

“Time is running out. Are you ready to join the revolution?”
Budget
$20M
Revenue
$1M
An ordinary evening at Norm's diner in Los Angeles... Until a disheveled man with a bomb vest bursts in. The unnamed man (Sam Rockwell) claims to be from a future where AI has taken over the world and must assemble the right "team" from the diner's patrons to save humanity. He's tried 117 times before and failed. This time, his recruits are painfully ordinary: a woman just wanting pie, a bickering teacher couple, an Uber driver, and an antisocial girl in a princess costume . Their mission: stop a kid a few blocks away to prevent the AI apocalypse. But the obstacles—phone-addicted zombie-like humans and surreal entities—turn this simple task into a nightmare .
"Imagine a film that combines the AI apocalypse of The Terminator, the time loop of Groundhog Day, and the visual chaos of Everything Everywhere All At Once . Now put Sam Rockwell, a mad genius, at its center. Gore Verbinski's first film in a decade, Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die, pulls you into a progressively insane adventure that starts at a mundane diner. It makes you wonder: if we're this addicted to our phones, aren't we already on the path to an AI apocalypse? The film tackles everything from Gen Z's doomscrolling habits to school shootings, but never feels like a lecture . Instead, it aims to be 'therapeutic' . What does Ingrid's (Haley Lu Richardson) technology allergy, complete with her princess costume, signify? And most importantly, will this ragtag team succeed on the 117th try? If you're looking for a film that will make you laugh and think, don't miss this wild ride."
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