In 2017, Hulu made television history by becoming the first streaming network to win the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series, thanks to the phenomenon that was The Handmaidâs Tale.
While Netflix has largely cornered the streaming market on original moviesâand even managed to persuade A-listers like Guillermo del Toro, Alfonso CuarĂłn, and Martin Scorsese to come aboardâHulu is starting to find its footing in features too, securing the exclusive rights to a large number of Oscar-nominated movies like A Real Pain and Anora. Below are some of our top picks for the best movies (original and otherwise) streaming on Hulu right now.
Still looking for more great titles to add to your queue? Check out WIREDâs guides to the best TV shows on Hulu, best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Disney+, and the best movies on Amazon Prime. Don't like our picks, or want to offer suggestions of your own? Head to the comments below.
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Uma (Radhika Apte) and Gopal (Ashok Pathak) are a pair of social misfits who suddenly find themselves living as husband and wife in a tiny shack in Mumbai following an arranged marriage. Living in a new city, surrounded by strangers (her new hubby included), and longing to fight back against the path that society has set for the life ahead of her, Uma begins to rebel against the way the world has always been. Eventually, she becomes a semi-monster of her own making. Director Karan Kandhari uses all the cinematic tools at his disposal to turn his directorial debut, which premiered at Cannes, into an unforgettably funny dark comedy that uses movie magic to offer its own social critique of why the old-school treatment of women very much deserves to be a thing of the past.
After winning the 2008 Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for Jason Reitmanâs Juno (which also just began streaming on Hulu), Diablo Cody was essentially given a blank check to write any movie she wanted. She opted to pen this female-centric horror movie starring Megan Fox as the eponymous teenage cheerleader of every guyâs (and girlâs) dreams. Unfortunately for her would-be suitors, she also happens to be possessed by a demonic succubus who now must feast on the flesh of unwitting guys to survive. On the plus side, Jenniferâs geeky bestie Needy (Amanda Seyfried) is dead set on exorcising the demon possessing her pal. The film was a box office dud and mostly derided by critics, but in 2025 those things just demonstrate that it was ahead of its time. Critical reassessments of the film have led to it being held in much higher regard today and hailed as a feminist masterpiece. Who knew?
Itâs been more than a decade since Keanu Reeves introduced audiences to one of cinemaâs most enigmatic vigilantes: John Wick, a very talented hit man who is forced out of retirement after a couple of low-level Russian gangsters decide to steal his beloved 1969 Mustang and kill his puppy Daisy in the process. What the men fail to realize is that John isnât just your average mark. The film has since spawned three sequels, a prequel TV series (The Continental), and the recent spinoff film Ballerina, starring Ana de Armas. A fifth film is on the way.
Itâs hard to take a story about a homicidal toy monkey all that seriously. Fortunately for audiences, Osgood Perkins doesnât really try. The directorâs follow-up to Longlegs (see below) is an adaptation of an old Stephen King short story about a wind-up toy that wreaks bloody havoc wherever it goes. Theo James stars in dual roles as twin brothers whose childhood was haunted by the toy and who now, as adults, must do their best to end its murder spree. Perkins creates some seriously memorableâand goryâset pieces yet never loses his sense of humor.
H.I. McDunnough (Nicolas Cage) is a petty criminal who falls in love at first sight with Edwina (Holly Hunter), the police officer tasked with taking one of his many mug shots. Following a prison stint, H.I. swears off his criminal past, and Ed leaves the police force so that they can marry and raise a family. But when it turns out that Ed is infertile, H.I. hatches a kidnapping plan to make her dreams of becoming a mother come true. The Coen Brothers were still in their cinematic infancy with Raising Arizona, their sophomore effort, which remains hilariousâand endlessly quotableâto this day.
While the title of this thriller might be lost on anyone who has never held an actual camera that isnât also a phone, it does not lessen the impact of this taut psychological thriller. Robin Williams is absolutely haunting in the role of Sy Parrish, a lonely photo technician (remember those?) at the local Walmart-ish big box store who becomes obsessed with one of his regular customers and what he believes is their ideal family. But when a crack appears in that seemingly picture-perfect family life, Syâs unhinged side begins to emerge in increasingly terrifying ways. That Williams didnât earn an Oscar nod for his performance remains one of the Academy Awardsâ most glaring snubs.
Two-time Oscar nominee Michael Shannon is one of this generationâs most celebrated actors, and the scope of his talent is on full display in this engrossing psychological thriller from Jeff Nichols, who has featured Shannon in every one of his films. Here Shannon stars as Curtis LaForche, a loving husband and father who is being haunted by apocalyptic visions of an impending storm. To protect his family from the danger he believes is coming, Curtis becomes obsessed with creating an underground shelterâalienating his friends and family and losing his job in the process. When Curtis shares his visions with his wife, Sam (Jessica Chastain), she is convinced that he is suffering from the same paranoid schizophrenia his mother began experiencing at about the same age. But what if his visions are real?
Steven Soderbergh remains Hollywoodâs premier experimental filmmaker, making a career out of embracing new technologies and narrative styles to keep audiences on their toes. In the case of Presence, he offers a totally unique take on the haunted house genre. In the wake of a tragedy, a familyâparents Rebekah (Lucy Liu) and Chris (Chris Sullivan) and teenage kids Tyler (Eddy Maday) and Chloe (Callina Liang)âmove into a new house, only to realize there is something else living amongst them. Itâs a slow burn in the best way possible, and a film that will keep you guessing.
Five years after Danny Boyle and Alex Garlandâs post-apocalyptic triumph with 28 Days Later, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo took the reins to continue telling the saga of the Rage Virus that has overtaken London. In this case, the US military has taken control of the island of Great Britain in an attempt to restore order and keep the survivors safe. The story focuses on a familyâparents Don (Robert Carlyle) and Alice (Catherine McCormack) and kids Tammy (Imogen Poots) and Andy (Mackintosh Muggleton)âwho might hold the key to a cure. It makes a perfect preshow to a screening of 28 Years Later, the newest entry in the series, which reunited Boyle and Garland.
Just over two years after Barbara Waltersâ death, documentarian Jackie Jesko delves into the life of the trailblazing journalist who knew exactly which questions to ask someone to elicit an emotional responseâand how to get under her interview subjectsâ skin, too. Many of the people Walters both inspired and occasionally annoyed (see: Katie Couric and Oprah Winfrey) offer their insights into Walters and the important role she played in breaking down barriers for the female journalists who came after her.
Like Office Space before it, Mike Judgeâs Idiocracy wasnât an immediate hit upon its release in 2006. But it has gained a much wider and more devoted following since then. A totally average man (Luke Wilson) and woman (Maya Rudolph) agree to take part in a top-secret experiment that will see them sleep for a year then reemerge into a new world. But the duo are forgotten about when the military base where theyâre hibernating shuts down. When theyâre eventually rediscovered in 2505, the world has degraded in such a way that Wilsonâs Joe is now the smartest man in the worldâa problem for Joe, and the world at large.
Tom Cruise returned to theaters in May as Ethan Hunt for what is presumably his last go-round as the secret agent the government turns to for its most unenviable missions. While Mission: ImpossibleâThe Final Reckoning was breaking box office records, Hulu went back to the beginningâand then someâby bringing the first six (of eight total) M:I movies into their library. If you want to watch them in order, youâll kick it off with Brian De Palmaâs 1996 original. If youâd rather go straight to the seriesâ best entry, choose 2018âs Fallout, which marks Christopher McQuarrieâs sophomore outing as director of the franchise. (He has directed all of the films since 2015âs Rogue Nation, including The Final Reckoning.) The sixth film is the first to feature a returning director, who opted to pair the action with more emotion than previous entries had seen. Between that and an extended cast that includes Henry Cavill and Vanessa Kirbyâplus the return of Michelle Monaghanâit marks a different kind of Mission for Hunt.
We previously included The Order in our list of âThe 10 Best Movies You Missed in 2024,â and we stand by that claim. Fortunately, the time has come for Hulu subscribers to right that wrong. Justin Kurzel directs this gritty tale of corruption and extremism from the Pacific Northwest to Middle America. Terry Husk (Jude Law) is an FBI agent who believes that a series of daylight robberies heâs investigating are linked to a local white supremacist group that is attempting to fund a war on America. The investigation eventually leads him to Bob Mathews (Nicholas Hoult), the unlikely leader of The Order, a neo-Nazi group. That the film is based on a true story makes it all the more heartbreaking.
Eight months after winning the Best Actor Oscar for Oppenheimer, Cillian Murphy delivered just as powerful a performance in this adaptation of Claire Keeganâs 2021 novella. It brings Murphy back to the kind of films heâs best known forâquiet, character-driven indies about working class people. Here, he plays Bill Furlong, a coal merchant, husband, and father of five daughters who witnesses a disturbing scene with a young girl at the local convent and school for girls. When he feels compelled to investigate further, and question the young girlâs treatment, Bill puts a target on his own backâand that of his familyâwhen the conventâs Mother Superior (Emily Watson) believes Bill is asking too many questions. Ultimately, despite veiled threats from the sister, his compassion overwhelms his fear of retribution.
Between It Follows, The Guest, and Watcher, Maika Monroe has become this generationâs scream queen. She adds to that genre resume in this offbeat thriller from Osgood Perkins (son of Psycho star Anthony Perkins) playing Lee Harker, an FBI agent who has a sixth sense when it comes to murder investigations. But something feels eerily familiar when sheâs asked to investigate a string of murder-suicides that some of her colleagues believe is the work of a possible serial killer. Monroe delivers yet another great performance as Lee, but it's Nicolas Cage who delivers the most unhinged (to the point of being unintentionally comical) performance here.
Alien: Romulusâwhich is set between the events of Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)âis about a scenario youâve probably heard before: a group of people journeying around space find an abandoned space station, which they decide to investigate. This, of course, leads them right into the arms/faces of the Alien franchiseâs regular cast of extraterrestrial baddies (see: facehuggers, chestbursters, and Xenomorphs). Writer-director Fede Ălvarez, who helmed the 2013 Evil Dead reimagining, manages to bring new life to a decades-old franchise with this sequel.
TimothĂ©e Chalamet shines in James Mangoldâs Bob Dylan biopic, which earned eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor for Chalamet. The film follows Dylanâs early career, beginning in January 1961âwhen he hitchhiked from Minnesota to New York City to meet and perform for his musical idol, Woody Guthrie. Thatâs also where the then-19-year-old met folk musician Pete Seeger (played by Edward Norton, who snagged a Best Supporting Actor nod), who became one of Dylanâs earliest champions. Seeger was also instrumental in Dylanâs game-changing performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, which is where the movie culminates. Whether you know everything or nothing about Dylan, itâs a fascinating story.
Anora, who prefers to be called Ani (Best Actress winner Mikey Madison), is an exotic dancer whose services are called upon when Vanya (Mark Eydelshteyn), the spoiled son of a Russian oligarch, comes to the club where she works, asking for a dancer who speaks Russian. Their VIP room evening turns into a (paid) sexual encounter outside the club ⊠then another, then another. During a spontaneous trip to Las Vegas, the two get married, with Ani believing she has found her happily-ever-after. Vanyaâs parents are less optimistic and make it clear that Vanya has two choices: his marriage or their money. Director Sean Baker, the critically acclaimed filmmaker behind The Florida Project (2017) and Red Rocket (2021), has yet again made a powerful dramedy that highlights the plight of marginalized characters.
âIf youâre Sly Stone, thereâs no blueprint for what comes next.â Thatâs the basic idea behind Sly Lives!, Questloveâs brilliant follow-up to the equally compelling Summer of Soulâthe rockumentary that won the Rootsâ drummer an Academy Award in 2022. He could well be headed for Oscar recognition once again with this deep dive into the rise and fall of the groundbreaking band Sly & The Family Stone, and the higher standards to which Black artists have traditionally been held. Questlove knows what heâs talking about, and so he serves as a perfect guide into this side of the music industry. The film was hauntingly timed, too. Stone passed away on June 9.
Though it arrived in theaters in 1979, Alien has lost none of its potency in the intervening yearsâwhich isnât something most fortysomethings can say. By now you probably know the story by heart: The crew aboard the spacecraft Nostromo, including warrant officer Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), put a presumably slight pause on their trip back to Earth in order to respond to a distress call from a nearby planetoid. But what they discover is a bizarre alien life-form that seems to delight in knocking off crew members in newâand frequently terrifyingâways. Can you say Facehugger? Or Chestburster? Alien is also noteworthy for being the film that kicked off a bona fide, and legendary, sci-fi/horror franchiseâand introduced the world to Ridley Scott, who changed the genre game yet again with his next feature, Blade Runner. If youâre itching for more Alien content, Noah Hawleyâs new prequel series, Alien: Earth, is currently streaming on Hulu, too.
Kieran Culkin continues his run as Hollywoodâs most lovable scene-stealer in this buddy-ish road trip comedy written, directed, produced by, and costarring Jesse Eisenberg (who earned an Oscar nod for the screenplay). David (Eisenberg) and Benji (Culkin) travel to Poland in honor of their late grandmother, a Holocaust survivor. Despite going down two very different paths in life and their opposing personalities, the two find a way to reconnect and prove that blood is thicker than water. Culkin nabbed his first-ever Oscar for the role, while Eisenberg was gifted Polish citizenship.
Nicolas Cage does what Nicolas Cage does best (read: chew quite a bit of scenery) in this postapocalyptic thriller in which a father, Paul (Cage), and his twin sons Thomas (Jaeden Martell) and Joseph (Maxwell Jenkins) are three of the only people remaining on earth. Making this scenario even more challenging is the fact that they are terrorized at night by homicidal creatures dead-set on ridding the planet of all humans. When Thomas goes missing, Paul must venture out into the night to find himâan ill-advised adventure that ultimately leaves Paul wounded, fighting for his life, and relying on his sons to keep them all alive.
June Squibb is the action hero you didnât know you needed. In the decade since her Oscar-nominated turn in Alexander Payneâs Nebraska, the 95-year-old actress has become one of Hollywoodâs most in-demand actors. Here, she plays the eponymous grandma who is swindled out of $10,000 by a phone scammer targeting elderly citizens. When the authorities seem reluctant to take any real action, Thelma grabs a gun and her motorized scooter and takes the law into her own hands. Best of all? This vigilante comedy is based on writer-director Josh Margolinâs own grandmother.
At an unspecified date in the near future, US Space Command Major Roy McBride (Brad Pitt) learns that mysterious power surges originating from an old space station are posing a threat to Earth. When he finds out that the activity can be traced back to the Lima Projectâa search for extraterrestrial life led by his father, H. Clifford McBride (Tommy Lee Jones), who has been lost in space for 30 yearsâRoy journeys into the unknown. When cowriter/director James Gray announced the project, he very boldly stated that he was hoping to create âthe most realistic depiction of space travel that's been put in a movie.â Did he succeed? Watch and make your own determination.
In the 1970s, Jack Delroy (David Dastmalchian) is a late-night talk show host who is constantly chasing Johnny Carsonâs ratings but simply cannot compete. He scores the highest ratings of his career when he sits down for an interview with his beloved wife, Madeleine (Georgina Haig), who is dying of cancer. When she passes away shortly afterward, Jack halts production on his show entirely. When heâs eventually ready to come back to work heâs even more determined to compete with Carson, so he decides to throw an occult-themed Halloween show for the ages, complete with a psychic (Fayssal Bazzi), a parapsychologist (Laura Gordon), and a possessed teen (Ingrid Torelli) who seems to know more about Jack and Madeleineâs relationship than he bargained for. Many critics have deemed Late Night With the Devil the best horror movie of 2024âand with good reason.
Pamela Adlonâs directorial debut does for motherhood what Bridesmaids did for marriage. New Yorkers Eden (Ilana Glazer) and Dawn (Michelle Buteau) are lifelong best friends with decades of history and traditions but now find themselves facing very different chapters in their lives. Dawn, who is struggling with postpartum depression, is trying hard to balance the demands of being a working mom and partner to her husband, while Eden has never been burdened by such demands. But when she discovers sheâs pregnant after a one-night stand and determines that she is ready to be a single mom, their friendship begins to fracture in ways they never would have imagined. Glazer and Buteauâs chemistry as BFFs is undeniable in this brash comedy that isnât always pretty, in part because of its brutal honesty.
Just three months after Poor Things scored four Oscar wins in 2024, Yorgos Lanthimos got much of the gang back togetherâincluding Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, and Margaret Qualleyâfor Kinds of Kindness, which debuted at Cannes. Unlike his previous works, this one is an anthology film, or what came to be marketed as a âtriptych fable.â Just like the writer-directorâs other movies, it is born from a place of absurdist comedy and over-the-top performances from its stars. Sex cults, reanimation, sandwiches, murder-happy bosses, and John McEnroeâs smashed tennis racket all play a part in the wildly fun festivities.
Sydney Sweeney produced this religious horror flick and also stars as Cecilia, a young nun (yep, you read that right) whose traumatic brush with death has convinced her that God saved her for a higher purpose. When she is invited to join a convent in the remote Italian countryside that assists older nuns at the end of their life, she happily acceptsâthen quickly comes to realize that all may not be what it seems.
Enzo Ferrari (Adam Driver) is a man who should have it all: the one-time race car driver and founder of the Ferrari car company oozes charm, wealth, and excitement. But behind the scenes, the walls are closing in on him. Set during the summer of 1957, Michael Mannâs biopic finds Ferrari (the man) on the verge of bankruptcy, mourning the death of his son, and desperately trying to hide his past indiscretions from his estranged wifeâwho helped build the car company and who holds the key to his financial future. Though the film earned mixed reviews, it does a solid job of telling the complex story of a complicated man. But its biggest selling point is PenĂ©lope Cruzâs bravura performance.
Nearly 60 years into his career as a filmmaker, Wim Wenders managed to make one of his best films yet with Perfect Daysâwhich is saying a lot when you consider that this is the same director who made Paris, Texas (1984) and Wings of Desire (1987). Hirayama (KĆji Yakusho) is a toilet cleaner in Tokyo who is blissfully content with the simplicity of his life, as it allows him the time to indulge his more personal passions: music (heâs an avid collector of cassette tapes and allows his favorite music to set the soundtrack to his life), books, and nature. The movie is not punctuated by any overly dramatic storylines; just the quiet interactions that Hirayama has with those around himâfamily, coworkers, total strangersâand the way those interludes impact him. Itâs that poetic simplicity, and Yakushoâs wonderful performance, that gives the film its heart.
Writer-director Ava DuVernay finds a way to yet again change the language of cinema with what is both a biopic and a historical document. The movie is based on the life of Isabel Wilkerson (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor), the first Black woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in journalism for her work at The New York Times. It follows Wilkersonâs journey to write her 2020 book Caste: The Origins of Our Discontentsâa project that took her from the US to Germany to India to research the troubling history of each countryâs caste system and the parallels that exist between them.
On January 11, 1998, 22-year-old comedian Tomoaki Hamatsu entered an apartment in Japan where he lived, nude and with no human contact, for 15 months as part of an understandably controversial game show titled Susunu! Denpa ShĆnen. Hamatsu had no idea his life was being broadcast. This riveting documentary delves into not just how anyone ever allowed this experiment to happen, but the real-world effectsâcultural, psychological, and beyondâit had on both Hamatsu and the tens of millions of viewers who were somehow drawn into witnessing his on-camera abuse.
Between her starring roles in The Zone of Interest and Anatomy of a Fall, German actress Sandra HĂŒller made it clear that when it comes to scripts, she knows how to pick âem. In this compelling courtroom drama, HĂŒller plays a successful writer turned murder suspect when her husband (Samuel Theis) is found dead outside their home on a snowy day. Ultimately, it might be her son (Milo Machado-Graner) and/or his guide dog (Messi, the movieâs real star) who ultimately seal Sandraâs fate. Itâs a smart, twisty, and well-acted mystery that will keep you guessing.
Itâs Always Sunny in Philadelphiaâs Glenn Howerton is practically unrecognizable in this immensely entertaining recounting of the rise and fall of BlackBerryâthe must-have cell phone that had the world entranced before the iPhone came along. Howerton costars as Jim Balsillie, the very real negotiator who, alongside Mike Lazaridis (Jay Baruchel), gave the world its first smartphone. Which is a lot more dramatic (and darkly humorous) than it sounds.
Ozark star Julia Garner reunites with director Kitty Green (The Assistant) for this taut psychological thriller in which BFFs Hanna (Garner) and Liv (Jessica Henwick) decide to backpack their way through the Australian outback. When theyâre offered the chance to live and work at a remote hotel in order to replenish their dwindling bank accounts, they jump at the chanceâdespite Hanna feeling that something isnât quite right with their place of employment or its clientele. Sheâs on to something. Garner has played one badass character after the next, and The Royal Hotel is no exception.
New Girlâs Jake Johnson makes his feature directorial debut with this wonderfully weird and occasionally dark meta comedy, which he also wrote and stars in. Tommy Walcott (Johnson) is living a pretty ordinary existence until heâs approached by Andy Samberg (as Andy Samberg), who offers him the chance of a lifetime: the opportunity to win $1 million as part of a massive reality competition. The only thing Tommy needs to do is not get murdered for 30 days, despite being hunted by dozens of contract killers whose job is to ensure that no contestant walks away with the big prize. The catch? Contestants can only be killed when theyâre entirely alone. So Tommy takes it upon himself to partner up with another contestant, which is where Maddy (Anna Kendrick) comes in. Since they both have a cool mil to gain and a lot to lose (aka their lives) if they donât triumph, they make a pact to spend every waking moment of the next 30 days together. Just when you think you know where Self Reliance is headed, it goes ahead and surprisesâand in the best ways possible.
Home invasion thrillers are never in short supply, but the really effective ones are hard to come by. Kaitlyn Dever shinesâand proves yet again that she can shoulder the weight of an entire filmâas Brynn Adams, a seamstress living a solitary existence in her childhood home and mourning the loss of her mother and closest friend. When she wakes up one night to discover that someone is in her house, that someone turns out to be something. A home invasion thriller with extraterrestrials might not have been on your must-watch Bingo card, but No One Will Save You is 93 minutes well spent.
Miguel (Tyler Dean Flores) is 17 years old and has never been in a fight. So when he learns that heâll be moving away from the place and people he has known all his life, he enlists his pals to help him get into his first fistfight. Itâs probably not the first coming-of-age ritual to spring to mind, but itâs certainly among them. A talented cast of young actors make this comedyâcowritten by Shea Serrano and Jason Concepcionâimmensely watchable.
Hal Porterfield (Christopher Abbott) has just been handed the keys to the castle following the death of his hotel magnate father. Rebecca Marin (Margaret Qualley) is a dominatrix who believes she deserves some of the creditâand half the cashâthat comes with Halâs new CEO position. Sexual politics have rarely played out as twisted, or darkly funny, as they do in this mesmerizing, and often claustrophobic, thriller from Zachary Wigon.
Environmentalism meets heist movie in director Daniel Goldhaber's thriller about a group of young people who try toâas the title impliesâexpose the fragility of the oil industry. It's not often that a movie examining the fight against the climate crisis is also an edge-of-your-seat adventure, but here those elements come together beautifully. (You can give cinematographer Tehillah de Castro a bit of credit for that.) Smart, prescient, and nearly unprecedented, How to Blow Up a Pipeline is more than worth the stream.
Raine Allen-Miller's directorial debut offers a playful twist on the typical rom-com. Yas (Vivian Oparah) and Dom (David Jonsson) are both twentysomethings reeling from recent break-ups. After a chanceâand rather awkwardâfirst meeting, the pair spend a day wandering around South London, bonding over their shared experience, finding cheeky ways to get over the mourning of their previous relationships, and maybe discovering that romance is not dead after all.
Think of it like Gilliganâs Island, but with more class commentary and vomit. When a bunch of rich people head out to sea on a luxury yacht, their plans are thwarted when a terrible storm leaves many of them stranded on a beach where none of their money or power can help them survive. That already gives away too much, but suffice to say, if you like The Menu-esque critiques of the excesses of wealth with just as many dark-comedy twists, this Oscar-nominated film is right for you.
Noa (Daisy Edgar-Jones) is a single woman who is on the lookout for a partner but tired of the online dating scene. When she meets Steve (Sebastian Stan), a quirky, handsome stranger, she decides to give him her number. The two hit it off on the first date and eventually find themselves making plans to spend a weekend awayâwhich is when Noa realizes that Steve has been hiding a few disturbing details about himself. Ultimately, Fresh stands as a lesson in the horrors of dating in the digital age (both real and imagined).
Given the existence of Harold Ramisâ near-perfect Groundhog Day, it takes a whole lot of chutzpah for a filmmaker to add another picture to the infinite-time-loop rom-com canon. But writer-director Max Barbakow did it anyway with Palm Springs, and audiences are thankful he did. Building upon the rules originally established in Groundhog Day, Palm Springs offers its own unique twist on the story. Instead of showing one person (Bill Murrayâs Phil Conners) slowly being pushed to the brink of insanity because heâs the only one who seems to be experiencing the phenomenon, Palm Springs has three wedding guestsâNyles (Andy Samberg), Sarah (Cristin Milioti), and Roy (J. K. Simmons)âliving the same day again and again and working together to find a way out of it.