It very much captures the thing that's so seductive and yet alienating about Southern California for people from more temperate parts of the country The marketing of LA as "the land of endless summer", eternal youth, arrested development No seasons, no change, no time passing
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It's not a particularly deep or subtle metaphor but it's a powerful one and one that draws a lot on cinematic language to drill it in What's so bad about just sitting in the pool in Palm Springs for eternity under that endless blue sky Isn't that how most people imagine Heaven
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Just like the slightly deeper thing about how he's specifically in Palm Springs as a guest at a wedding What's so bad about not wanting to move on from the wedding to the marriage Why should the party have to end, why should you have to leave the hotel and go back home
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(The whole thing implying that the sequel to Palm Springs would be titled Irvine and the line "I hope you find your Irvine" is one of those cheesy things that's mostly saved by the knowledge it's intentionally cheesy)
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Anyway that particular angle of the movie is very strong for me, as someone who's lived in multiple parts of the country, and who deeply sideeyes people from SoCal who talk about wishing they had "real weather" and thinks it would be fun to live someplace with snow
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As someone who is, like, violently opposed to the idea of being a responsible adult and raising kids in the suburbs and finding my Irvine I'm willing to accept this may make me a stunted broken person but I also just don't care
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