: A disgruntled computer genius, John Geiger (Willem Dafoe), uses a remote keyboard to hack the ship's navigation and "cruise control" systems.
Despite the clever title, the film is often cited as a "legendary flop" due to the perceived lack of urgency inherent in a slow-moving cruise ship. Critics from Rotten Tomatoes and Empire Magazine frequently mocked the subtitle for being a "dippy pun" that ironically matched the film's sluggish pacing. subtitle Speed 2: Cruise Control
: Once the hacker takes control, the ship cannot be steered or stopped manually, forcing it toward a catastrophic crash with an oil tanker and the island of Saint Martin. Reception and Critical Legacy : A disgruntled computer genius, John Geiger (Willem
However, some modern retrospectives from The Guardian have praised the film for its progressive inclusion of a deaf character (Drew) and its ambitious, record-breaking final stunt. : Once the hacker takes control, the ship
: While the original Speed took place on a city bus, the sequel moves the action to the Caribbean aboard the Seabourn Legend .
The subtitle in the 1997 sequel Speed 2 serves as a double-edged pun that refers both to the film's luxury cruise ship setting and its primary plot device: a hijacked computer system that locks the vessel onto a fixed, high-speed collision course. Key Context & Plot Utility