
Dr. Lewis Shaler and his son Max are traveling by train to London. Lewis will leave Max to attend the funeral for victims of a great accident at the hospital where he works. When Max accidentally spills coffee on Sarah Barwell, Lewis offers to pay for the cleaning, and soon they start a talking. When the train stops, Lewis sees a man on the track apparently fixing the brakes. When the trains moves, he sees another man crawling on the tracks. Lewis seeks out the train conducto... (Full plot summary below)
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Dr. Lewis Shaler and his son Max are traveling by train to London. Lewis will leave Max to attend the funeral for victims of a great accident at the hospital where he works. When Max accidentally spills coffee on Sarah Barwell, Lewis offers to pay for the cleaning, and soon they start a talking. When the train stops, Lewis sees a man on the track apparently fixing the brakes. When the trains moves, he sees another man crawling on the tracks. Lewis seeks out the train conductor and finds he's missing. When the train bypasses a stop, he tries to contact the driver. After talking with the few passengers onboard, they realise the train has no brake and the driver's suicidal.
Leave your thoughts about Last Passenger.
| VarietyBen KenigsbergA sturdy runaway-train thriller that flaunts its influences but chugs up a decent amount of suspense. |
| Village VoiceZachary WigonWhile certainly a formulaic genre film, it's nevertheless a formula executed with a great sensitivity to visual engagement. |
| The PlaylistNikola GrozdanovicLast Passenger is a good antithesis to the overloaded and cluttered action Hollywood seems to love nowadays. If you're not feeling especially picky on plot or character, you won't go wrong with this compelling and stylish train thriller. |
| The ListRob CarnevaleNooshin succeeds in keeping things suitably tense throughout, throwing in a few decent set pieces without compromising the credibility of the situation, at least until a slightly overblown finale. |
| GuardianMike McCahillNooshin holds on to a strain of logic that doesn't often survive at this level of filmmaking. |
| Shockya.comBrent SimonA runaway-train action thriller that coasts along serviceably for a bit before entering Boredom Station, this British-produced rip-off of Speed lacks compelling characterizations. |
| Metro (UK)Larushka Ivan-ZadehThis has the potential to become a camp classic of UK cinema, with the mundane British setting amusingly at odds with the disaster-thriller delivery. |
| Examiner.comChris SawinWhile Last Passenger is in the same vein as films such as Unstoppable, Speed, Joy Ride, and Premium Rush, it lacks a proper resolution and its empty thrills don't make up for its inadequate amount of substance. |
| Seattle TimesJohn HartlIt (almost literally) runs off the rails with a series of twists that ultimately invite more laughs than tension. |
| Time OutTom HuddlestonFirst-time feature director Omid Nooshin makes the best of a minuscule budget, and his punchy script doesn’t brake for breath. |