28 Days

April 14th, 2000







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28 Days

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Still of Sandra Bullock and Alan Tudyk in 28 Days28 DaysStill of Azura Skye in 28 DaysStill of Alan Tudyk in 28 DaysStill of Sandra Bullock in 28 DaysStill of Sandra Bullock and Viggo Mortensen in 28 Days

Plot
A big-city newspaper columnist is forced to enter a drug and alcohol rehab center after ruining her sister's wedding and crashing a stolen limousine.

Release Year: 2000

Rating: 5.8/10 (21,171 voted)

Critic's Score: 46/100

Director: Betty Thomas

Stars: Sandra Bullock, Viggo Mortensen, Dominic West

Storyline
After getting into a car accident while drunk on the day of her sister's wedding, Gwen Cummings is given a choice between prison or a rehab center. She chooses rehab, but is extremely resistant to taking part in any of the treatment programs they have to offer, refusing to admit that she has an alcohol addiction. After getting to know some of the other patients, Gwen gradually begins to re-examine her life and see that she does, in fact, have a serious problem. The path to recovery will not be easy, and success will not be guaranteed or even likely, but she is now willing to give it a try.

Cast:
Sandra Bullock - Gwen Cummings
Viggo Mortensen - Eddie Boone
Dominic West - Jasper
Elizabeth Perkins - Lily
Azura Skye - Andrea
Steve Buscemi - Cornell
Alan Tudyk - Gerhardt
Mike O'Malley - Oliver (as Michael O'Malley)
Marianne Jean-Baptiste - Roshanda
Reni Santoni - Daniel
Diane Ladd - Bobbie Jean
Margo Martindale - Betty
Susan Krebs - Evelyn
Loudon Wainwright III - Guitar Guy
Katie Scharf - Young Gwen

Taglines: The Life of the Party... before she got a life.

Release Date: 14 April 2000

Filming Locations: Asheville, North Carolina, USA

Box Office Details

Budget: $43,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $10,310,672 (USA) (16 April 2000) (2523 Screens)

Gross: $62,198,945 (Worldwide)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Sandra Bullock spent some time in rehab clinic to prepare for her role in this film.

Goofs:
Continuity: When Gwen and Eddie are sitting in front of the TV, the ginger snap box on her right flips over on its other side between shots.

Quotes:
Gwen Cummings: Nobody gets hurt collecting coins.
Jasper: Everybody hurts everybody it's the human condition!



User Review

Accurate and smart; great performance by Sandra Bullock. *** out of ****.

Rating: 8/10

28 DAYS / (2000) ***

"28 Days" is one of the most accurate movies about alcoholism and drug addiction I can remember. The film does not glamorize or poke fun at its thematic content, but instead shimmers in truth depicting the problems in which a nowhere life can lead. Why would anyone want to see a movie about someone spending time in rehab, regardless of how well crafted it is? Because "28 Days" is an interesting, sometimes funny, and involving tale with empathetic, down to earth characters. Do not let this production pass by you without a watch.

The film's main character is named Gwen Cummings and is played by the talented Sandra Bullock. She lives a wild, crazy life with her boyfriend, Jasper (Dominic West). Gwen is an alcoholic and a drug addict, and does not get much support from her similar love interest. As the movie opens, the two get drunk at a club, come home, have sex, and put out a fire with wine. The next day, Gwen arrives late to her sister's wedding, only to destroy an expensive dessert and crash a limousine into a house.

The Gwen Cummings character is developed clearly and effectively. We learn about her lifestyle, recognize faults, and are shown a dark history through painfully real flashbacks. This is one of the things that make "28 Days" so involving. We discover elements about the character and notice inner changes as she learns of them herself. I really cared about this character.

Gwen is given a choice, she can serve jail time for her wrongdoing or can waive that and spend 28 days in a rehab clinic. She chooses rehab. The head counselor is Cornell (Steve Buscemi), who shows empathy but also coyness. Also present at his heath clinic is an assortment of characters who sing sappy melodies and share group love, including Daniel (Reni Santoni), with thick glasses and medical capabilities, Andrea (Azura Skye), Gwen's young roommate, and Eddie Boone (Viggo Mortensen), a famous baseball pitcher with a drinking problem.

Gwen's experiences in rehab seem truthful and accurate. Her withdrawals and agonies are realistic and knowledgeable. It is obvious the filmmakers and Sandra Bullock thoroughly researched the stresses and details of rehab.

Sandra Bullock performs with the right amount of immaturity and charisma. This wonderful actress is set free in this kind of heart filled role; she is best when the main character. Here, Gwen is free to tread the surface of the movie and still allows other characters to contribute to her defining.

About half way through, the movie losses its much needed focus on Gwen and drifts into detailing relationships, friendships, and other characters. While most of the events that take place surround Gwen, the movie was on the right track with its first half. "28 Days" is smart enough to recognize its blunder, however, and by the final scenes it regains the emotionally correct material and concludes with high standards.

The filmmakers are advertising it as a comedy, but only an isolation of sequences offer hilarity or slapstick. This movie teaches us lessons through its characters. And the lessons are well taught.





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