Trainwreck: Poop Cruise (2025) recounts the chaotic days aboard a passenger ship crippled by an engine fire, leaving roughly 4,000 people stranded at sea without power, air conditioning, or working plumbing. The film stitches together first-person accounts, archival footage, and investigative reporting to recreate the heat, confusion, and indignity passengers endured as the crew and coast guard scrambled to restore order. Intimate interviews with passengers and crew capture moments of fear, frustration, and unexpected camaraderie, while on-deck footage and news segments chart the escalating public outrage and logistical nightmare.
Blending dark humor with clear-eyed investigation, the documentary probes how a routine cruise became an international scandal, interrogating corporate decisions, safety oversight, and the media circus that followed. It also follows the aftermath for survivors—lawsuits, reforms, and the lingering emotional toll—offering a broader meditation on accountability and resilience when systems meant to protect us fail. The result is a gripping, humane portrait of a modern calamity and the people who lived through it.