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The Woman in Cabin 10 review: Keira Knightley’s nautical thriller drowns in mediocrity

You might want to give this one a wide berth

by · Tech Advisor

At a glance

Expert's Rating

Rating of this product is 2 out of 5.

Our Verdict

Compared to some other lacklustre Netflix thrillers, The Woman in Cabin 10 is a full-blown masterpiece. But if you have standards and want to watch a thriller that actually grips, you might want to throw this one overboard and skip it entirely.   

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It’s a horrible thing to be doubted when you’re certain of the truth. That’s what happens to Laura Blacklock in Keira Knightley’s new thriller when she watches someone die aboard a luxury yacht. No one believes her when she reports the murder, even though she’s a journalist. In fact, no one believes that the victim ever existed at all. 

Thankfully, this journalist will probably have a far easier time convincing you just how boring The Woman in Cabin 10 actually is.

Netflix doesn’t exactly have the best track record when it comes to their original movie slate, especially in the action/thriller genre. With duds like Red Notice, Back In Action and The Gray Man taking up a big chunk of the streamer’s top ten most watched films of all time, my expectations for new movies like this are sinking faster than… Laura’s stomach watching that poor passenger drown.

It doesn’t help that co-writers Joe Shrapnel and Anna Waterhouse are most famous for penning Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins, or that the film is directed by Simon Stone, a former stage director who helmed Carey Mulligan’s so-so biopic The Dig in 2021. Still, I’ve always rooted for Keira Knightley, and with the success of last year’s Black Doves — not to mention the phenomenal cast she’s joined by here — there was always a chance that The Woman in Cabin 10 might turn out better than expected.

Unfortunately, my optimism was as delusional as the boat’s gaslighting crew makes Laura out to be. 

Based on Ruth Ware’s bestselling novel, The Woman in Cabin 10 starts off intriguingly enough with a faithful take on the book’s central mystery. Namely, who was thrown overboard, and why kill someone out at sea when you can’t escape? Unless it turns out no one was really murdered at all… 

After Blacklock reports seeing a passenger thrown overboard, the crew do a head count and claims that no one is missing. It seems that Laura must have imagined it all, including a bloody handprint she saw on the glass, which is missing now too. Only Laura’s ex-boyfriend, Ben, gives her the benefit of the doubt as she begins an investigation into what really happened.

There’s plenty of scope to mine tension from the film’s claustrophobic setting, evoking classic Hitchcockian suspense with a fresh spin on what it means to be a woman gaslit in the modern era. However, the only tension I ended up feeling was the urge to set the film to a faster speed or risk drowning in the mediocrity of it all. 

…the only tension I ended up feeling was the urge to set the film to a faster speed or risk drowning in the mediocrity of it all 

It’s not that the twists just play it safe, either. They certainly do to start with, telegraphing the idea that something more might be happening early on. But then the ship is steered from boring to unhinged with improbable turns that unmoor the film’s sense of reality. Never mind that dull Netflix sheen, which so many of their original films are characterised by. It’s the script itself that feels unreal, hurtling into a final stretch that’s nigh on nonsensical. 

Much of this comes down to how poorly the film’s biggest twist lands and how unlikely it is that the other characters didn’t know what was happening sooner. Saying more would spoil one of the script’s livelier moments. On the plus side, this big reveal arrive a lot earlier than you might expect, so things aren’t dragged out further.

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To be fair to the writers, this twist is integral to the source material, so it’s not like they could have scrapped it without drastically changing the core of this story. And without having read the book myself, I imagine that the reveal probably works far better on page than screen because our imagination does a lot of the heavy lifting.

Keira does a lot of heavy lifting too, centring the narrative with one of the film’s better performances. Still, there’s only so much you can do with such a soggy script. Guy Pearce and Hannah Waddingham also bring some star power aboard, but not half as much as you’d expect from either seasoned performer. 

Star Trek: Discovery’s David Ajala is one of the film’s few standouts, sparring with Knightley’s journalist in the role of her charming ex. Whenever they’re on screen together, The Woman in Cabin 10 comes dangerously close to feeling like a film made by actual people. You know, instead of an AI algorithm that’s halfway through plundering the summertime beach read at your nearest airport bookshop.

Keira does a lot of heavy lifting too, centring the narrative with one of the film’s better performances

But then talented stars like Kaya Scodelario and Gugu Mbatha-Raw show up in thankless nothing roles and suddenly, we’re reminded again that this is an original Netflix thriller. Mbatha-Raw, especially, is burdened with one of the worst lines committed to film in recent memory. You’ll know it when you hear it. 

Author Ruth Ware explained recently to Tudum that her story remains timely a decade on: 

“Cabin 10, at its heart, is about a woman who experiences something wrong, reports it truthfully, and isn’t taken seriously because of who she is.”

And she’s right. Sit through The Woman in Cabin 10 and you too will feel like you experienced something wrong. There’s no doubt about it.  

Should you watch The Woman in Cabin 10?

Like an airport beach read you might take on holiday, The Woman in Cabin 10 isn’t going to change your life. In fact, you’ll likely forget it as soon as the credits start to roll. Personally, I’d rather get lost at sea than lost in this story again, but if you’re looking for something easy and mindless to get stuck into, Keira Knightley’s latest Netflix thriller might just do the job. 

The Woman in Cabin 10 is out now on Netflix. You can sign up here, with accounts starting from £5.99/$7.99 per month.

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