Skip to main content

Passengers review

Pratt and Lawrence shine, but chemistry alone can't carry 'Passengers'

Passengers
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Ever since Jon Spaihts’ script for Passengers was included on the 2007 edition of the Black List – the annual list of the most popular, unproduced screenplays circulating around Hollywood – the sci-fi adventure has been saddled with high expectations. Various directors and stars have been attached to the film over the years, with the project eventually snagging two of most marketable actors in the industry right now, Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt, along with The Imitation Game director Morten Tyldum behind the camera.

Almost 10 years of built-up expectations can be a hard thing to live up to, though. And while Passengers provides an entertaining outer-space spectacle with good performances by its cast, it falls frustratingly short on exploring the big questions that its premise seems engineered to pose.

Recommended Videos

In Passengers, Pratt plays one of 5,000 colonists aboard the starship Avalon in the midst of a 120-year voyage to the far-off planet Homestead II. A malfunction causes his hibernation pod to wake him early – 90 years ahead of time – and he soon finds himself facing the prospect of living out his entire life alone on the luxury starship. He’s eventually joined by another passenger played by Lawrence, also pulled out of stasis early, and the pair are forced to contend not only with their intertwined fates, but a threat that puts the lives of everyone still sleeping aboard the ship in danger.

Charm and charisma can go a long way on the screen, and Lawrence and Pratt are brimming over with both in Passengers.

The two actors hold your attention well enough in their solo scenes, and their fantastic chemistry together covers up some of the film’s biggest problems. Lawrence is clearly the more experienced, engaging actor of the two, but Pratt is no slouch – particularly when he’s given the chance to play the sort of quirky, sentimental rogue he portrays so well. Both actors seem perfectly comfortable bouncing between the movie’s tonal highs and lows as they deal with their characters’ fluctuating relationship and the greater threat developing around them.

Tyldum and the film’s creative team also do an admirable job of crafting some breath-taking visual effects that make the movie feel fresh and stand out among the year’s crowded field of outer-space adventures. A scene in which Lawrence’s character deals with a sudden loss of gravity while swimming in the ship’s pool is particularly clever. This and other depictions of how the ship’s malfunction affects conditions inside it do a nice job of keeping the excitement high and momentum rolling along.

Passengers opts to take the easy route.

It’s that constant feeling of being propelled forward, however, that makes it difficult to feel satisfied with the way the film deals with what is arguably its most important premise: Two strangers facing the prospect of living out their lives together with only each other for company.

It’s obvious that Tyldum and studio Sony Pictures desperately want Passengers to be a space romance, following two people from very different backgrounds learning to love each other despite everything at play around them and a deep betrayal of trust that lingers between them. Unfortunately, that lighter, fluffier romantic theme is given priority over some of the elements with more compelling storytelling potential.

Passengers
Image used with permission by copyright holder

At various points in the movie, we’re given montages of the two characters growing closer and enjoying their time together, but the film glosses over the psychological effects of their isolation and how these two strangers really come to terms with the idea of living out their lives together – particularly when it comes to processing an unforgivable decision that brought them together in the first place. For the most part, everything just seems to fall into place perfectly for the romantic leads in Passengers, despite all the factors that could (and probably should) drive a wedge between them.

Passengers feels like it simply doesn’t have the time or desire to explore the deeper issues promised by its premise and many of the most impactful, intriguing events that would ensue. Every time there’s an opportunity to dive deeper into the psyche of two people stuck in such unimaginable circumstances, it opts to take the easy route by shifting its focus to the romantic arc and opportunities for sci-fi spectacle.

Their fantastic chemistry together goes a long way toward covering up some of the film’s biggest problems.

That’s not to say that those two elements don’t deliver, though.

Passengers tugs at your heart just as well as it captures your gaze, and Lawrence and Pratt make an exceptional on-screen couple. The beautifully crafted interior set pieces of the Avalon are nearly as impressive as the gorgeous outer-space imagery in the film. The highest praise for the visual design likely comes from the fact that the characters’ journey still seems wildly appealing despite everything we see them endure.

Although it doesn’t quite live up to the expectations that a decade in development limbo built up for it, Passengers still manages to provide an entertaining, escapist adventure in space that holds your attention while it moves along.

It’s when the film slows down and gives you the chance to really think about what’s happening on the screen that Passengers starts to feel like it’s just not living up to its potential.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
The best sci-fi movies on Hulu right now
Sadie Sink in O'Dessa.

Sci-fi fans, is it fair for Hulu to take away all of the Alien and Predator movies for a few months and then trot them back out as if they're fresh additions to the library? Those films should have permanent places among the best sci-fi movies on Hulu, rather than seasonal passes.
Before we eventually readmit some of those films to this roundup, we're throwing the spotlight on a new arrival called O'Dessa, starring Sadie Sink, who was recently cast in the next Spider-Man film. Our other pick for the month is The Prestige, which does veer into science fiction territory in a uniquely entertaining way. You can find these films and the rest of the best sci-fi movies on Hulu below.
If you're curious about what's available in science fiction on other streaming services, we also have guides for the best sci-fi movies on Netflix, as well as the best sci-fi movies on Amazon Prime Video. For more options, check out guides for the best new movies to stream and the best movies on Hulu.

If you're looking for more films to watch, remember that Hulu is part of the Disney Bundle. That includes the basic Hulu subscription (with ads), Disney+, and ESPN+, all for just $17 a month. That's a great deal, and you don't even have to travel to the future for it.

Read more
The best sci-fi movies on Max right now
The cast of Y2K looks worried.

Max doesn't always give science fiction fans many reasons to celebrate, but it's worth noting that the two latest additions to the best sci-fi movies on Max are both charting among the top 10 films on the platform.
Y2K, which hit theaters earlier this year, is Max's No. 1 movie at the moment and features Snow White actress Rachel Zegler in the leading role of a story set during the end of the world as we know it. The Terminator's presence in the top 10 is more of a surprise given its age. This isn't even the first time it's been on Max, but it holds up remarkably well for a 41-year-old movie. You can catch these films and the rest of the best sci-fi movies on Max below.
In need of some more streaming recommendations? We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Max, the best shows on Max, and what's new on HBO and Max that are worth looking through.
Y2K

Year: 2025
Runtime: 1 hour, 33 minutes
Director: Kyle Mooney

Read more
3 sci-fi movies on Peacock you need to watch in November 2024
A close-up of Marty McFly in Back to the Future looking at something outside.

Sci-fi is a genre that everyone loves, whether it’s hard sci-fi or lighter options that incorporate sci-fi themes. There are classic and new sci-fi movies available to stream on all the top streaming services, including Peacock.

For this month, there are three sci-fi movies on Peacock you need to watch in November. Chances are these are movies you watched when they were first released, dating back to the 1980s through 2010s. But these are films with great re-watch value as well, especially if you haven’t seen them in a while. One, in fact, is among the greatest sci-fi movies of all time.

Read more