One of my guilty pleasures in this life is a little comedic rap
group that goes by the name of The Lonely Island. Raunchy, foul-mouthed,
immature, and exceptionally hilarious and clever, the group first made it big
when they all got jobs at Saturday
Night Live: Jorma Taccone and Akiva Schaffer as writers and Andy Samberg as
a featured player. After pioneering SNL
Digital Shorts and
essentially inventing the viral YouTube video, the group tried its hand at
feature film making to a lesser degree of success; while still funny, the two
films that they wrote, directed, and starred in, 2007’s Hot
Rod and
2016’s Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping,
were hardly what one could consider box office or critical hits. I’m still a
fan of both, however, and was therefore excited to learn that they had produced
another film called Palm Springs. While it was a bit less
straightforward comedy and much more romcom than I was expecting, I found this
Sundance hit to be a charmingly good time if not a wholly original one.
Have
you seen Groundhog Day? Of course you’ve
seen Groundhog Day; it’s a
classic. Palm Springs has a plot much like that of Groundhog
Day, but the kicker is that there is more than one person stuck in the time
loop in this story. Although the movie does get some mileage from this simple
tweak to the living-one-day-over-and-over-again premise, there is no denying
that a lot of the themes are almost identical to the those in the 1993 Bill
Murray classic. The quest to find meaning in a world free of long-term
consequences, the indifference towards life one develops when one becomes
essentially immortal, trying to get things right and become a better person…
it’s all there. But Palm Springs truly sets itself apart with its love story.
As I said earlier, this is a
full-on romcom instead of being another exercise in full-on silliness and
absurdity. The leads, Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti, have just as many
dramatic and romantic scenes as they do funny scenes, and they are both more
than up to the task (surprisingly so for Samberg… I didn’t know the guy could
act in addition to being funny). This is, undoubtedly, a result of the fact
that the guys in The Lonely Island only produced this film instead of writing
and directing in it as well (with the exception of Samberg, obviously). The
characters they play are not always likeable and their romance occasionally
seems a little one-sided, once skewed towards Sarah (Milioti) and then skewed
towards Nyles (Samberg), but the two still have great chemistry that kept me
invested. All in all, the premise might not be original, but what screenwriter
Andy Siara and director Max Barbakow did with the
premise was impressive. I should also mention one other big difference between
this film and its inspiration: While Groundhog’s
Day is
a family friendly PG, Palm Springs is an R-rated affair that you should NOT watch with
kids. It thoroughly earns its R rating with swearing, some sexual content, and
hard drug use. Also, Andy Samberg gets shot by J.K. Simmons with a bow and arrow
a couple of times, but we’ll let that slide.
Palm Springs is now available
on Hulu.
This
review was first published in The Keizertimes on September 4th, 2020. Visit at http://keizertimes.com/
Hindsight: I don't like the intro. Seems a bit too... unrelated, I guess? Like I say later, The Lonely Island only produced the movie... they didn't actually write it. Reads like I just wanted to talk about a group I think is funny before being sidetracked into actually doing my job of reviewing the movie. The actual review part of the review is pretty good, however.