In a future where a special police unit is able to arrest murderers
before they commit their crimes, an officer from that unit is himself
accused of a future murder.
Director:
Steven SpielbergWriters:
Philip K. Dick (short story),
Scott Frank
Storyline
In the year 2054 A.D. crime is virtually eliminated from Washington D.C. thanks to an elite law enforcing squad "Precrime". They use three gifted humans (called "Pre-Cogs") with special powers to see into the future and predict crimes beforehand. John Anderton heads Precrime and believes the system's flawlessness steadfastly. However one day the Pre-Cogs predict that Anderton will commit a murder himself in the next 36 hours. Worse, Anderton doesn't even know the victim. He decides to get to the mystery's core by finding out the 'minority report' which means the prediction of the female Pre-Cog Agatha that "might" tell a different story and prove Anderton innocent.Minority Report Movie Reviews
This
gets high marks for being an involving film that, despite a long length
of almost two- and-a-half hours, keeps ones interest all the way. Being
a Stephen Spielberg-directed film, it's no surprise that the
photography is first-rate. This is nice-looking movie. Tom Cruise also
was very good in here, not the obnoxious character he sometimes portrays
(or did more often in his younger days.).
The film is a good
mixture of action and suspense. Only the one chase scene was overdone
with Rambo-like mentality of the good guys not getting hit when they
should, and vice- versa.
The subject matter is interesting, too:
what would do you (or the police) had very reliable information on
crimes that were about to be committed, that you could prevent things
from happening before they actually did?
I recognized two people
in here who went on shortly thereafter to become recognizable in TV
series: Kathryn Morris ("Cold Case") and Neal McDonough ("Boomtown").
Add Colin Farrell, Max Von Sydow, Samantha Morton and you have an
interesting cast. I am of the opinion that this is one of Spielberg's
underrated gems.


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