| A film review by Christopher Null (filmcritic.com)
Per Minority Report, in only 52 years we'll have a new privacy
nightmare on our hands: A police unit in Washington D.C. will genetically
engineer three people, float them in a Jacuzzi, and hook wires up
to their heads so the cops can see murders occurring in the future.
And thus, they can arrest the perpetrators before they commit the
crime. (I would say this is a nightmare of an idea… but then
again, we are talking about Washington D.C….)
The premise is a mind-bending puzzle on the scale of Memento, courtesy
of sci-fi legend Steven Spielberg and his first collaboration with
a stellar Tom Cruise. It's also Spielberg's best work since 1993's
Schindler's List and flirts with threatening Blade Runner and A
Clockwork Orange as the best paradoxical utopic/dystopic view of
the future.
Minority Report's similarities with its predecessors end pretty
quickly; though all three films follow cops and/or robbers, Cruise's
John Anderton gets to play both, when his "Precrime" department
fingers him for an upcoming murder. In 36 hours, the "pre-cogs"
tell him, he'll murder a man he's never even heard of. Convinced
he's been set up by a nosey Justice Department staffer (Colin Farrell),
Anderton goes on the run through vertical freeways, futuristic auto
plants, and a Blade Runner-ish "sprawl"/ghetto in the
hopes of evading his own crack police department. But events inexorably
lead him closer and closer to his would-be victim.
At nearly 2 1/2 hours in length, the plot gets considerably more
complicated -- including an unexpected final act that takes place
after those 36 hours expire. All the while though, the film maintains
a feverish intensity -- one which I feared Spielberg had lost altogether
with his dippy A.I. -- studded with a great sense of humor and dazzling
special effects. But it's Minority Report's almost-too-real version
of the future that steals the show. To get the details right, Spielberg
locked a few dozen futurists in a Santa Monica hotel for three days
and forced them to come up with plausible view of 2054, from the
de rigueur future-cars to The Gap. The results are hauntingly true
to life.
Cruise's dead-on lead performance is also overshadowed by the impressive
action sequences. When Anderton leaps from one car to another on
one of those vertical freeways, all thoughts of greenscreens and
CGI go out the window. When advertisements greet him by name, you
almost expect to hear the same thing when you visit the concession
stand, the simulacrum of the future is that seamless.
Only a few points detract from an otherwise perfect moviegoing
experience. Farrell's performance is whiny and ineffective, and
Samantha Morton, as one of the gibbering pre-cogs, borders on annoying.
(And I don't care what changes in the next 50 years: There will
never be a Lexus factory in Washington D.C.)
Mr. Spielberg, you have restored my faith in sci-fi -- and more
importantly, you have restored my faith in you.
|
James Chappell's
review
Kent Williams's review
A film review by Christopher Null (filmcritic.com)
Review by Mike Clark, USA TODAY
|