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Two Weeks to Live

Two Weeks to Live 1943

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Two Weeks to Live Plot Summary

Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for Two Weeks to Live (1943). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.


Abner Peabody, Norris Goff, runs the Jot ’Em Down general store in Pine Ridge, Arkansas with a steady pride that masks a string of small-town struggles. When he unexpectedly inherits railroad stock from his Uncle Ernest, he suddenly becomes the sole owner of what he believes to be the Chicago and Ohio Railroad, a prospect that fills him with cautious optimism. His enthusiastic store partner, Lum Edwards, Chester Lauck, leaps at the chance to turn this windfall into something bigger. Lum hatches a bold plan: sell off chunks of the stock to the town’s residents to raise capital, enough to claim the land where the railway sits and to secure control of the surrounding area. The idea excites the community and the two men gather almost ten thousand dollars from gullible investors, a sum they believe will buy them real property and real power.

They head to Chicago to meet Uncle Ernest’s lawyer, Herbert Rawlinson as J. J. Stark Sr. They discover, to their shock, that the railroad they’ve bought is nothing more than a broken-down local line, with assets barely topping two hundred dollars. The iron rails and worn cars reveal a fragile dream, not a thriving empire. A telegram is sent back to Pine Ridge advising them to abandon the land purchase, but by the time the message arrives, the land has already been bought. The setback lands like a punch, and the two partners stagger from the attorney’s office in despair. In a comic twist of fate, Abner slips on the stairs and tumbles to the ground, triggering worry about his health. After a visit to a doctor, a case of mistaken identity, and a note that he is dying with only two weeks left to live, Abner’s world tilts toward a new kind of urgency—the urgency of quickly turning a fortune before time runs out.

Back at the hotel, a window-washer named Gimpel, Irving Bacon and his imaginary dog drift into their room, offering outlandish schemes to make money fast. With Abner’s health in jeopardy, Gimpel suggests taking on high-risk, high-reward jobs, arguing there’s no future if the two weeks are all they have left. The first proposed gig is to test a new drug that supposedly alters personality, a second is to perform as a death-defying gorilla dancer, and a third—an offer to spend a night in a haunted house for a handsome payday. There’s also a nerve-wracking daredevil stunt, swinging from one airplane to another while they are midflight, which would bring in thousands. Each failed attempt leaves them poorer and more desperate, especially after the mysterious contractor disappears with the initial five thousand dollars. With little left, Gimpel and the duo flirt with another plan: sue the building for unsafe stairs, appointing Lum as Abner’s lawyer. Lum misreads a settlement offer and lands only a pittance, sixty-five dollars, in a moment that shows the limits of luck and the quirks of small-town justice.

A stock buyer named Elmer Keaton arrives at the hotel to press for refunds, revealing that the stock is practically worthless. Lum coercively pushes Abner toward a final, money-minded opportunity, convincing him to spend the night in the haunted house for a chance at a substantial payoff. But Mrs. Carmen, the schemer behind the plan, intends to blow the place up and claim a life-insurance payout on her husband. She slides Abner a violin case and a good luck charm, carefully concealing a bomb in the case and a corresponding name on the charm to help the coroner identify a body as hers if things go wrong. Abner, unaware of the danger, travels to the wrong house, and the scene becomes a farcical tragedy when the home is occupied by Nazi spies. He flees in a panic, the bomb detonates, and the attempted attack destroys the house and the spies inside.

As the two-week mark nears, a lucrative offer surfaces: a chance to ride a rocket to Mars for ten thousand dollars. Abner, still convinced his days may be numbered, hesitates to commit, while Lum also teeters on the brink of a life-changing leap. Then a cold, cruel twist of fate arrives in the form of a phone call. Gimpel answers the line in their room and learns that Stark has sold the Pine Ridge land for twenty thousand dollars. With the news, Stark heads toward the launch pad, while Lum takes his place at the rocket’s controls. Abner, upon hearing the good news, collapses—he sits down precisely on the launch button, sending Lum off into space. The rocket falters and crashes back to Earth, landing in Mars, Iowa, in a spectacular comic reversal that leaves the two improbable dreamers to pick up the pieces of a plan that was almost a fortune, almost a lifetime, and almost certain to go off without a hitch.

Two Weeks to Live Timeline

Follow the complete movie timeline of Two Weeks to Live (1943) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.


Abner inherits the railroad stock and pairs with Lum

Abner Peabody becomes the sole owner of the C&O Railroad after inheriting stock from his uncle. Lum Edwards quickly steps in as a partner and proposes selling stock to the town to raise money. Their plan is to buy the land around the railway and its surroundings to secure their stake.

Pine Ridge, Arkansas

Raising funds and heading to Chicago

Lum's scheme raises nearly $10,000 from selling stock to local residents. With the funds in hand, they travel to Chicago to confront Ernest's attorney, hoping to culminate the purchase. They believe they are backing a genuine Chicago and Ohio Railroad venture.

Pine Ridge, Arkansas; Chicago, Illinois

Chicago exposure: the C&O is worthless

In Chicago they discover the assets are virtually useless, worth no more than about $200. The land has already been bought, and their telegram to Pine Ridge telling them not to buy arrived too late. The dream begins to crumble as reality intrudes.

Chicago, Illinois

Abner falls ill and learns he is dying

The two partners leave the attorney's office in despair after the discovery of the shabby assets. Abner trips on the stairs and is urged to see a doctor. A case of mistaken identity at the doctor's office leads to the shocking news: Abner is dying and has only two weeks left to live.

Two weeks left to live Chicago, Illinois

Gimpel the window-washer brings a risky cure

Back at the hotel, a window-washer named Gimpel enters through the window with his imaginary dog and proposes risky schemes. He argues that Abner should take high-risk jobs since he is near the end of his life. The idea is to squeeze as much money as possible while time remains.

Chicago, Illinois

First job: tester of a mind-altering drug

Abner's first dangerous assignment is to test a drug that is said to have a personality-changing effect. The project promises big pay, but the risks are high and unclear. The encounter marks the beginning of a string of reckless gigs.

Laboratory

Second job: a perilous gorilla dance act

Next, he is hired to perform a death-defying gorilla dance, a stunt that pushes his nerves and courage to the limit. The pay is good, but the danger is real and immediate. It continues the pattern of desperate, high-stakes gigs.

Performance venue

Haunted-house offer: a night for money, a trap of fear

A mysterious offer puts him at a haunted house for a night for $1,000, but Abner refuses, citing fear of the dark. A more dangerous dare follows: a risky aerial stunt where the organizer disappears with $5,000, forcing a fresh start. The scheme to monetize fear continues to backfire.

Haunted house / airfield

Suing the stairs and a bungled settlement

Gimpel pushes for a lawsuit against the building for unsafe stairs, appointing Lum as Abner's legal representative. Lum's inexperience shows as he misreads a settlement offer, thinking $10,000 is only $10 and ends up settling for a mere $65. The case highlights their mounting missteps.

Hotel/Building

Stock buyers arrive and fuel another risky plan

Elmer Keaton, a representative of the stock buyers, comes to demand their money back. Lum convinces Abner to spend a night in the haunted house to raise funds, while Mrs. Carmen hatches a plan to profit from life insurance by blowing up the house.

Pine Ridge, Arkansas

Mrs. Carmen's bomb plot and the talismans

Mrs. Carmen outfits Abner with a violin case and a good luck charm before sending him into the haunted house. Unbeknownst to Abner, the case hides a bomb and the charm bears the name of her deceased husband for a corpse's identification.

Haunted house

The wrong house and the explosion

Abner ends up at the wrong house, which is occupied by Nazi spies. When he spots the spies, he throws the case and flees as the bomb detonates, annihilating the house and killing the spies inside.

Haunted house

A Mars-Rocket offer and a fatal hesitation

With two weeks almost up, Abner is offered $10,000 to ride a rocket to Mars. He initially accepts, then hesitates, realizing he may not live long enough to complete the mission. The offer gnaws at him as time ticks away.

Two weeks left to live Pine Ridge hotel

Lum falls sick and a fatal decision about the rocket

Lum comes down with a bad cold and a doctor concludes Abner is healthy, but Lum himself is dying. Lum decides to take the rocket ride instead of Abner, hoping for a final chance at fortune.

Hotel room

The land sale and the launch that goes awry

Gimpel answers the phone to news that Stark has sold the land for $20,000. Stark heads to the launch pad while Lum sits in the rocket, and Abner, hearing the news, accidentally sits on the launch button, sending Lum into space. The launch fails spectacularly as the rocket crashes back to Earth.

Hotel room / Launch pad

The rocket ends up on Mars, Iowa

The malfunctioning rocket crashes and lands in Mars, Iowa, ending Lum's ill-fated voyage. Abner's fortunes have shifted entirely due to the land sale, leaving Pine Ridge to ponder the strange chain of events that began with a simple stock inheritance.

Mars, Iowa

Two Weeks to Live Characters

Explore all characters from Two Weeks to Live (1943). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.


Abner Peabody (Norris Goff)

The earnest owner of the Jot 'Em Down store who becomes swept up in a string of get-rich-quick schemes after learning he’s dying. His optimism clashes with the harsh realities of a dilapidated railroad and an overambitious plan to acquire wealth. His willingness to take dangerous risks reveals a stubborn loyalty to Lum and a desperate hope to secure a future for Pine Ridge.

🎭 Anti-hero 💼 Enterprising 🤝 Loyal friend

Lum Edwards (Chester Lauck)

Abner’s partner in misadventure, eager but often clueless in business and law. He bungles settlements and misreads offers, providing comic tension and highlighting his bold but flawed approach. Despite his flaws, Lum remains a loyal ally whose schemes propel the plot and keep the duo moving forward.

🎯 Dreamer 📜 Aspiring lawyer 🤝 Loyal friend

Mrs. Madge Carmen (Kay Linaker)

A calculating widow who engineers the haunted-house plot to collect life insurance money. She masks malice with charm and uses the violin case bomb and a misleading charm to manipulate Abner. Her plan serves as the catalyst for the film’s climactic chaos and reveals the darker edges of the comic caper.

🧨 Bombmaker 🪄 Manipulator 🧾 Sly schemer

Omar Tennyson Gimpel (Irving Bacon)

A window-washer with an active imagination who injects questionable schemes into Abner’s life. He pushes the two-week death premise into a string of dangerous, money-making ideas. Gimpel’s presence accelerates plot twists and keeps the action moving through a series of risks.

🏃‍♂️ Daredevil 🧭 Opportunist 🗯️ Imaginative

J. J. Stark Sr. (Herbert Rawlinson)

Uncle Ernest’s attorney who accompanies the duo to Chicago and holds the legal keys to the railroad deal. He ultimately facilitates the land sale that yields a late windfall, though the move arrives with complications and tension with the stock buyers. His actions precipitate the investors’ demand for refunds and the story’s turn toward final outcomes.

🧑‍⚖️ Attorney 💼 Realist 🗺️ Strategist

Elmer Keaton (Stock Buyer Representative)

A stock buyer representative who arrives to demand repayment once the stock’s worth proves negligible. His presence heightens the pressure on Abner and Lum and accelerates the escalation of the plot as the consequences of their financial gambles come home to roost.

👔 Stock Buyer 📨 Demander 💵 Investor

Two Weeks to Live Settings

Learn where and when Two Weeks to Live (1943) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.


Location

Pine Ridge, Arkansas, Chicago, Illinois, Mars, Iowa

Pine Ridge, Arkansas is the rural home of the Jot 'Em Down general store where Abner and Lum hatch their early get-rich-quick plans. The town’s tight-knit, small-town rhythms anchor the plot as schemes unfold and fortunes swing wildly. Chicago, Illinois serves as the contrast, hosting Uncle Ernest's attorney and exposing the legal realities of the railroad deal. The story even spawns a space-age finale with a rocket to Mars, underscoring the characters’ wildly ambitious, far-flung aspirations.

🏡 Small Town 🏙️ City Setting 🚀 Far-Reaching Schemes

Two Weeks to Live Themes

Discover the main themes in Two Weeks to Live (1943). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.


💰

Greed & Risk

Abner and Lum pursue a quick fortune after inheriting railroad stock, pulling the town into increasingly dubious money schemes. Their plans depend on risky bets that promise large returns but collapse into disappointment. The pursuit of cash drives the plot, pushing the pair toward reckless decisions. The tone uses humor to critique how greed can distort good judgment.

🎭

Deception & Misunderstanding

The plot hinges on mistaken identities, a haunted-house ruse, and a bomb setup that fuels chaos. Lum mishandles settlements and legal matters, while fake sincerity and hidden motives push the characters into and out of danger. Deception repeatedly redirects the story, turning ordinary actions into comic complications. The characters’ misreadings propel the farcical energy of the film.

Luck & Mortality

Abner believes he has only two weeks to live, shaping his willingness to risk everything for money. A sudden windfall from Stark’s land sale alters the odds and momentum, showing how fortune can shift in an instant. The ending swaps despair for a new, unintended fate as Lum embarks on the rocket and the outcome tumbles in unpredictable ways. The countdown motif underlines how chance governs the characters’ lives.

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Two Weeks to Live Spoiler-Free Summary

Discover the spoiler-free summary of Two Weeks to Live (1943). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.


In the sleepy crossroads of Pine Ridge, Arkansas, the modest Abner Peabody tends the Jot ’Em Down general store with a quiet pride that belies the town’s lingering hardships. Beside him is his ebullient partner Lum Edwards, a dreamer whose boundless optimism turns every ordinary transaction into a promise of something larger. Their friendship is the kind forged in long, idle afternoons and shared ambitions, a bond that makes even the most mundane errands feel like the first steps toward a grander destiny.

When a routine doctor’s visit delivers a shocking misdiagnosis—only two weeks left to live—Abner suddenly faces a ticking clock that reshapes his outlook. Rather than succumbing to despair, he and Lum decide to wrestle fate into something outrageous: they head for the city with a plan to turn their looming tragedy into a chaotic hustle. The duo begins plotting a series of increasingly daring, crowd‑pleasing stunts, hoping that the thrill of danger and the promise of quick cash can eclipse the shadow of the diagnosis.

The film swings between bucolic charm and frenetic city energy, stitching together slapstick humor with a touch of dark absurdity. Abner’s grounded sensibility clashes delightfully with Lum’s flamboyant scheming, creating a partnership that is simultaneously earnest and reckless. As they chase ever‑riskier opportunities, the story captures the tension between small‑town simplicity and the glittering, unpredictable lure of urban spectacle, inviting the audience to wonder just how far two friends will go when time itself seems to be on sale.

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