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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $12.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $12.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $23.99 |
Closed Caption; Minority Report Story to Screen: an in-depth discussion between director Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise on the controversial premise behind the film. Additional commentary is provided by the film's producers and screenwriters; Minority Report Archives: fascinating imagery - including storyboard sequences, production photographs and more - reveals how the future was brought to life through the film's sets, costumes, props and vehicles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Red Ball/Main Title
2. The Arrest of Howard Marks
3. Clarity
4. Pre-Determination
5. Can You See?
6. Ann Lively
7. Case 1109
8. Everybody Runs
9. Auto Assembly Line
10. History of the Precogs
11. Minority Reports
12. Eyeworks
13. Public Pool
14. The Spyders
15. Agatha Is the Key
16. Downloading Agatha
17. Balloon Man
18. Leo Crow
19. An Echo
20. So Much Love in This House
21. All Thumbs
22. A World Without Murder
23. Forgive Me, John
24. In Peace/End Credits
Chalk up another triumph for Steven Spielberg, whose latest sci-fi effort ranks among his very best films. Minority Report, a futuristic thriller based on a story by author Philip K. Dick (Blade Runner), is also something of a tour de force for Tom Cruise. He plays police officer John Anderton, whose "future crimes" task force uses scientific technology and psychic premonitions to identify contemplated crimes and arrest the would-be perpetrators before they follow through with them. This expansive, revolutionary approach to law enforcement, overseen by visionary Lamar Burgess (Max von Sydow), seems to be foolproof -- until Anderton himself is identified as the potential murderer of a man he’s never met. Minority Report’s script synthesizes sci-fi stories, psychological thrillers, and police procedurals; the result is a complex melodrama that plays out like a particularly intricate whodunit. Spielberg’s trademark virtuosity manifests itself in the film’s striking visuals and elaborately staged action sequences. But the muscular performances of Cruise, von Sydow, and Colin Farrell (as a skeptical cop who becomes Anderton’s nemesis) -- along with those of supporting players Lois Smith, Tim Blake Nelson, and Steve Harris -- keep the story’s human element in the forefront and prevent the film from becoming an extravagantly produced piece of eye candy. To those disappointed by Spielberg’s previous genre offering, A.I., Minority Report will be seen as a much-welcome return to form. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Intense peril and violence, including murder and suicide, and a grisly operation.
Character abuses drugs; reference to addicts. Some smoking (fairly background).
Some strong language, including one use of "f--k," as well as "s--t," "ass," "hell," etc.
Mild sexual references -- couples kissing and preparing for sex, fantasy vision of ideal woman, other suggestions of sex.
Not an issue.
About Minority Report
Parents need to know that the movie has some graphic violence, including sci-fi shooting, fistfights, brutal and graphic murders, and suicides. Anderton abuses illegal drugs. Viewers see a flashback of his son's abduction. The movie also has some gross and grisly visuals, particularly when Anderton has his eyes replaced as a way of avoiding the retinal scans that the police use to track everyone's whereabouts.
Families can talk about private vs. public good. Is it worth violating the rights of some innocent people in order to prevent violent attacks? How would Anderton answer that question at the beginning of the movie, and how would he answer it at the end? What about the rights of the precogs? Is it fair to ask them to give up any kind of normal life if it will prevent people from being killed? Families can also discuss Anderton's inability to come to terms with the loss of his son. How do people go on after devastating losses? Also, what do you think daily life will be like half a century from now.