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In a comedy atmosphere, the movie follows, Kenny Lusting and Kirby Cordice, two different fathers who are highly opposite of each other, they are forced to spend a week in order to attend their children's wedding. They suffer that the week is not end and they see that this is the long week ever as the wedding day is not coming.
What we assume might turn into a patriarchal power struggle never reaches a boil, making for an overly sentimental movie that misuses the outsize talents of its two big stars.
More than most of the Sandler Netflix comedies, it almost feels genuine and heartfelt enough that you think you're about to like it and then it just goes wrong again.
Smigel 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.
If 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.