Liam Neeson Keeps the Suspense on Track in The Commuter
When The Commuter arrived in theaters in 2018, audiences knew they were in for another dose of Liam Neeson’s particular brand of action heroics. What they may not have expected was a thriller that manages to balance taut suspense, claustrophobic settings, and an everyman’s desperation with enough polish to keep viewers gripped until the very last stop.
Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, The Commuter marks the fourth collaboration between the Spanish filmmaker and Neeson, following Unknown (2011), Non-Stop (2014), and Run All Night (2015). While none of these films have pretended to be high art or social commentary, they have carved out a niche of sturdy, well-paced thrillers that deliver exactly what they promise: an intense and entertaining ride.
The Premise
Neeson plays Michael MacCauley, a middle-aged insurance salesman who has taken the same train every day for the past ten years. His life is as routine as the tracks beneath him—until a mysterious woman, played by Vera Farmiga, approaches him with an unusual proposition. She offers him $100,000 to identify a passenger on the train before the last stop.
What begins as a hypothetical “game” soon escalates into a life-or-death struggle. Michael finds himself caught between sinister conspirators, innocent commuters, and a countdown he cannot escape. The confined setting turns the train into both a stage and a prison, echoing Collet-Serra and Neeson’s earlier success with Non-Stop, which similarly trapped its protagonist inside a commercial airliner.
Suspense Over Spectacle
Unlike many modern action films, The Commuter does not drown itself in nonstop explosions. While it features a handful of well-executed action set pieces, the true focus is suspense and psychological pressure. The ticking-clock scenario is amplified by the train’s limited space, with every passenger a potential ally or threat.
Collet-Serra handles the geography of the train carefully, creating a believable sense of movement and rhythm. His pacing ensures the audience never feels entirely at ease. At one point, viewers may notice themselves leaning forward in their seats, subconsciously mirroring MacCauley’s own tension and desperation.
This emphasis on intrigue over spectacle makes The Commuter an ideal popcorn thriller. It does not aim to revolutionize cinema but succeeds in entertaining while keeping audiences on edge.
Neeson as the Reluctant Hero
By 2018, Liam Neeson had already become synonymous with a particular type of action film. Since Taken (2008), he has embodied the reluctant hero: a man past his prime, trapped by circumstance, and forced to fight back with brains, grit, and sheer willpower.
As Michael MacCauley, Neeson again proves credible. His character is no superhero; he is an ordinary man who reacts as best he can when pushed against the wall. The casting plays to Neeson’s strengths—he convinces as both weary commuter and sudden action lead.
Farmiga provides an enigmatic counterpart, her calm menace sharpening the story’s stakes. Patrick Wilson steps in as a familiar face from MacCauley’s past, while Sam Neill plays a police superior caught between authority and ambivalence.
The film also benefits from a strong supporting ensemble, including Clara Lago, Jonathan Banks (Breaking Bad), Elizabeth McGovern, Roland Møller, and Florence Pugh in a small but notable early role. Their presence adds texture to the commuter train’s microcosm, where every face might conceal hidden motives.
A Tense but Familiar Ride
The Commuter belongs firmly to the tradition of thrillers that unfold in confined environments. From Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train to Speed, the genre thrives on characters trapped in transit, forced into extraordinary circumstances. Collet-Serra embraces this lineage, weaving intrigue from the monotony of Michael’s daily commute.
Yes, the film occasionally stretches plausibility. Some transitions between stations seem too long, and certain stunts push the boundaries of realism. But such quibbles matter little when the story maintains its internal logic. The film knows what it is—a lean, gripping thriller—and does not pretend otherwise.
The Legacy of Neeson and Collet-Serra
With The Commuter, Collet-Serra and Neeson demonstrate once again why their partnership has endured. Each collaboration has explored variations on the same theme: an ordinary man thrust into extraordinary peril, often within a confined space. The director’s flair for atmosphere and Neeson’s stoic intensity create a reliable formula that continues to satisfy audiences.
It is worth noting that while critics gave the film mixed reviews, audiences responded with enthusiasm. The film grossed over $119 million worldwide, proving once again that Neeson’s midlife action star persona still resonates with fans.
Final Stop
The Commuter is not revolutionary, but it doesn’t need to be. It succeeds on its own terms: an entertaining, tense, and surprisingly layered thriller that keeps audiences hooked until the final stop. For viewers willing to suspend disbelief and accept its modest ambitions, it is a ride worth taking.
In the end, Neeson may have become typecast as the weary, resourceful hero, but few actors inhabit that role with as much conviction. The Commuter reminds us why: he makes us believe that even an ordinary man on his daily train can rise to extraordinary challenges.