: 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
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. subtitle Speed 2: Cruise Control
: A disgruntled computer genius, John Geiger (Willem Dafoe), uses a remote keyboard to hack the ship's navigation and "cruise control" systems. : Once the hacker takes control, the ship
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 The subtitle in the 1997 sequel Speed 2
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.
: While the original Speed took place on a city bus, the sequel moves the action to the Caribbean aboard the Seabourn Legend .