Palm Springs.

Palm Springs, available now to stream on Hulu, is a smarter reboot of Groundhog Day, without the cameo from an impossibly young Michael Shannon, but in some ways still falls prey to the flaws of its inspiration. It’s a time-loop story that explicitly rejects the idea that there’s some moral lesson the trapped protagonists have to learn to escape it, and instead forces one of them to confront the fears that have led him to accept his fate rather than fighting it.

Nyles (Andy Samberg) is a guest at the wedding of his girlfriend’s sister, and when we first see the ceremony, he comes to the rescue of another of the bride’s sisters, Sarah (Cristin Millotti), as she’s fumbling through the maid-of-honor speech she didn’t realize she was supposed to deliver. This leads to them hooking up, but that’s interrupted by something else and, long story short, they both end up caught in a time loop where they must repeat the day of the wedding over, and over.

It turns out that Nyles has already been stuck in this time loop for a while, and that itself leads to all sorts of complications, especially once Sarah tires of it after a few trips around the carousel and decides she wants out – with or without Nyles. It turns out that they each have a significant secret that they don’t reveal to the other for quite some time, and while Nyles’ secret infuriates Sarah, Sarah’s secret is the bigger revelation. There’s also one more person stuck in the time loop, Ray (J.K. Simmons), who throws a wrench, or an arrow, into the works, although his role is best left undiscussed.

For a swift movie with a thin, familiar premise, Palm Springs does quite a bit right. It’s often very funny, and it’s a lot more than just Samberg playing the same character he always plays (Nyles is little more than Jake Peralta without a badge). The whole subplot with Roy, including how he got stuck in the time loop in the first place, is frequently hilarious, as are some of the smaller bits in the first half of the film. Millotti displays quite a penchant for comedy, especially when outraged – there’s an art to dropping an F-bomb and making it funny, and she has it – and by about halfway through the film, it’s clear that she is, or at least should be, the main character here. While flawed, she’s the stronger, smarter, and wittier of the two, and she’s ultimately the one who finds a possible exit from their infinite loop.

Which brings up the two major problem with Palm Springs: Why is Sarah romantically interested in Nyles? True, he’s far more into her than she is into him, but she is into him, even though their connection beyond the shared experience of the time loop is thin. She does far more to make their time in the loop more tolerable than he does. She’s also more willing to examine her own misdeeds than he is. She’s a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, right down to her petite frame and “doe eyes,” and if you couldn’t guess from the fact that she’s into the aimless protagonist who can’t get out of his own way that this script was written by a man, well, it was.

There are some minor technical issues with the way Palm Springs handles its time loop, although that’s true of just about every work of fiction that includes time travel. (I’ll argue forever that Connie Willis does it best in her Oxford series of novels and stories, because she makes time travel itself extremely difficult and limited in scope.) The script is so concerned with getting its two protagonists out of the loop that it sort of forgets everyone else involved, which is understandable Sarah’s secret is left unresolved in the end, even though it affects more characters than just her and Nyles, and, if you’ve seen the movie already, I’d love to know what you thought of Sarah’s grandmother’s last comment to her near the end of the film. But ultimately, it was the unconvincing nature of Sarah’s interest in Nyles that brought Palm Springs down from great to merely good – still very funny, and sometimes thoughtful, just not entirely plausible form any perspective other than Nyles’.

Comments

  1. Thanks for the write up Keith – I really enjoyed the movie, watched it twice (which I rarely do).

    Re: Grandmother’s last comment – thought it played on multiple levels, like the concerned well-wishing of a parent/grandparent towards a black sheep relative, but plays both ways considering the growth Sarah has gone through.

    Also, I think Sarah’s ability to liven up the time loop is likely due to the frame of time the movie is in – we didn’t see Nyles’ previous 1,000 days where he may have tried a lot of what they’re doing, but without a companion. Although, I do agree her character is far more compelling throughout.

    I really enjoyed the last scene between Roy and Nyles at the wedding – logically may not have fit perfectly, but does serve the purpose and pay off that arc.

    • Completely agree on that very last scene with Roy and Nyles.

      My question about Sarah’s Nana was whether she knew too, and maybe was also stuck in the time loop. I think it was purposefully ambiguous. I do think your interpretation makes sense, though.

    • If the grandmother is part of the loop, might this not have been the first time that Sarah found a way out? She asked in a very knowing way whether Sarah was moving on. If so, I wonder why she didn’t ask to go with her/them.

  2. Landon Horton

    Hi Keith. Speaking of time travel films, have you ever seen Primer? I highly recommend it, and I think it’d be right up your alley.

    • I have not. thank you for the suggestion.

    • +1 for Primer. Fantastically intricate (and just plain fantastic) movie for something that is basically a one-man show with no budget.

    • Primer might have broken my brain to the point where I’m scared to even revisit it.

      Thought “Palm Springs” was super enjoyable–great quarantine movie.

  3. My biggest issue with the movie is the decision to leave Roy behind and show him at the wedding with a non-looped Nyles. Now, if and when Roy leaves and goes to the next day, which Nyles will he meet? the one he had just met on his last day in the loop who didn’t recognize him/no anything about the loop, or the one who was in the loop and got out? Are we dealing with a multiverse now? Like if Marty McFly never got out of Biff Trump’s timeline?
    They could’ve tied it up neatly without a lot of the usual time-travel sci-fi questions, but it seems like they just wanted to add them back in, and now that’s all i think about when talking about the film, when we should be talking about the choreographed dance in the bar.

  4. There were some formulaic things that these types of movies and shows get bogged down on that brought me eye rolls – how many silly ways can we kill this person? Even Russian Doll fell into that trope, so it isn’t unique to Palm Springs, but it is something that seems required for loop movies.

    I agree on Andy Samberg – his character was Jake Peralta if he divorced Amy and left Brooklyn for a ‘fresh start’ elsewhere.

    My biggest issue with the movie revolved around Roy. First, JK Simmons was easily as underutilized as Grady Little’s postseason bullpen in a deciding game. But I also struggled with the logic that he’s a relative of the bride or groom but his family only came to the wedding every once in a while? That just didn’t make sense to me, unless he’s been in the loop so long that he somehow can convince his wife more times than not to not go to a wedding on the morning of the wedding. Been married close to 22 years and I’ve never been able to do that.

    Sarah’s secret and reveals (both of them) are really well done. I was captivated. While so much of the preceding felt to me like things I’ve seen before, that was fresh to me.

  5. The grandmother’s comment stuck out to me immediately and I think it’s definitely implied she’s stuck in the loop as well. If you recall in the beginning of the movie after Sandberg gives the first speech, the grandmother interrupts them both at a table and says “young man I’ve been to more weddings in my life than you’d e ver believe but that was by far the best speech I’ve ever heard” which I think sets up the later scene.

    It’s probably my favorite part of the film because it shows she’s been in there potentially just as long but never ruined the wedding or freaked out.

  6. Agreed with others that the grandmother is in the time loop. I think she’s probably accepted it in much the same way as JK Simmons had, only with a different perspective on it due to her age. JK hadn’t yet had the chance to see his kids grow up, so he takes the exit once it’s made available to him. The grandmother has already lived her entire life, so why take the exit and the unknown of death, when she can spend eternity with her family at a celebration?