Released: 21st December 2016
Length: 116 Minutes
Certificate: 12A
Director: Morten Tyldum
Starring: Chris Pratt, Jennifer Lawrence, Laurence Fishburne and Michael Sheen
With two big names at its centre, Passengers aims to close
out 2016 with a contained, solitary trip through the cosmos. It’s been
subjected to quite the marketing blitz but the film simply can’t make a lasting
impression.
Passengers takes place aboard the Avalon, a ship travelling
towards an idealistic new home on the colony of Homestead II. For no apparent reason,
engineer Jim Preston (Chris Pratt) awakens from hyper sleep, finding himself
the only passenger on the vessel to do so. He discovers that he woke up ninety
years too soon, condemned to a lonely life before the ship reaches its
destination. With only a suave android bartender (Michael Sheen) for company
and his options running out, he makes the extremely dubious decision to wake up
a woman named Aurora, all the while running a lie that her pod also
malfunctioned. The film is made up of three separate which have their own
individual problems. First there’s the opening which sees Jim on his own,
trapped on an empty ship with no means of refreezing himself or reaching the
crew for help. Unfortunately, it doesn’t explore that isolation very
effectively, opting to use basic details to show the passage of time rather
than allowing Pratt to flex his acting ability. The second part is a love story
between Jim and Aurora; it takes up a good chunk of the film and really wants
the audience to believe that it is genuine, but because the morals are skewed,
it’s almost impossible to take seriously, not to mention the fact that Passengers
never explores the nasty undertones of selfishness and lust. The final act is
much like a disaster film in which a crisis aboard the Avalon must be resolved;
it’s here that a new character (Played by Laurence Fishburne) is suddenly
introduced and things hastily wrap up without pulling the audience into the
mystery of why it all happened. When the three acts are put together, the plot
of Passengers becomes rushed and messy, never finding a moment to make its
setting and characters work together properly.
Sadly, the characters don’t fare much better. Chris Pratt,
despite being planted in isolation at the film’s outset, feels flat here; even
his scenes with the other characters feel quite restrained, never rising to the
kind of intensity that would grip the situation. Jennifer Lawrence fares a lot
better, with her two major realisations being good moments that play to her
strengths as an actress. Despite this, both main leads also have very basic characteristics.
We know that Jim is an engineer and Aurora is a writer and journalist but they
never really get developed beyond those bases. Michael Sheen is a rather basic
commentator on the action and as for Lawrence Fishburne, his screen time is
horribly limited by plot contrivance, marking the second time since 2010’s Predators where a potentially interesting role for him has been snubbed by
limited material. Passengers mostly falls into the camp of the more mindless
blockbusters, not bothering to give its talented cast a solid script to work
with.
Much like many sci-fi flicks, Passengers is a looker but on
this occasion strong special effects can’t really make up for a broken story.
It’s not a complete lack of effort here; the backdrops are suitably stunning,
though these are often used in many of its contemporaries. Ambient music pieces
do well enough at selling the vast celestial setting and the ship itself gives
way to a fair few long shots to show off its scale. Unfortunately, a twisting
ship design is where much of the originality ends; Passengers borrows more than
its fair share of tropes from several contemporaries including the likes of
2001: A Space Odyssey, Sunshine, Prometheus and Gravity to name a few. Despite
its well-produced special effects, this hodgepodge of different components
brands Passengers as a rather derivative title, one which loses much of the
impact it could have had.
Passengers is a massively disjointed production which doesn’t
do enough to set itself apart from other major sci-fi films. Its one big idea
is built on something so morally bankrupt that it creates a massive disconnect
with everything that goes on. Some spurts of good acting from Lawrence and a
heap of special effects do hold it up slightly but it remains a mostly
misguided, unremarkable outing.
Rating: 2/5 Stars (Disappointing)