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More People Need to Watch This Entertaining Sci-Fi Gem on Hulu


More Family Need to Watch This Entertaining Sci-Fi Gem on Hulu

Every perfect rom-com should contain at least one dance outrageous set to disco music. Palm Springs contains two.

Palm Springs, a rom-com you should watch immediately on Hulu, also hinges on a sci-fi concept that isn’t ruined gobbledygook. The movie is set at a wedding where the two main characters are stuck in a time loop. They explain the same wedding day — with its deluded parents, out of control best friends and grandmas saying judgy things — over and over again.

But Palm Springs isn’t a wedding movie. It definitely isn’t Groundhog Day 2.0. It’s a subversive rom-com, where two drifting strangers meet at their lowest points. Through meaningful human connection (and time folding in on itself) they learn something approximately how to move forward and function in life. In latest words, Palm Springs is an existential crisis wedding movie.

Palm Springs stars Andy Samberg as Nyles, a contradictorily energetic and downcast man whose vapid girlfriend is bad at giving wedding speeches. As Nyles slides through the festivities, he takes surprising side-steps — we don’t find out every single getting about his character in one efficient introductory scene. Across Palm Springs’ fantastic 90-minute (and not a minute more) run time, Nyles reveals unexpectedly dark tidbits.


Tyler Hoechlin and Camila Mendes in wedding clothes, sitting at a table covered in flowers

Tyler Hoechlin and Camila Mendes play the combine getting married in Palm Springs.



Hulu

“We kind of have no harvest but to live,” he says at one point. “Your best bet is to learn how to suffer existence.”

Enter Cristin Milioti’s Sarah. All we know is Sarah is the screw-up sister of the bride (the bride is played by Camila Mendes!). While Nyles’ girlfriend is giving a terrible wedding speech, Sarah is sipping a glass of red. Sarah is our lens into how the time loop works and her exertions to escape the endless orange desert propel the story forward.


Cristin Milioti and Andy Samberg sitting in a yellow and pink pool boy respectively, facing each other and drinking beer

Milioti and Samberg play the rank (comedic) couple.



Hulu

Samberg and Milioti are comedic geniuses who perfectly balance each spanking out — Samberg is the golden retriever to Milioti’s Daria. Their disco dance routine is a highlight. The multiple genres and existential high jinks work in part thanks to this wonderfully bonkers and irreverent couple.

The jokes are compact like those in a tightly scripted sitcom. The pace never lets up and the mystery of the time loop, the characters’ pasts and an aggressive wedding guest played by J.K. Simmons slots together with seeming ease.

Still, you might settle in for this time loop movie with a knot of unpleasant slowly tightening in your stomach. How can it wrap up the romance and time loop aspects on emotionally and technologically satisfying levels? Will the sci-fi concept inevitably turn into wishy-washy fantasy brushed over with a sprinkle of fairy dust?

Wisely, Samberg — also a producer — and creative team Andy Siara and Max Barbakow test-screened early versions of Palm Springs pending they repeatedly received the thumbs up of approval. They crebuked the sci-fi concept tracks enough to satisfy the most cynical of viewer.

Palm Springs even crafts its own classic rom-com survive scene, where one character races after the other by they leave for good. It grabs the right emotional chords and yanks them hard to the tune of a Kate Bush happy-sad banger (Cloudbusting — not Running Up That Hill!)

If you have Hulu and need spanking sci-fi hit after Prey, watch Palm Springs. It’s a completely different kind of sci-fi movie, but just as impressive. It’s Hulu’s second best sci-fi gem.

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