The Ninth Passenger 2018

It's about to crash the party.

4.2 / 10   29 vote(s)
Horror

A group of salacious students party aboard a luxury yacht only to turn on each other as a 9th PASSENGER picks them off one by one.

Release Date 2018-07-18
Runtime 1h 33m
Director Ian Ptaff
Producers Peter Shaw, Corey Large, Yarek Danielak, Richard Janes, Joan LeSeur, Gary Ousdahl
Writer Corey Large

I won't tell you what does happen in The Ninth Passenger but I'll tell you what doesn't happen: The movie's description, and the movie's title.

Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product.

Gimly

Eight people on a luxury yacht, but there’s another passenger

In the Strait of Georgia in the Vancouver area eight people, half of them strangers, end up on an unexpected ride in a luxury yacht where some of them eventually board a dinghy to the nearest island and horrific things happen. Will anyone make it back alive? Jesse Metcalfe plays the quasi-protagonist with a secret agenda.

“The Ninth Passenger” (2018) is a drama/thriller with a little horror that brings to mind yacht/schooner movies like "Dead Calm" (1989) and "Caught Inside" (2010), but with a surprise twist in the last act, which has more to do with flicks like “Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan” (1989).

While this is the least of these, it’s proficiently made for a low-budget film with a decent cast of no-names, fitting atmosphere, a quality score and impressive F/X. But the script needed more tweaking because there’s a lack of cohesion to the story. It’s like several ideas put together that needed a little more smoothness and logic. Yet it could also be argued that ambiguity works in the picture’s favor.

Metcalfe does well as the formidable protagonist, inspiring men to get in better shape. As for the feminine cast, there are four beauties: Alexia Fast (Jess), Veronica Dunne (Christy), Sabina Gadecki (Tina) and Cinta Laura Kiehl (Nicole), but the director only milks the latter’s splendor (no nudity) and she’s debatably the least of ’em.

The film runs 1 hour, 16 minutes (although it’s curiously listed as 93 minutes), and was shot in Vancouver, British Columbia.

GRADE: C+

Wuchak