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Kick Back With 'Palm Springs,' A Witty Romcom About Fighting Despair
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There's an argument that a review of Palm Springs, new this weekend on Hulu, should just say, "Watch it; it's fun. Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti, romantic comedy hijinks — just watch it." That's as much as I knew about it, and I enjoyed seeing it reveal itself, and if you're willing to take my word for it, then off with you! Watch it; it's fun.
Now ... what to say to the rest of you, who need a little more, or who have already seen promotion for the film that you can't unsee. Promotion that gives away the premise.
"Groundhog Day at a wedding" is a piece of shorthand that wouldn't be a lie. More specifically: Nyles (Samberg) is trapped in a time loop, much like Groundhog Day's Phil (Bill Murray). He spends every day at the same wedding at the same venue in Palm Springs, where he sees the same people (including a girlfriend he doesn't particularly like), and then the next day, he wakes up, and he does it all over again. There's a woman at the wedding named Sarah (Milioti), who's the bride's sister. Nyles is used to seeing her and talking to her; she's part of the routine. But every version of this day is a little different, and on one of them, an unexpected event yanks her into the time loop with him. So now she's waking up over and over again on the day of the wedding too, and she can't get out of it either, and they have only each other to talk to about it, since everyone is blissfully at the wedding for the first and only time, every day. Just the way Sarah always was for Nyles, until this happened.
Palm Springs was directed by Max Barbakow and written by Andy Siara, and while it has the stamp (literally and figuratively) of the Lonely Island, Samberg's longtime comedy shop, it's also a little bit of a different shading of his persona.
Particularly if you see it a second time, you pick up a cleverness in what Samberg is doing with his weary portrayal of Nyles. This is a man who has learned that nothing has consequences, and (unlike Phil) he mostly doesn't like that (at least by the time we meet him), and he doesn't exploit that fact to be mean; he exploits it to be weird. He can make strange wedding speeches, hook up with whomever he wants, try anything, and none of it matters. So he drifts through the day, again and again, without purpose. It's dangerous to seek metaphors that are too literal, but if you made this a metaphor for how depression feels to some people, you wouldn't be far off. Nobody understands what's happening to you and nobody understands how you feel, nobody except you can see the futility of every day, so you can only sit back and wonder at the foolishness that makes people care about anything.
And of course, into this mess comes Sarah. Milioti is an actress who hasn't had a lot of exactly-right roles in film and television; she can play very sunny and sweet as she did on How I Met Your Mother, but she's a more interesting and emotionally angular actor than that. Here, you really get her as a perfect romantic comedy lead and yet a fresh one. This is a woman who can get past her own shock and bafflement to seek a way to live in the time loop without losing herself, but she also can slice through Nyles' self-pity and his (frankly earned) nihilism. Because it doesn't take long for her to adopt a very different attitude toward this version of confinement than Nyles has. Hers is something more like, we gotta get out of here.
Palm Springs features a terrific supporting turn from the reliable J.K. Simmons as Roy, a man whose part in all this it would be unsporting to explain too much, except to say that the role calls on Simmons' ability to play dry and wise observers of the world, but also his flair for pure comedy. (Nobody but me will likely care that this is a reunion of Simmons and Peter Gallagher, who plays Sarah's father and also co-starred on Broadway in Guys and Dolls when Gallagher was Sky Masterson and Simmons was Benny Southstreet, right? Right, right.) Simmons improves 99 percent of the projects he appears in, and it turns out a full-length buddy comedy featuring him with Andy Samberg is a feature film I would very much watch in the future.
The thing about a gimmick like time loops is that the thing itself will not sustain interest. We've seen that — Groundhog Day, sure, but also in Edge Of Tomorrow, Happy Death Day and more. It comes down to what you do with it. The good part of Groundhog Day for me has always been the lighter observations about what this kind of life would make possible: amazing people by predicting what was about to happen, mastering a skill through endless practice, and so forth. But the ugly part has always been the way Phil manipulates Rita (Andie MacDowell) intentionally, and the way it all winds up being about his redemption, which solves his problem and gives him everything he wants.
Palm Springs is still a comedy, don't get me wrong. But it's using the time loop idea to think about something interesting. A time loop is a form of meaninglessness, really, and fighting that requires figuring out what you're going to get out of bed for every day. It's not that once Nyles is nice and is redeemed, all his problems are solved. He's mostly pretty nice all along. It's that both of these people have to decide how to add some kind of stakes to their own lives, because if they wanted to, they really could just float in the pool and drink at the wedding forever, and they could even have each other's company along the way.
But that, it turns out, isn't much of a life, staying in the same place, seeing the same people, having the same routine, even if it means nothing particularly terrible happens to you either. We gotta get out of here, indeed.
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