(Watch out for
spoilers!)
It
is ever so fascinating to consider how a big Hollywood film -- with just a small shift in emphasis --
can slip from one genre right into another.
With
a little clever tweaking and re-thinking, the beautifully shot and well-realized
Passengers
(2016) might have become a cinematic science fiction classic. It features a memorable setting (a sleeper
vessel in deep space), strong performances, and the kernel of a great,
intellectual theme.
But
in the end, it backs away from its best ideas at half-light speed.
Sans
the courage to really explore its narrative’s themes, however, Passengers
is ultimately just a bit more than a glorified (though enjoyable enough…) Hollywood
romance.
That this expensive film from director
Moten Tyldum and writer Jon Spaihts ultimately falls short of a lofty goal saddens
me a bit, not because I dislike happy endings, or romantic films in general,
but because Passengers, in its first hour, stakes a claim for legitimate
greatness as science fiction.
The
film concerns human nature, loneliness, and the way that people seek advantages
in all their relationships.
Passengers is a story about love, for certain, but one about
how, ironically, love can be a very selfish, hurtful thing in certain
circumstances.
After
contending with these worthy ideas, Passengers all but abandons them in its rock’em, sock’em third act, turning
to action tropes and a romantic playbook that supports the apparent necessity
of a conventional ending.
It
is a long-standing rule in big-budget genre pictures that a climax must end
with uplift and excitement, not reality, or emotional truth.
That
necessity to be “happy” harms Passengers, transforming this work
of art from an amazing experience to, simply, a better-than-average one. The film is not bad, for sure, but ultimately
it disappoints because it gets so close to being something more than a romantic
vehicle for two attractive, currently popular stars.
“I
woke up too soon.”
In
the future, a giant spaceship called the Avalon carries a crew of 258 and 5,000
passengers as it treks towards “the jewel
of the occupied worlds,” the natural and unspoiled Homestead Colony. All those aboard the huge vessel are asleep
in individual hibernation pods, and a complex web of ship’s systems tends to
their well-being.
After
Avalon’s run-in with an asteroid belt, the ship begins to malfunction, and the
ship’s computer seeks to restore balance to its damaged network of
operations. In one hibernation bay, Jim
Preston (Chris Pratt), a mechanical engineer, awakens suddenly. He finds that he is the only person conscious
on the ship, and that the Avalon is still a full ninety years distant from
Homestead II.
Thus,
Jim will spend the rest of his natural life alone, on a hunk of metal, in the
middle of nowhere.
At
first, Preston turns all of his intelligence towards re-activating the
hibernation pod. When that endeavor fails, he attempts to send a message to
Earth, only to learn that he won’t receive a response for 55 years. Jim also can’t contact the sleeping crew,
because the door to that section of the ship is hermetically-sealed, and
impregnable to drill, hammer, and saw.
Preston
attempts to keep himself occupied for a ime by watching movies, playing
basketball, dancing against a holographic game, and visiting with the ship’s
android bartender, Arthur (Michael Sheen). But after a full year, he grows
despondent and contemplates suicide.
And
then, Preston sees Aurora Lane (Jennifer Lawrence) in cryo-sleep. He reads all
about her in the ship’s files, and watches videos of her, as well. She is the
daughter of a famous writer, and a writer herself. Preston reads her books and then falls in love
with her.
He
struggles mightily with what to do, but ultimately decides to awaken Aurora, an
act which will end his loneliness but condemn her to his fate; 90 years on a
hunk of metal traveling the stars.
Aurora
awakens unaware of what has occurred, and Preston lies to her, telling her that
her pod must have malfunctioned too. As
they get to know one another, Aurora and Preston fall in love.
Then
one day, Aurora finds out the truth, even as the ship’s systems continue to
malfunction…
“We’re
passengers. We go where life takes us.”
Before
I write about why I believe Passengers ultimately misses its
mark, I want to discuss how terrific the first act is.
In
short order, we meet Jim -- a hollowed-out looking Chris Pratt, who has gone
too far losing weight -- and come to grips with his situation. He is alone, with no way to talk to anyone,
and no way to restore his hibernation pod.
Jim realizes that he will die of loneliness if he doesn’t do something,
and then grapples with a moral decision.
Should
he condemn a woman that he has fallen in love with to his fate? Can he live
with himself if does that? Can he survive without
doing that?
I
love that a movie as big, complex, and technologically-based as Passengers
is turns all of its drama on one human decision.
I’ll
also say this, I am ashamed of my fellow movie critics for their lack of
empathy in reviewing this movie.
Many
of these reviewers actually termed Jim a “stalker” and said that he was creepy
and perverted for wanting, simply, companionship, and seeking to find that
companionship with Aurora.
Let’s
review the facts again: Jim is alone, looking at a lifetime of isolation, and he
makes a terrible, selfish mistake. But he is not a stalker, and the movie doesn’t
advocate his actions, either. Jim is a man driven to the brink of suicide, who
is looking for any tether to keep him alive.
That doesn’t make what he does right in any sense, but it makes him
human. It makes him one of us. We are all flawed, and we all make mistakes.
Let’s
cut through the I’m-taking-offense-because-he’s-a-stalker bullshit
and face facts. All of us seek advantages in our relationships all the time,
fair or not. It’s not like Jim is alone
in making a bad choice, and then lying about that choice.
That’s
human nature.
We
use what we are given or what we have, to get what we desire. The heart wants
what the heart wants, and it’s not always right, or ethical. People cheat, lie,
color the facts, and deceive to maintain relationships that are important to
them. It’s a fact of human nature, and Passengers absolutely gets it
right. A good person, Jim, does
something immoral and unethical, because he is, purely and simply, desperate.
We can feel compassion for him, even without approving of his choices. Calling him a stalker is snarky, and wrong,
and suggesting that Passengers approves of his behavior is a totally incorrect
reading.
There’s
a powerful scene here wherein Jim nearly attempts suicide. All he has to do is
push one red button. The scene is not powerful because of his attempt, but
because of what happens next. He catches
himself, realizes what he is capable, and grow scared. He flees the airlock,
terrified of what he is capable of. He
is scared…of himself.
Again,
this rings very true, and suggests, once more, that Jim is a fallible, real
person not a screenwriter’s cipher.
And
what about love? Jim does what he does,
he says, because his in love with Aurora.
Love,
we all know, is a powerful emotion. And it isn’t always hugs and puppies.
Love
is selfish.
Hence
jealousy.
Hence
crimes of passion.
Love
drives people to do things that give them the advantage in a relationship, but
which -- from the comfort and distance of our judgment -- we gauge as
unethical. The movie makes it plain that
Jim falls in love with the (improbably named) Aurora Lane not because of what
she looks like; but because of her books; her personality, her spirit.
That
doesn’t give him the right to ruin her life, or “steal” her life, as Aurora says,
in any way, shape or form. But it’s not
just like he stalks her based on her looks, or a desire for sex.
I
would argue that Passengers is quite unblinking and truthful about human
emotions, and the need for companionship in its first act.
And
I would simultaneously argue that it would have been a better movie had it
stuck to this idea instead of veering into Hollywood conventions. There would
have been a way to do it, to make a statement about human nature.
How?
Passengers
should have
had the courage to let Jim die in the final act, saving the ship (instead of
being rescued by Aurora).
I
would have Jim die in the climax, in an act of redemption (proving that he made
a terrible choice, a terrible mistake, with Aurora, but is not a bad person,
overall). And then, I would have set the
epilogue of the film exactly one year later.
In
that coda, we would have seen a hibernation pod opening with a man inside. He
would wake up, confused and scared. And
then he would randomly happen across Aurora, who was already awake.
We would understand from this encounter that
she awakened him, as she was awakened by Jim, because she too was impacted by
the heavy gravity feelings of loneliness and despair that Jim felt.
She is human too, and -- if Jim died -- she would
have had to fight the same feelings, and go through the same decision process that
he did.
I
doubt she would have decided differently.
Why?
Back to Human nature!
Human
beings are naturally selfish, in some sense. As reported in Scientific
American Mind (Matthew Robinson; 2014): “… instances of selfish behavior also abound in
society. One recent study used a version of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma,
which can test people's willingness to set aside selfish interests to reach a
greater good. After modeling different strategies and outcomes, the researchers
found that being selfish was more advantageous than cooperating. The benefit
may be short-lived, however.”
If
we consider Jim again, we see that he is not a stalker, but that he does make a
selfish decision when he is weak.
But
that doesn’t tell the whole story of the character. He is also altruistic, and
thinks of the community, at times, too. He risks his life, finally, not for
Aurora, necessarily, but -- specifically namechecked
in the finale -- the 5,000 sleeping beauties in hibernation. Again, this is also human nature. Sometimes
we think of ourselves first. But sometimes we are able to rise above that, and
think of the well-being of the entire community.
It
is natural (and human, too), that Aurora rejects Jim after learning that he
manipulated her, and lied to her (on more than one occasion). But to pretend
that Jim is just a stalker “on the make” is so untrue to his character in the
film. Passengers could have
made this point in a superior fashion if Aurora found herself having to make a
choice about her future too
Ninety
years alone? Or share the misery, and wake up another passenger?
Instead,
Passengers
settles, at the end, for some uplifting schmaltz about the life Jim and Aurora
ultimately share, before dying in transit to Homestead II.
They
live a long, fruitful, productive happy life.
I
submit that this outcome is unrealistic, given the situation that Jim finds
himself in (vented out a tube, blown into space, in a damaged space suit…) and
untrue, even more so, to the themes of the movie.
We
actually aren’t just passengers, going where life takes us. On the contrary, we
are flawed people like Jim, having to
make decisions on a moment-by-moment basis, and hoping for the best. The movie is about a man who considers
himself and what he wants, first, and then realizes just how wrong he was…and
redeems himself.
The
truth of human nature would have been validated if Passengers ended with a
despondent Aurora, making the very same choice that she punished Jim for.
What
would she have realized?
We
are social animals. We can’t live alone.
And killing ourselves is against our nature too, in many situations.
Consider that, according to Pascal
Vrticka at The Huffington Post:
“The reasons for the evolution of the human social brain are not yet completely
understood. There is, however, growing consensus that two processes likely
played key roles in triggering the observed dramatic increase in brain, and
particularly neocortex, size. These were the development of (i) socially monogamous pair
bonds, and (ii) paternal care / the involvement of the father in rising children
(see here for additional information). Both of these processes
offered additional defense mechanisms against infanticide and predation on
offspring. In a nutshell: if the father stuck around long enough with his
partner, and vice versa, the common children had a higher chance of survival…and
that is what ultimately counts in evolution: promotion of survival of the
fittest.”
In other words, Jim is driven both to be selfish, and to want
companionship. His (unethical) action to awaken Aurora is one that stems from
both aspects of human nature.
I wager everyone reading this blog would do the same thing in Jim’s
situation, and the false outrage over his actions says more about our society’s
lack of empathy (and self-awareness) than it does about Jim, himself.
He made a terrible mistake, and came to regret it. Then he tried
to make up for it.
I find that Passengers is
actually incredibly smart, at least to start, in terms of how it addresses the
reality of human nature and Jim’s big choice.
It is just too bad that the
movie also makes a bad choice at the very end. Finally, it succumbs to the need
to be a commercial “hit,” and becomes a happy-ending romance in which all is
forgiven, and which Aurora learns nothing from Jim.
After
so much careful set-up and canny insight into what makes us tick, Passengers
chooses, finally, to be a stupid romance, instead of a smart science fiction
picture.
I,
for one, can’t go along on that particular ride.
Well, what do you expect from a system that wouldn't let When Harry Met Sally's much more realistic ending stand?
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