A passenger on the fatal Lion Air Flight 610 shared a video of himself and other passengers boarding the plane.

The mundane video provides some of the only imagery of the flight, which crashed shortly after takeoff and likely killed all 189 people on board.

Paul Ferdinand Ayorbaba sent the video to his wife, who watched it, then went back to sleep. The plane crashed at nearly the same time.

She told Indonesia's TVOne, "I kept calling him, sending WhatsApp messages, hoping that he didn't go or something made him cancel his trip, but there was no answer."

A passenger on Lion Air Flight 610, which likely killed all 189 people on board when it crashed into the Java Sea on Monday, shared video footage of himself and others boarding the plane.

Paul Ferdinand Ayorbaba shared the video with his wife, Inchy Ayorbaba, on WhatsApp. She saw it at 6:30 a.m. and then went back to sleep, the Associated Press reported.

The plane crashed less than a minute later.

"It was his last contact with me, his last message to me," Inchy Ayorbaba told Indonesia's TVOne, according to the AP.

It was Paul Ferdinand Ayorbaba's first trip to Indonesia's Bangka Island.

The video shows the last images of some of the passengers who were killed when the 40-meter-long Boeing 737 Max 8 crashed, minutes after leaving Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Jakarta, Indonesia.

No survivors have been found.

You can watch the video here:

It shows many of the mundane moments of air travel, including people queuing to have their boarding passes inspected and wheeling carry-on bags towards the plane.

At one point, it zooms in to Ayorbaba's own boarding pass and shows the flight number, JT 610.

He also zooms in on a waiting Lion Air plane and to another Lion Air jet in the distance. He then focuses on his own waiting plane, according to the AP, where a woman can be seen climbing the stairs and disappearing into the aircraft.

Read more: What we know about the victims of the Lion Air plane crash off Indonesia, where there were 'likely no survivors'

The video's timestamp shows he shared the video with his wife about 35 minutes before takeoff, Inchy Ayorbaba told TVOne.

She said she heard the news that the plane had crashed at about 9 a.m.

"I went back to watching the video," she said. "I saw his boarding pass he showed in the video. I started to believe he was in that crashed plane.

"I kept calling him, sending WhatsApp messages, hoping that he didn't go, or something made him cancel his trip but there was no answer."

Rescuers have recovered 49 body bags of human remains and given them to investigators, CNN reported.

Experts found a 22-meter-long object that they think is part of plane, according to the AP.