TL;DR – This is fun adventure flick in the tradition of saving the world being thrust upon young people. A fun cast, a good set up, and a good use of world building.
Score – 4 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
If you have read this site before you will know I am a fan of the alien
invasion genre, indeed Independence
Day is one of my top ten films of all time. So I am always interested
to see different takes on the genre, to see where they can take the formula. Today
we are looking at the newest Netflix film based around this very scenario, but
also more than many films I have seen this year, Rim of the World both knows what it is and what it wants to do, and
at all times it succeeds in these core drives.
So to set the scene, we open on the first day of summer camp as kids from
around Los Angeles and further come together to have a fun time away. Alex (Jack
Gore) is a space enthusiast who likes to live in his world of screens, but
there is a reason for his isolation. Zhen Zhen (Miya Cech) has secretly flown
across the Pacific to attend the camp in an attempt to overcome her disappointed
father. Dariush (Benjamin Flores Jr.) is full of bluster, the rich kid that has
it all, and cares more about his sneakers than other humans, but then it is all
a shield. There is also Gabriel (Alessio Scalzotto) who no one quite knows why
he is here. Rim of the World adventure camp is full of zip lines, canoe rides,
and camp counsellors that may have needed more of a background check before
starting work, so your usual summer camp. However, while all that is happening
the International Space Station is being destroyed because entering high orbit
is an alien mothership and as people will find out as the sky explodes, they
are not here to make new friends.