I've finally had a chance to watch Passengers. How soon a
movie makes its way to DVD is a good indication of how well it did at the box
office, so that sounds a lot like 'not too well'. I know a couple of other Spacefreighters
ladies reviewed the movie a while ago, but I thought it was worth adding my two
cents' worth.
You can read Pippa's review here
and Laurie's here.
They fundamentally disagreed with each other 😊
Actually, a friend of ours recommended the title to us, so Pete
and I sat in the lounge and watched it on the big TV.
WARNING: There will be minor spoilers.
Credit: Sony pictures - starship Avalon |
First things first: I LOVED the space ship. It takes the
form of a double helix spiralling its way through space at half the speed of
light, and it's
pretty realistic.
It's traveling in normal space, scheduled to arrive at its
destination after 120 years, carrying five thousand passengers and about 260
crew to set up a new colony. But things go wrong when the ship encounters an
asteroid belt. Jim (Chris Pratt) is shaken out of suspended animation and finds
himself the only person awake on the ship, with 90 years to go. Aurora
(Jennifer Lawrence) joins him after he's been alone for a year. The way in
which she joins him is probably the most contentious – and most important –
issue in the whole movie. Some saw it as 'stalkerish' and 'creepy'. But I felt
it was all about the essence of what makes us human, and how we consider
choices. The audience is presented with the unspoken words – what would you
have done?
From there, the plot became a bit predictable. There's not
too many places you can go with two people in a faulty spaceship carrying over
five thousand other souls. The part where Jim gets the knowledge he needs to tackle the faults is a
little too convenient – and conveniently transient, as Pippa pointed out in her review.
When the credits started to roll I turned to Pete and said,
"I can see why it wasn't so popular at the box office." He agreed
with me. Perhaps it's because we have been conditioned to expect science
fiction movies to have lots of excitement and adventure. Although things hotted
up a bit in the last third of the film, I have to agree with reviewer Owen Gleiberman,
who said, "There isn’t much to
“Passengers” besides its one thin situation…. it's like a castaway love
story set in the world's largest, emptiest shopping mall in space." Read the full review here.
Thanks for your take, Greta. Sorry you didn't find the movie terribly enjoyable. I actually have that poster hanging on my office wall, but then, I've made no bones about how much I loved the film. :)
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