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The Week Of
Promotional release poster
Directed byRobert Smigel
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyFederico Cesca
Edited byTom Costain
Music byRupert Gregson-Williams
Production
company
Distributed byNetflix
Release date
  • April 27, 2018 (2018-04-27)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Week Of is a 2018 American comedy film written and directed by Robert Smigel in his feature length directorial debut, and co-written by and starring Adam Sandler. It co-stars Chris Rock, Rachel Dratch, Steve Buscemi, Allison Strong, and Noah Robbins, and follows two fathers the week of the wedding of their children. The film is the fourth collaboration between Sandler and Netflix, and was released on the streaming service on April 27, 2018.[1]

Plot

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Sarah Lustig and Tyler Cortice are one week away from getting married. Despite Tyler's doctor father Kirby being extremely rich, Sarah's construction worker father Kenny insists on paying for everything, resulting in a very cheap wedding.

In the week leading up to the wedding, the two families are plagued with multiple problems. Kenny, in an attempt to impress Kirby, tries to get his hotel room made over to look more fancy. The incompetence of the staff results in damage to the other rooms where other members of the family are staying, forcing the Lustigs to let them stay at their house, already crowded with their own family. To make matters worse, the hotel is where the reception is held, and the damage from the poor work threatens it. Despite this, Kenny firmly refuses any help from Kirby, insisting on doing everything by himself.

Due to a misunderstanding, Kenny's elderly uncle Seymour is mistaken for a World War II veteran (he never actually fought). To help save face after accusations from the press, Kenny convinces the mayor to hold the reception, in the guise of a party in Seymour's honor, at City Hall. However, when Seymour dies in an accident during Tyler's bachelor party, Kenny is forced to admit that the legs everyone thought Seymour lost in combat were actually lost to diabetes. This gets back to the mayor, who cancels the party. To cover this, Kenny, his wife Debbie and Seymour's son Charles capture a bunch of bats and dump them down the chimney of City Hall.

The day of the wedding arrives and despite everything, the ceremony goes off without a hitch. During the reception, Kirby confronts Kenny over his behavior and helps him realize that he did it all out of a need to do one more thing for his daughter. They have this talk while being held up during a dance for a long time, and one of the carriers collapses, spilling water which hits the electronics, starting a fire.

Feeling awful, Kenny admits why he did the things he did to Sarah, who forgives him. The rest of the reception is held at the Lustig house and Kenny and Kirby agree that the latter should pay for the first big family vacation.

Cast

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Production

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Principal photography began on Long Island, New York, in July 2017.[1][2]

Reception

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The film received negative reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 26% based on 27 reviews, and an average rating of 4.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Week Of suggests promise in further collaborations between Sandler and Robert Smigel, but its shopworn premise and listless execution aren't enough to recommend it."[3] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 41 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[4]

Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 1.5 out of 4 stars, calling it lazy and saying: "Sandler gives a relatively restrained performance as the well-meaning dad. Rock seems barely invested in paying attention to the other actors, and reads his lines as if he’s hoping there won’t be another take and he won’t have to go through this again. Even with helpful title cards telling us it’s 'MONDAY,' 'TUESDAY,' etc., etc., this is a week that feels 10 days long."[5] Peter Debruge, writing for Variety, called the film "lazy and overlong" and said: "Back in autopilot mode, Sandler phones in what may qualify as the lowest-concept comedy of his career—which, thankfully, is not the same as the lowest point in his career (that would be Jack and Jill, the cross-dressing debacle that began the downward slide that landed him at Netflix in the first place)."[6]

References

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from Grokipedia
The Week Of is a 2018 American comedy film directed by Robert Smigel in his feature-length directorial debut, co-written by Smigel and Adam Sandler, and starring Sandler as Kenny Lustig alongside Chris Rock as Kirby Cordice.[1][2] The story centers on two fathers from contrasting socioeconomic backgrounds who clash while attempting to manage the chaotic preparations for their children's wedding over the course of a single tumultuous week.[3] Released exclusively on Netflix on April 27, 2018, the film runs for 116 minutes and was produced by Sandler's Happy Madison Productions in collaboration with Netflix.[4] The narrative unfolds through a series of escalating mishaps, including logistical nightmares and family tensions, as Kenny, a devoted but overbearing middle-class contractor, insists on funding and controlling every aspect of the event despite Kirby's more affluent, laid-back approach as a heart surgeon.[5][2] Smigel is known for his satirical writing on Saturday Night Live and as the creator of Triumph the Insult Comic Dog.[6] Upon release, The Week Of received mixed reviews from critics, who praised the chemistry between Sandler and Rock but critiqued its uneven pacing and reliance on familiar tropes, earning a 26% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 27 reviews.[5] It garnered a 5.2 out of 10 rating on IMDb from over 26,000 user votes, reflecting a polarizing reception among audiences for its blend of heartfelt family moments and broad comedic set pieces.[1] The film marked another entry in Sandler's prolific Netflix partnership, which began in 2015, and highlighted Smigel's transition from television sketches to feature filmmaking.[2]

Synopsis

Plot

The Week Of centers on Kenny Lustig, a frugal middle-class father from Long Island, who is determined to orchestrate his daughter Sarah's wedding to Tyler on a tight budget, despite the involvement of Tyler's affluent father, Kirby Cordice, a successful doctor. The narrative unfolds over the course of a single chaotic week leading up to the ceremony, highlighting the stark contrasts in their socioeconomic backgrounds and parenting styles, which ignite the central conflict as Kenny rebuffs Kirby's offers of financial assistance to cover escalating costs.[2][7] The story begins with wedding preparations, where Kenny clashes with Kirby over key decisions, such as selecting a modest venue at a rundown motel like the Quality Inn to minimize expenses, arranging a young relative as the DJ, and sourcing discounted alcohol through an unconventional family connection. These choices underscore Kenny's resourcefulness amid financial strain, while Kirby's more lavish expectations—rooted in his privileged lifestyle—create immediate tension, forcing the fathers into awkward negotiations as they attempt to align their visions for the event.[2][7] As the week progresses, the arrival of extended family and guests exacerbates logistical nightmares, leading to severe overcrowding at Kenny's home and the venue, with sleeping arrangements turning into a comedic scramble of couches, floors, and makeshift tents. Transportation woes, including unreliable rentals and parking shortages, strand groups and compel Kenny and Kirby to carpool and collaborate unwillingly, amplifying their interpersonal friction through forced proximity and differing approaches to problem-solving. Family dynamics further complicate matters, with eccentric relatives contributing to mishaps like botched setups and interpersonal spats that highlight generational and cultural divides.[2][1] The comedic escalation builds through a series of humorous disasters during rehearsals, bachelor and bachelorette events, and final preparations, including unexpected medical emergencies among attendees that disrupt schedules and require on-the-spot improvisation. These incidents draw the two fathers deeper into each other's worlds, testing their patience as they navigate the whirlwind of vendor issues, weather threats, and emotional undercurrents tied to letting go of their children, all while striving to salvage the wedding amid the mounting pandemonium.[2][7]

Themes

The Week Of delves into class disparity as a central motif, contrasting the frugal, working-class values of Kenny Lustig (Adam Sandler), a suburban contractor determined to host a budget-conscious wedding, with the more affluent, professional lifestyle of Kirby Cordice (Chris Rock), a successful surgeon who offers to fund a lavish affair. This tension manifests in conflicts over wedding expenses, such as Kenny's insistence on cost-cutting measures like a rundown motel venue and cheap catering, versus Kirby's suggestions for upscale alternatives, underscoring broader socioeconomic divides in American society.[8][9] The film also examines father-daughter and father-son bonds amid generational clashes, portraying Kenny's overprotective, hands-on approach to his daughter's big day as a symbol of parental devotion clashing with Kirby's more distant, career-focused parenting of his son. These dynamics highlight the emotional stakes of high-stress family events, where differing generational expectations—rooted in evolving societal norms around work, family roles, and success—create friction but ultimately foster mutual understanding.[10][8] Through its comedic lens, The Week Of satirizes family dysfunction and incompetence in crisis management, using exaggerated portrayals of quirky relatives and logistical mishaps during wedding preparations to lampoon the chaos of American wedding culture. The narrative culminates in reconciliation through shared adversity, as the fathers navigate disasters like venue failures and family antics, transforming initial hostilities into a unifying sense of communal resilience and acceptance.[9][10]

Cast and characters

Principal cast

Adam Sandler portrays Kenny Lustig, the overprotective father of the bride who is deeply involved in orchestrating a budget-conscious wedding for his daughter Sarah, often clashing with logistical challenges while insisting on traditional responsibilities like footing the bill for a modest ceremony.[2] As a Long Island construction worker, Kenny's character embodies working-class anxieties and paternal devotion, drawing on Sandler's signature blend of earnest goofiness to highlight the film's comedic tensions around family expectations.[5] This marks another collaboration for Sandler with director Robert Smigel, with whom he co-wrote the screenplay in Smigel's feature directorial debut, building on their shared history from Saturday Night Live and previous projects.[11] Chris Rock plays Kirby Cordice, the affluent and laid-back father of the groom Tyler, a high-rolling Manhattan surgeon whose upscale lifestyle contrasts sharply with Kenny's frugality, fueling much of the film's humor through their escalating rivalry.[12] Rock's performance emphasizes Kirby's smooth-talking demeanor and effortless charm, particularly in scenes where his comedic timing amplifies the father-in-law dynamics, turning potential conflicts into sharp-witted banter.[2] The central pairing of Sandler and Rock as opposing personalities benefits from their real-life friendship, which originated during their Saturday Night Live tenure in the early 1990s and has informed their on-screen chemistry across multiple films, allowing for authentic interplay that underscores the movie's exploration of class and generational divides.[13] Their undeniable rapport, honed through decades of mutual respect as comedians, elevates the rivalry scenes, making the characters' clashes feel both relatable and hilariously exaggerated.[5]

Supporting cast

Rachel Dratch portrays Debbie Lustig, the wife of Kenny Lustig (Adam Sandler), offering a grounded family perspective amid the escalating wedding chaos by enduring her husband's penny-pinching schemes with patient support.[14][8] Steve Buscemi plays Charles, Kenny's eccentric cousin and the rabbi who officiates the wedding, injecting quirky humor through his peculiar antics and observational gags that heighten the family's dysfunction.[8][4] Allison Strong stars as Sarah Lustig, Kenny's daughter and the bride, whose optimistic dynamics with her fiancé Tyler (Roland Buck III) underscore the young couple's brief backstory of a long-term relationship tested by their families' clashing priorities.[4][15] Noah Robbins appears as Noah, Kenny's emotionally unstable teenage son recently out of rehab, whose extensive list of personal "triggers" generates comedic tension and amplifies the principal fathers' conflicts over family responsibilities.[8][4] Other notable supporting players include Jim Barone as Uncle Seymour, a double amputee who lost his legs to diabetes and is mistaken for a World War II veteran, whose condition inspires recurring physical comedy, alongside various extended family members whose antics further contribute to the wedding preparations' disorderly ensemble dynamic.[8][4][16]

Production

Development

The development of The Week Of began as part of Netflix's ongoing partnership with Adam Sandler and his production company, Happy Madison Productions. On April 25, 2017, the project was officially announced as the fourth film in this collaboration, with Sandler set to star alongside Chris Rock in a comedy about two fathers navigating the chaos of their children's wedding.[17] The announcement highlighted Robert Smigel's involvement as both director—marking his feature-length directorial debut—and co-writer, with production slated to start in summer 2017 on location in Long Island, New York.[18] The screenplay was co-written by Smigel and Sandler, drawing from Sandler's initial concept of a middle-class father insisting on funding his daughter's wedding despite financial strains and clashing with the wealthier father of the groom.[19] This premise set the tone for the film's exploration of family tensions and class differences during wedding preparations. Pre-production included early attachments for the principal cast, with Sandler and Rock confirmed at the announcement, followed by initial casting calls for supporting roles.[17]

Filming

Principal photography for The Week Of commenced in July 2017 on Long Island, New York, and concluded on August 29, 2017, encompassing roughly six weeks of shooting.[20] Key filming sites centered on Long Island to evoke the film's suburban setting, with notable exteriors and interiors captured at Temple Beth Sholom in Roslyn Heights for the wedding sequences, Northwell Health LIJ Hospital in New Hyde Park for the medical-related scenes, and the Church of St. Rocco at 18 3rd Street in Glen Cove, which functioned as the production's base camp and hosted additional interior work.[21][20][22] This location selection stemmed from development aims to portray a genuine New York suburban atmosphere.[23]

Release

Distribution

The Week Of premiered worldwide on Netflix on April 27, 2018, as a Netflix original film.[1][3] The film was produced under an exclusive multi-picture deal between Netflix and Adam Sandler's Happy Madison Productions, marking the fourth collaboration between the two entities.[18] This agreement facilitated a straight-to-streaming distribution model, bypassing traditional theatrical release and making the 116-minute comedy available exclusively on the platform.[5][24] The rollout was simultaneous across Netflix's global footprint, reaching subscribers in over 190 countries on launch day.[25] To accommodate international audiences, the film included subtitles and dubbed audio tracks in multiple languages, aligning with Netflix's standard localization practices for original content.[26] Initially, there was no physical media release, and the film has remained streaming-exclusive without subsequent DVD or Blu-ray editions in any markets.[27][28]

Promotion

Netflix released the first teaser trailer for The Week Of on February 1, 2018, featuring Adam Sandler and Chris Rock as the competing fathers-in-law, highlighting the comedic tension of their daughters' wedding preparations.[29] A second trailer followed on February 27, 2018, expanding on the film's chaotic premise with scenes of mishaps and the duo's clashing personalities.[30] The official full trailer debuted on April 3, 2018, just weeks before the film's premiere, emphasizing the bromance between Sandler and Rock amid the wedding mayhem.[31] Publicity efforts included interviews with Sandler and Rock discussing their experiences filming on Long Island, where much of the production took place, including the challenges of shooting in real locations like local homes and venues.[32] The stars appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on April 23, 2018, sharing anecdotes about reuniting for the project and their stand-up comedy backgrounds.[33] Additional interviews, such as on Good Day New York, featured the cast reflecting on the film's improvisational humor and family dynamics.[34] Netflix's social media campaigns amplified the promotion through behind-the-scenes clips on YouTube, including a video of the funniest on-set moments shared by Sandler and Rock on May 1, 2018, showcasing cast cameos and improvisations.[35] The streamer leveraged its platform for streaming-focused ads, positioning the film as an ideal binge-watch for comedy fans. Promotional posters centered on the fatherly rivalry between the leads, with imagery of Sandler and Rock in tense yet humorous poses amid wedding chaos.[3] The film was marketed as the fourth collaboration in Adam Sandler's Netflix original slate, building on his previous successes with the service to attract his established fanbase.[36][1]

Reception

Critical reception

The Week Of received mixed to negative reviews from critics, who praised the on-screen rapport between leads Adam Sandler and Chris Rock while criticizing the film's execution and originality. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 26% approval rating based on 27 reviews, with an average score of 4.1/10.[5] Metacritic assigns it a score of 41 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[37] Critics frequently highlighted the natural chemistry between Sandler and Rock as a bright spot, noting their ability to generate charm and banter amid the chaos.[38] Specific comedic moments in family interactions, such as the awkward pride and tension during wedding preparations, were cited as occasionally effective in capturing relatable parental anxieties.[2][39] However, the film faced substantial backlash for its overlong runtime, lazy scripting, and heavy reliance on stereotypes, which many felt undermined its potential as a class satire. Variety described it as "another lazy, overlong comedy Netflix subscribers can half-ignore while doing the dishes," emphasizing its derivative Father of the Bride riff.[8] Reviewers pointed to caricatured portrayals, like Sandler's stereotypical Long Island everyman, as contributing to mean-spirited gags that prioritized easy laughs over insight.[2][40] In the context of 2018, The Week Of was often compared unfavorably to other Adam Sandler Netflix comedies like The Ridiculous 6, which earned a 0% on Rotten Tomatoes, as part of a pattern of critically panned but commercially viable streaming fare.

Audience response

Audience reception to The Week Of has been mixed, with viewers appreciating its family-oriented humor while critiquing its formulaic elements. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an audience score of 35% based on over 500 verified ratings, reflecting a divide among casual viewers who found the wedding chaos relatable but the plot predictable.[5] Similarly, IMDb users rate it 5.2 out of 10 from more than 26,000 votes, with many praising the chemistry between Adam Sandler and Chris Rock as a highlight that elevates the lighthearted father-in-law dynamic.[1] Fan reactions often highlight the film's strengths in delivering feel-good comedy amid everyday absurdities, such as the escalating mishaps of a backyard wedding, which resonated with audiences familiar with Sandler's style. Positive comments on platforms like IMDb emphasize its heartfelt moments and mature themes for a Sandler project, making it a comforting watch for fans of his collaborations with Rock.[41] However, detractors frequently note its lack of originality, describing it as an unremarkable entry in Sandler's Netflix output that relies too heavily on slapstick without deeper laughs.[42] Viewership data for The Week Of, released in 2018 before Netflix's increased transparency on streaming metrics, remains unofficial, but it contributed to the strong overall performance of Sandler's films on the platform, which have amassed over 61 billion viewing minutes since that year. Estimates place it as a moderate performer in Sandler's catalog, buoyed by repeat watches from dedicated comedy enthusiasts rather than blockbuster peaks.[43]

References

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