Minority Report

  • UK Minority Report (more)
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Sci-fi / Action / Thriller / Mystery
USA, 2002, 145 min (Alternative: 140 min)

Directed by:

Steven Spielberg

Based on:

Philip K. Dick (short story)

Screenplay:

Scott Frank, Jon Cohen

Cinematography:

Janusz Kaminski

Composer:

John Williams

Cast:

Tom Cruise, Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton, Max von Sydow, Patrick Kilpatrick, Kathryn Morris, Lois Smith, Peter Stormare, Jessica Capshaw, Tim Blake Nelson (more)
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Tom Cruise plays John Anderton, the head of Washington's Pre-Crime bureau, an experimental government agency that uses precognitive humans to predict murders. Finding himself accused of a future homicide, Anderton goes on the run and tries to stay one step ahead of his jet pack-assisted colleagues and an ambitious Federal agent (Colin Farrell). (20th Century Fox UK)

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Reviews (10)

POMO 

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English Minority Report is an intelligent, well-plotted and visually captivating blockbuster whose plot continuity unfortunately loses the necessary harmony in the crucial final third of the movie. It is also a purely commercial flick which, on the one hand, elevates mediocre entertainment to a higher level but, on the other hand, “wastes” the excellent subject matter and the creative talent of two brilliant filmmakers (Steven Spielberg and Janusz Kaminski). They had the potential to create a once-in-a-decade gem of the genre. ()

Othello 

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English Spielberg, instead of taking a moment to think about the lazy script cobbled together from the most unique ingredients and solutions, hired representatives from technology schools, companies, and organizations to give him an expert opinion on likely technological developments by 2050. The result is a very outlandish vision of the future, with giant talking advertisements, singing cornflakes, and funny spiders that crawl up under people's duvets whenever the cop of the great evil state waves his hand. It makes any 1960s sci-fi forecast look considerably more realistic next to it, whereas this is really just a relic of Cruise’s profile period. But it's a fact that I have to admire Kaminski for taking his penchant for analogue color desaturation to such an extreme in a high-budget sci-fi film that it ends up looking like a movie rip from 2010. ()

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Lima 

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English It's a very good film, but it won't become a cult classic like Blade Runner. I don't know what Philip K. Dick would say about the sweet happy ending, but you have to expect something like that from the eternal child of Spielberg. Ideal popcorn entertainment to fight off boredom, nothing more than that. ()

Marigold 

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English Yes! If you forget Dick's original story, which is a long way off, Spielberg has made a completely riveting sci-fi with a rather possibly visionary view of the future, when our ideas will be under control and we are punished for crimes we will not be able to commit. The story is not based on action scenes (but the few sequences are worth it), but rather on a well-constructed story with a surprising point. Unfortunately, the point is over extended in a Spielbergian way, and the film loses steam at the end and kind of loses its head. At least it keeps part of its core. In the end, the film and Cruise (almost) are excellent! ()

kaylin 

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English One of my favorite films by Steven Spielberg, one that has a brilliant premise or foundational idea. The fact that Spielberg turned it into popcorn entertainment is one thing. He still managed to stick to the main idea and there's always something more than just entertainment in his films. Preventing crimes before they are actually committed is indeed an idea that holds a lot of potential. It could probably yield more than just predominantly action spectacle, but sometimes that's enough. Which is the case here. ()

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