Others say...

"Spielberg & Cruise, what a combo"
Does Steven Spielberg ever do anything that's bad? Not likely. This is an interesting story with many innovative ideas and gadgets. Tom Cruise makes the whole thing believable. The cast is great including Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton, and Max Von Sydow. It's a long movie, but it moves along fine.

"Roller coaster thrills marred by swiss cheese plot"
John Anderton (Tom Cruise) is chief of the Precrimes Unit in Washington, D.C. in the year 2053. The unit has abolished murder in their city with the aid of three "precogs" who can see the crimes before they happen. Police arrest the suspect based on the visions and the prisoner's are put into suspended animation immediately. The "trial" each receives is apparently limited to their appearance in the precog visions. Anderton believes in the system wholeheartedly and is proud of the results. Just after he learns of odd discrepancies in a few cases, however, the precogs have a vision that implicates him in the murder of a man he's never heard of. Anderton makes a run for it to try and prove his innocence. The rest of the movie is a roller-coaster ride as he tries to escape from the police while uncovering the real villain.

Minority Report is a mixed bag of a movie. The action sequences are all exciting and Cruise conveys enough urgency that it goes a long way toward carrying the film. At the same time, the plot suffers from numerous holes and inconsistencies. For example, the precogs can only see a murder when the killer forms the intent. But Anderton's murder is predicted even though he knows nothing about the victim and certainly has no intention of killing him.

Overall, I enjoyed Minority Report. It's well produced and Cruise's energy and passion in the role help show once again why he's a major star. The story doesn't hold up very well to even casual analysis so you need to be prepared to just let that slide or skip the movie completely.

"One of the best in the breed; a film that is mentally as well as visually captivating..."
`Minority Report' is one of those movies that just gets better and better EVERY TIME I watch it. It's beautifully constructed, intense, meaningful, thought provoking, thrilling...an all around edge of your seat thriller that delivers on every front. Stephen Spielberg, the man who's famous for delivering intense science fiction thrillers doesn't disappoint this go around either. `Minority Report', while remarkably absent from the Oscar shortlist, makes a huge impact on the viewer. From an impressive and remarkably realistic script (we'll get to that in a minute) to the superb special effects and some well handled performances `Minority Report' never fails at being spellbinding.

So let's tackle that script for a minute. The thing that I love most about films of this nature is that they challenge the audience to think about the future in ways they maybe don't want to. While films like `I, Robot' may take things a little overboard (while I don't think that the idea of robots providing assistance is out of the question) there are films like `A.I.' and the like that tackle things in a manner that is believable. Now, while the initial concept of psychics predicting murders and thus stopping crime altogether is a bit far fetched, the world in general that is portrayed for us in `Minority Report' is not. A world that follows us around, watching our every move so as to `serve' us better is, in my humble opinion, right around the corner.

`Minority Report' also broaches on the subject of humanity and our willingness to suffer for the betterment of others. The three precogs give up their freedom, their lives, their shot at anything remotely normal in order to help the government stop the plague that is murder. Sure, what they are doing is something admirable and it makes life in general so much better for the rest of upstanding society, but do we think about what this means for them. They are forced to relive nightmarish situations over and over with no sense of comfort. `Minority Report' also asks the viewer to contemplate how necessary this scenario really is. Now one can argue that murder is wrong, but is it really necessary to lock someone away for a crime they have yet to commit, especially when it is one of passion that merely needs to be prevented, not avenged?

Spielberg's handling of the material is utter perfection here. He directs a masterpiece, giving us cinematic gold. There really is nothing about this film I can pick at or find as a fault, and I am an adamant Cruise hater, but even he delivered wonderfully here, really digging into the heart of his character to deliver real signs of pure emotion. Colin Farrell delivers a fine breakthrough performance for himself. This was the role that got him noticed and preceded his 2003 rise to fame. Max von Sydow is also deliciously mysterious as Lamar but it's Samantha Morton (an actress who is just orgasmic in everything) who steals the show here. Her portrayal of Agatha is honest and fragile and the backbone to the end of the show.

So, it's obvious that `Minority Report' has left me smitten and I hope that it will do the same for you. It's one of those movies that impresses the first go around, but it begins to root itself in its audience after repeated viewings. There is no denying it is a masterful piece of American cinema. One of the movies I'll never get tired of that is as visually stunning as it is mentally captivating. A true triumph of cinematic bliss.

"One of Tom's best movies...."
2054, Washington D.C. After six years of experiments, Pre-Crime law enforcement - in which murderers are caught before they commit their crime, thanks to the aid of a trio of psychics - has been deemed a success and is on the verge of going national. The project is headed up by Lamar Burgess (Von Sydow) and his protandeacute;gandeacute;, John Anderton (Cruise) who - through this technology - have prevented any murders taking place in the capital for the last six years. Others aren't so convinced - chief among them, F.B.I agent Ed Witwer (Farrell), assigned to find flaws in the system. When one of the psychics - known as 'Pre-Cogs' - predicts that Anderton will commit murder, the former golden boy is forced to go on the run from a system that he helped create.
Neither Spielberg nor Cruise have a reputation for making really uncommercial films and Minority Report doesn't deviate radically from their respective career trajectories. It is - with the honourable exception of Schlinder's List - perhaps the darkest movie in Spielberg's catalogue to date. Certainly, it's the most adult orientated of his films. For the most part it is a very enjoyable and intelligent film, which shouldn't fail to entertain most audiences. I liked it.

"Underrated & A Film To Think About"
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 Steven 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 am of the opinion that this is one of Spielberg's underrated gems.

 

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What our customer's say!

"First Tom Cruise movie I actually liked.", Okay, I'll fess up. I am *not* a Tom Cruise fan; not be a long shot. Every movie I've ever seen in which he stars, he acts pretty much the same; only the movie subject matter and dialog change.

However, there are a few scenes in this movie (especially with his son) where he seems to at least somewhat break out of his usual limited range Top Gun/Mission Impossible/Etc. character.

As for the movie itself, I won't bore you with spoilers or a long list of plot faults. There are two things, though, that really bug me. The first has to do with the status of his security clearance: it never changes. It should have been revoked when he was accused of the pre-crime or soon thereafter. Second, near the end of the movie he is arrested and charged with not only the original pre-crime intent to murder, but an actual second murder of a key character. It wouldn't make sense for him to commit the murder, wipe down the gun, and then leave it at the murder scene in plain sight.

Otherwise, it's a enjoyable flick to watch, and does raise some very interesting questions.

"Fitting of the time", I must confess that some of the philosophical undertones of this movie were poignant to me. Nonetheless, I found this movie difficult to endure. The plot wasn't very suspenseful, although it was clever. Some of the major plot twists were very predictable while subtle details were handled in a creative fashion. **My personal disclaimer is that I think such notions of law enforcement are absolutely preposterous, and my stance on the issue left me too far removed from the debate to even enjoy the exploration of the possibilities. That said, I think the filmmakers employed some cute effects, and the vision of our world in the future was eye-candy.

"The Eyes Have It", This movie made me squirrely, disconcerted, agitated, not because it was a movie with an important message to convey, but because it was exploitive and edgy just for the sake of edginess.
It's a futuristic overwrought work in which a precrime unit in Washington, DC, in 2054 prevents murders by using pre-cogs, pre-cognitive slaves who can see into the future and predict crimes that are going to take place. The three pre-cogs, male twins and a woman are kept in a vat of water with electrodes attached. The means justifies the ends, get it.
Tom Cruise is head of the unit; he's an anally-retentive, wired spring about to snap. He seems constipated or suffering from hemorrhoids throughout. He plays the role with extreme seriousness. Warning: the series of scenes about his eyes are very disconcerting. Scanners can identify people by their eyes so you get the picture.
Without giving any of the plot away, it's sufficient to say all the stuff regarding Tom Cruise's eyes is excruciatingly painful to view.
It's an unrelenting movie in which the tables are turned, and the crime fighters target Cruise. In super-hero fashion he fights off platoons of "cops," and learns that he has been set up. His escape with the female pre-cog is harrowing and too disconcerting. He performs unbelievable feats in his escape.
Max von Sydow is very good as Cruise's wily boss. Colin Farrell has a one-dimensional role that doesn't give him a chance to show off his real acting talent. Veteran actress Lois Smith is very good as the morally reprehensible "mad" scientist who even makes a pass at Cruise.
If this is your taste, you'll love it. If it isn't, you may cringe. Optical surgeons may shed a few tears over it. I realize mine is a minority report; most people are going be ga-ga eyed over this flick.
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"Entertaining adaptation of Dick's classic short story ", "Minority Report," like "Bladerunner," is based on a Philip K. Dick story (although this time a short story). The plot revolves around a future where murders have almost been eliminated, thanks to a technology that allows the protagonist, John Anderton (played by Tom Cruise) to see into the future and stop a murderer before the act has been committed. The plot, which is excellent, is only half of the reason this film makes the list. The film resembles "Bladerunner," in more ways than having been based on a Dick story; the world it takes place in is beautifully detailed and believable, one in which scanners on billboards read your identity and then produce a specialized advertisement just for you. The future portrayed is believable, both gritty and sleek, and the ethical questions raised by the film are especially poignant as we increasingly live a world were we are videoed, photographed, and observed on a greater, and greater level.

"A modern classic.", Sci-fi crime thriller set in the year 2054 about a policeman - played by Tom Cruise - who works in the Department of Precime in Washington D.C. which uses people with the gift of precognition to prevent murders before they happen. But one day the precognitives predict that Tom Cruise himself will commit a murder; a prediction that leads to Tom Cruise going on the run to clear his name and in the process uncovering a murder that happened in the past; one that somehow the Department of Precrime didn't know about. I found this to be a quite excellent film, with an intelligent plot, first-rate protagonist played by Tom Cruise and a wonderfully realised future world (the special effects really are something else). Spielberg is as usual in his element when making science fiction and this film is even better than the outstanding 'A.I. Artificial Intelligence' which he made the year before. A flawless combination of exceptional story telling and science fiction vision that is quite simply film-making at its very best. A modern classic.



 
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Read this reviews before You buy...

"Spielberg doing what he does best.", Minority Report is a sci-fi thriller that poses the question, if you haven't commited a crime yet, how can you be charged for it. That's what John Anderton has to come to terms with when he's accused of the murder of a amn he does not know. This sends him on a tale that'll change his life.

Wonderful movie. Well crafted, beautiful, and a fun ride as well. Steven Spielberg crafts yet another wonderful movie to watch. You won't be disappointed.

Highly recommended.

"Has Spielberg ever disappointed you?", Minority Report is a spectacular science fiction masterpiece directed by the great Steven Spielberg and loosely adapted from a short story by Philip K. Dick, one of the fathers of the cyberpunk genre. The movie shows us a world filled with dazzling technology but tells a personal story of a man who is betrayed by the system he worked for. There's plenty of action throughout the film but there's also some philosophy to make you think for hours after the end.

Minority Report is set in Washington, in the year 2054 and it's a great time to live in. The world has changed considerably and advanced technology pervades every aspect of life. Moving pictures draw your attention to every ad and poster. Holograms enable you to live out your wildest fantasies. Mag-lev vehicles ensure that 'car accidents' are a thing of the past. Retinal scanners are everywhere and the cops have jetpacks so the potential criminal has nowhere to run. In fact there hasn't been a single murder in Washington for six years thanks to a group of psychics who see every murder that's going to happen in the future. The police arrest these would-be criminals and place them in suspended animation. It's a good thing the system can't be tampered with and the precogs are never wrong.

At least that's what John Anderton the chief of police thinks until the precogs show him killing someone he doesn't even know. He must use all of his skills to escape and outwit the now-hostile system and find out the truth about the precogs, the conspiracies and his own destiny. All the actors give great performances, especially Tom Cruise and Samantha Morton.

Can we make choices that change our destiny or is the future inevitable. Is it fair to imprison someone for a crime they didn't commit...yet? Is this a worthy price to pay to maintain a murder-free society? Minority Report will give you a lot to think about and its engrossing mystery will keep you engaged until the very end. However, it is not a happy movie and some scenes are very heartbreaking so stay away if you don't like that sort of thing.

"philosophy meets crime prevention meets sci-fi",
How much is it the elimination of murder worth? How much would we pay to erase the weeping bereaved from our television screens?

MINORITY REPORT foresees a moment in 2054 when technology has made such a world possible. Or so it seems.

As with all utopias in which the human report remains untransformed--that is, all of them to date--one smells a rat. This rat moves secretly to a Spielbergian rhythm until the hunting down of 'Precrime's' central and heroic figure (Tom Cruise) for a crime he is supposedly about to commit leads to the unraveling and the entrance into the system of--dare we say it--a measure of doubt.

Is it worth the occasionally mis-prosecuted innocent for a system that works most of the time? But not all of it?

In working out this plot via some of the wittiest screenplay to come along in a while and one or two superb chase scenes, the movie entertains and provokes.

Colin Farrel threatens to outshine Cruise, but both do their job well.

Possibly not a film to be watched more than once. But promising of a very enjoyable *once*.

"Engaging", This movie has all the makings of a classic. Great Sci-Fi with a turn the tables story that is compelling and engaging. Just enough in the way of special effects as to not detract from the story but to convey a future of both optimism and the terror associated with too much trust in technology and human institutions.

In all, great storytelling!

"Good movie despite Cruise.", While I've never been a Tom Cruise fan, he is good in this movie, bearable even, and it's extremely entertaining. It's refreshing to see a science fiction movie presenting an interesting idea rather than a series of special effects. Here, the special effects serve the story, and with Spielberg involved you can expect it to be done well, which it is.

This is one of those movies where I don't think it's necessary to know more than the basic premise, so I won't go into the story.

I highly recommend this.

 
 
 

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