PASSENGER:
JUST DRIVE AWAY FROM THIS STANDARD HORROR MOVIE!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: ** out of 4
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Lou Llobell and Jacob Scipio in Passenger
A couple is about to learn the horrifying lesson to never drive at night in Passenger, the new horror film from director André Øvredal (The Autopsy of Jane Doe, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, The Last Voyage of the Demeter). I’ve only seen two of Øvredal’s previously directed projects, those being Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark and The Last Voyage of the Demeter, and I liked both. Scary Stories was a solid adaptation of the books that inspired it, and Demeter was a really interesting and epic Dracula film; he clearly puts a lot of craftsmanship into his work.
I didn’t have any expectations with his next film, Passenger, though the teaser trailer definitely got my attention, which only showed two guys driving in the dark, pulling over so one of them can pee, and then some supernatural force terrorizes them. Regardless of how good or bad I think this movie is, that trailer made me want to check it out.
Sadly, despite a few solid scares and decent performances, Passenger is a pretty lousy horror flick and so far the worst film I’ve seen from André Øvredal. It’s certainly not the absolute worst horror film I’ve seen in 2026 (Psycho Killer and Return to Silent Hill are currently my #1 and #2 worst movies of the year), but I cannot believe a film with this much potential and talent could be wasted on standard genre tropes and cheap jumpscares.
The film follows Maddie (Lou Llobell-Voyagers, Foundation) and Tyler (Jacob Scipio-Bad Boys 3 and 4, Without Remorse, The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent), a couple on a road trip who witness a terrible highway accident. But when they make the boneheaded decision of stopping and getting out of the car after seeing the accident, Maddie and Tyler become haunted by a demonic entity that has latched itself onto them.
The film also stars Melissa Leo (The Fighter, Prisoners, The Equalizer 2) as Diana Marsh.
Overall, Passenger had the potential of being a truly spine-tingling and creepy movie revolving around driving in the dark, but instead, it wastes its premise on tired horror tropes and predictable storytelling. Of course, the opening scene of this film is the part shown in the teaser, but to give it a little bit of credit, it is an awesome way to start the movie off, as it is a genuinely frightening and effective sequence followed up by a grisly airbag payoff.
There’s another standout moment later on in the movie with Lou Llobell in a parking lot trying to get to the van, and it mysteriously keeps getting farther away from her the more she gets closer. That was probably the best sequence outside of the beginning scene from the teaser, and it was really suspenseful and knew how to time the scares well.
I’ll also say that despite the subpar material, Lou Llobell and Jacob Scipio give decent performances as the couple. They aren’t like the most deep or complex horror protagonists, but I bought their chemistry, and they weren’t annoying as balls like a lot of other standard or downright garbage horror films.
Unfortunately, only a few effective scares and fine performances aren’t enough to make up for Passenger’s shortcomings because this film goes downhill pretty quickly after having so much promise and an amazing opening scene. The movie just hits every tired beat from other horror movies, obligatory jumpscares, lore that makes absolutely no sense, the wise character who knows what’s going on so, you know is going to be killed off by the end, people constantly making stupid decisions and not in a fun way like The Cabin in the Woods or Obsession, it all comes off as lazy even with a creative idea like this.
Even the monster/killer’s design is pretty uninspired; he just looks like some dirty, weird guy who also sometimes has Freddy Krueger powers as a ghost or demonic spirit. I’m not saying it has to be something so outlandish like the Smile demon, but make The Passenger a memorable movie monster and something moviegoers won’t forget, he could have been a new horror movie icon. Sadly, the film surrounding him dropped the ball.
. I don’t know, guys; I’m struggling to even remember and gather cohesive thoughts on Passenger. If you absolutely gotta see this, then I’ll call the film “An A-List or Unlimited Movie,” where if you have AMC A-List or Regal Unlimited and you’ve seen everything else, I guess there’s no hurt in seeing this if you’re the teeniest bit curious.
Me personally, I’d rather drive as far away from this movie as possible and never look back. It’s a generic, tired horror movie that wastes its premise on tropes and recycled storytelling. Also, Passengers starring Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence was better!






























































































