with more vulgarity. |
| Consequence of SoundBlake GobleThe Week Of is the wedding you forgot you were invited to, weren’t all that stoked to attend, then wound up loving anyway because you had such a surprisingly good time. |
| The A.V. ClubJesse HassengerSmigel may not want to take up permanent residence in the Happy Madison offices, but he raises his old friend’s game considerably. |
| VarietyPeter DebrugeWhile some gags are funny the first time around, practically everything in The Week Of overstays its welcome. |
| indieWireEric KohnAfter 85 minutes of mediocrity, The Week Of finally lands on one inspired bit, and then there’s another half hour to go. |
| Entertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyIt feels like Smigel and Sandler just shot the first draft of their script without fine-tuning or polishing any of the jokes. |
| Screen ZealotsLouisa MooreIt's a stale set up and no new comedy bounds are broken, but the The Week Of delivers the laughs and will surprise audiences with its genuinely sweet and heartwarming story. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfSmigel creates a charmingly manic farce with "The Week Of," playing with wedding build-up clichés and absurdity with remarkable fluidity and appreciation for non-sequitur humor. |
| New York TimesGlenn KennyWhile the movie is ultimately more of the same old same old, it is at least not as appallingly sexist and culturally insensitive as “The Ridiculous Six,” Mr. Sandler’s dreaded 2015 Netflix Original western “spoof.” |
| ThrillistDaniel JacksonRock often struggles in comedies he didn't have a hand in writing, but he looks comfortable trading sentimental confessions with Sandler, who channels some of the same paternal sadness he so gently played in Meyerowitz. |