How to watch Palm Springs Movies Online: Hulu release dates, trailers, reviews and more

How to watch Palm Springs Movies Online: Hulu release dates, trailers, reviews and more

Watch the movie "Palm Springs" online to fall in love, die, repeat. Andy Samberg and Christine Milioti play a couple of A Hulu original film about two crazy kids who repeat the same day over and over and over and over and over and over again. It reminds me of "Groundhog Day," but Bill Murray is not the only one reliving the endless time loop, it extends to Andie MacDowell.

The Palm Springs film is set on a wedding day attended by carefree Niles (Andy Samberg) and reluctant bridesmaid Sarah (Christine Milioti). They are drawn to each other, but things get complicated the next morning when they realize they cannot escape the venue, themselves, or each other

Palm Springs had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2020. The film received rave reviews and was purchased by Hulu and Neon Films in the largest deal in Sundance history.

The charming but not overly sweet romantic comedy is exactly the kind of summer movie we need right now as the pandemic continues. And it feels very timely. A film about the difficulty of doing the same thing every day is a perfect metaphor for isolation.

Here's everything you need to know about how to watch "Palm Springs" online.

If you're in the US, you can watch "Palm Springs" on Hulu right now; it became available on July 10 at 12:01 AM ET.

Unfortunately, Hulu is only available in the U.S.

The Palm Springs trailer is a very appropriate setting for Cyndi Lauper's song "Time After Time." Sarah (Cristin Milioti) wakes up on Tara and Abe's (Camila Mendes and Tyler Hoechlin) wedding day. Then she meets Niles (Andy Samberg) and sparks fly. Unfortunately, their romance takes a seriously twisted turn. Then Sarah wakes up again on her wedding day. She discovers that Niles is also reliving the day in an endless loop. How will the two of them get out of it?

Palm Springs has been well received almost universally. Here are some of the comments from film critics:

"Rolling Stone" magazine: "Before you dismiss Palm Springs as Groundhog Day at a wedding, realize that you're watching this sneakily provocative romantic comedy in a way the filmmakers never intended. The pandemic has made the idea of repeating the same day over and over again with the same people (but this time wearing masks) all too real.

Time: "...... The film is very light on its feet, never intrusive or didactic, even as it asks us to confront a piercing truth about the elusive meaning of love and happiness."

Vulture: "Cute as Milioti and Samberg's Hello Kitty. chemistry would have been almost off-putting if not for a few obvious facts waiting in the wings to spoil things.

Entertainment Weekly: "At its core, the film is too in love with love, or at least its messy, time-hopping ideals, to be a true discomfort comedy of its kind. So perhaps it lacks courage, but in this moment in which we live, who can begrudge a happy ending?

The Curvy Film Critic: "Christine Milioti and Andy Samberg are comedy gold, with precious, powerful, playful, palpable chemistry."[27

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