My quick rating - 6.5/10. If you walk into Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice expecting a straightforward crime caper, you’re already in the wrong timeline. Literally. BenDavid Grabinski wastes no time drawing us in, opening with Ben Schwartz’s Symon casually singing Oliver and Company while tinkering away, only for a glowing doorway (never a good sign) to interrupt the vibe and immediately escalate things to gunfire. It’s the movie equivalent of “this meeting could’ve been an email,” except the email is a bullet.
From there, the film structures itself in what feel like chaotic “chapters,” kicking off with The Party. And any party hosted by Keith David as Sosa is automatically operating at a different level of cool. But the real engine of the movie is the buddy dynamic between Vince Vaughn’s Nick and James Marsden’s Mike. What starts as a simple “chloroform this guy” job (as one does) quickly spirals into a plot that refuses to sit still, layering in time travel, shifting loyalties, and enough double-takes to make you question whether you missed something. Or whether the movie is just messing with you on purpose.
My guess? It probably is.
Vince Vaughn is having an absolute blast here, especially juggling multiple versions of Nick without missing a beat. He leans into his fast-talking charm but adds just enough variation to keep each version distinct. Marsden, on the other hand, plays the audience surrogate. The guy who is painfully aware that none of this makes sense and isn’t afraid to say it. Watching him try to process time travel logic in real time is half the comedy. His chemistry with Eiza González just works despite the madness, even when the script is gleefully pulling the rug out from under them.
And you often see me mention Dolph Lundgren. Here he plays The Barron, who shows up as if he strolled in from a completely different (and much more serious) movie, which somehow makes him even funnier. The film thrives on these tonal clashes. Dark humor, sudden violence, and absurdity all collide in ways that shouldn’t work, but absolutely do.
By the time you hit the After After Party, yes, that’s a real thing, and eventually the After After After Party (they really commit to the bit), the movie is fully hammering its own ridiculousness. There are running jokes (including an unexpected obsession with Gilmore Girls references) that somehow never overstay their welcome, and the final stretch delivers a surprisingly long, energetic action sequence that feels like a reward for keeping up.
Technically, the film keeps things tight. The directorial vision from Grabinski is assured and stylish but never intrusive, and the cinematography by Larry Fong is just fancy enough to make the picture stand out. The editing deserves kudos as well. Because with a story like this, one wrong cut and the whole thing collapses into nonsense. Instead, it (mostly) holds together, even when it’s intentionally trying not to.
Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice crackles with wit, fun energy, and genuinely clever time-travel twists. It’s messy in a “we meant to do that” kind of way, powered by a cast that fully commits to the insanity. And yes, it even sneaks in a proper sequel tease. Surprised? In this universe, why stop at one timeline when you can break a few more?






