The movie brings
up the debate of free will. Is free will truly free will if my future actions
are known beforehand?
Minority Report tries to answer that question by saying that even if the future is known, the path can
still be changed; it’s just a matter of determination. Set 50 years into the
future, this classic is about a future where criminals are arrested before they
commit the crime.
The movie’s plot centers on the lead character, John Anderton. In April 2054, Captain John Anderton (Tom Cruise) is chief of the Washington, D.C. PreCrime police force. Thanks to their proficiency and effectiveness — and the intense use of future visions generated by three "precogs" (mutated humans with precognitive abilities) — the city of Washington has been murder-free for six years. The moment a murder is thought of, the precogs send a visual message, and the culprit is picked up before the crime is committed.
Things change for Anderton when, while the system is being audited by Danny Witwer (Colin Farrell), the precogs predict that Anderton will murder a man named Leo Crow in 36 hours.
Anderton is surprised because he knows no Leo Crow. Chaos breaks loose, and Anderton is on the run, stealing one of the precogs to help clear his name.
The movie boast of fantastic acting, directing and cool cinematographic effects, which are things you would expect from a film with Cruise and Spielberg on the helm.
As much as this is a masterpiece, I have to say the story got way too much into itself with the amount of complexity and twists and turns. I also feel the movie sagged in the middle, when John was trying to figure out how the precogs work, with all these making the movie longer than it needed to be.
The story itself
was written by Philip K. Dick, and Jon Cohen was hired to adapt the
story for a potential film version. Cruise and Spielberg then decided to go in together to make the movie, both
agreeing not to take any money upfront but to share a percentage of the gross
profit.
Boasting high-tech graphics and CGI, this futuristic film looked certain — like, if we are all here in the next 50 years, the movie looked like what it might be.
Listed as one of the best films of 2002, this financial success is one of the best surveillance and futuristic films out there — a movie to watch again and again.

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