When released, Passengers entered a cultural moment increasingly attentive to consent, power dynamics, and representation in media. Its central premise collided with ongoing conversations about how romantic narratives can romanticize coercion. In that light, the film’s failure is as instructive as its successes: it demonstrates how a high concept can be narratively elegant yet ethically problematic.
Passage through the Avalon is, in large part, the film’s triumph. Production design and cinematography create a believable, luxurious future: warm wood panels, diffuse ambient lighting, and the contrast between human-scale living spaces and the sprawling, clinical engineering areas of the ship. The set design allows director Morten Tyldum and cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto to stage isolation vividly — long, empty corridors, a quiet bar with a single patron, the muted grandeur of the ship’s amenities now inert.
Visuals and production design
Narratively, the survival act functions like a penance structure: danger externalizes moral peril and forces cooperation. The last act privileges spectacle (collapsing decks, emergency repairs, a daring spacewalk) over the quieter interpersonal consequences, which risks sidelining the most interesting ethical questions. The result is a film more interested in reconciling the audience to a happy ending than interrogating whether reconciliation is even possible.
Critical reaction to Passengers clustered — quite loudly — around its moral core. The question is simple: can a story about a nonconsensual awakening that leads to a romantic relationship be redeemed by later remorse and heroism? Many critics and viewers answered “no,” arguing that the film mishandles consent and attempts to paper over wrongdoing with chemistry and spectacle. The film, indeed, risks normalizing abusive behavior by privileging human loneliness and “true love” as rationales for violating another’s agency.