Save Yourselves! doesn't do anything unexpected with its one-joke premise -- but fortunately, that one joke turns out to be consistently funny anyway. It's through these earnest scenes between the childlike duo, mixed with standard-issue hipster humor of mason jars and vegan meals, that the filmmakers manage to maintain the disarming edge of "Save Yourselves!," even when the running time feels stretched and the one-note concept wears thin. Save Yourselves! is now playing in U.

Allie Gemmill is the Weekend Contributing Editor for Collider. Review: Hipsters vs. aliens in 'Save Yourselves!,' a war of the worrieds Sunita Mani and John Reynolds in the movie "Save Yourselves!" ( Bleecker Street) Save Yourselves! movie reviews & Metacritic score: Jack (John Reynolds) and Su (Sunita Mani) are a hip Brooklyn couple who, like many of their friends, find themselves dependent on technology and unable to put d. Movie Review: In the charming alien-invasion comedy 'Save Yourselves!,' Sunita Mani and John Reynolds play a nebbishy Brooklyn couple stuck in rural New York when aliens invade Earth.

Save Yourselves!

Directed by Alex Huston Fischer, Eleanor Wilson. With Sunita Mani, John Reynolds, Ben Sinclair, John Early. A young Brooklyn couple heads to an upstate cabin to unplug from their phones and reconnect with each other. Blissfully unaware of their surroundings, they are left to their own devices as the planet falls under attack. A couple taking a week long sabbatical from electronics and technology, find themselves in the middle of an alien invasion with just their wits. But to put it mildly, the film is extremely prescient… especially as current events and being locked up. 'Save Yourselves!': Film Review .

Trailer Save Yourselves!

The movie's best special effect is Mani and Reynolds' chemistry. It's a breakout role for two young actors with strong comedy roots. Please consult the guidelines outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before watching movies inside theaters.

Review by Monique Thompson A young Brooklyn couple head to an upstate cabin to unplug from their phones and reconnect with each other. Blissfully unaware of their surroundings, they are left to their own devices as the planet falls under attack. Let's not mention we still have the last. If you haven't heard of the film and didn't read the first three paragraphs of this review you've still got that option so just look at my score and go.