Minority Report (Movie)

Minority Report is a 2002 film by Steven Spielberg starring Tom Cruise, Max von Sydow, Samantha Morton, and Colin Farrell. It is loosely based on the Philip K. Dick short story of the same name. Minority Report is one of several movies based on stories by Dick. The film renders a much more detailed view of a near-term future world than that present in the original short story, with depictions of a number of technologies related to the movie's themes. The film also omits certain story details (no punch cards for example). While the film's roots make it a science fiction film, it mixes in elements of a number of different genres, particularly film noir, mystery, and action / adventure. Minority Report is set in Washington, DC during the year 2054. Thanks to three "precogs" and technology built around their ability to see murders before they happen, the city has gone six years without a murder. The group making use of the precogs is called the "Department of Pre-Crime"; the police officers and detectives within the department are empowered to act on their foreknowledge, arresting people who are about to commit a murder, and imprisoning them without a trial in a "Hall of Containment" using technology even crueler than that used to make use of the precogs. The department chief is played by Cruise, with von Sydow playing his boss. Morton plays the senior precog, nicknamed Agatha (after Agatha Christie; the nicknames of the other two, Dashiell and Arthur, are also references to the themes of the film). The country is about to vote on expanding the Pre-Crime program nationally, which brings in the Department of Justice. Farrell plays an observer from that department, whose concerns about Pre-Crime could be motivated as much by a desire to advance his own career as from doubt about the constitutionality and absolute certainty of the Pre-Crime process and the people who run it. The title of the movie refers to a discovery that the chief makes about the pre-cogs: they don't always agree about the future. Since there are three precogs, the "Minority Report" refers to the dissenting opinion, which the process filters out in order to preserve the sense of certainty that von Sydow's character in particular believes is required for the program's success. The chief's discovery of the existence of minority reports is one of several clues to the mystery which drives most of the film. And it also contributes to the desperation felt by the chief when in the flash of an eye (more literally, the drop of a wooden ball), he goes from being a pre-crime cop to a pre-crime perpetrator. He learns that he is supposed to kill someone he's never met and eventually discovers a conspiracy involving the pre-cogs, an old friend, and the death (months before) of his little boy.

Similar movies

The film explores several science fiction themes common to films and novels:

Trivia

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