In Passengers, Norwegian director Morten Tyldum (The Imitation Game) has directed a hotly anticipated summer flick, that from reports of early screenings, seem to have polarised ethical opinion on the responsibilities of its protagonist. I couldn't find any evidence of this in the trailer that I saw, so I was
Movie review: Passengers
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WAKEUP!: Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence star in the sci-fi movie, Passengers.
Soon after, the film unfortunately takes a turn for the worse. Rather than fully exploring the implications of a deliberately presented ethical dilemma, it opts to focus instead on another less cerebral problem - saving the ship from falling apart. Yes, the original malfunction has conveniently spread, leaving the ship in jeopardy. In reality, it provides an easy out for writer Jon Spaihts, who appeared not to know what to do with his excellent set-up. Spaihts also suffered a similar problem with his previous work, Prometheus, where an interesting premise is tantalisingly dangled in front of its audience but is not fully explored. A couple of set action pieces later and I was left scratching my head wondering why it was that I felt so deflated.
Technically, the film is beautiful to look at and the production value is top-notch. As a stock standard sci-fi, it's actually not bad and worth your money, if that's what you're after. If you're after anything more you'll be lamenting the lost opportunity.
Rating: 3 stars.
Passengers opens New Year's Day.