Interesting you would tie Minority Report to Total Recall and Blade Runner, all based on stories by Philip K. Dick. Dick was a brilliant man, who unfortunately was writing science fiction at a time when the genre had no respect whatsoever. He spent his life just barely scraping by financially.
Just like all “starving artists” he/she is recognized AFTER they die and their work, be it paintings or books are only then worth many millions of dollars…. It’s really cruel but all so true… 🤷♂️
Minority Report is based on a Phillip K. Dick story. He also wrote the stories that became Blade Runner, Total Recall, Paycheck, and Imposter, which I recommend watching. It stars Gary Sinese.
I love how quick Samantha picks up on screen writing narratives. She'll be like "wait a minute this person should totally be caring about why this other thing happened From 25 minutes ago", And without skipping a beat the character she's talking about will start caring about what she's talking about. She's the perfect movie watcher.
@@samantha_schmitt Sam we've constantly commented that you are one of the smartest people on the internet next to Neil Tyson Degrass. To see your mind work is such a pleasure to behold.
4:07: Yes, that is Jessica Capshaw, who in addition to being Arizona Robbins on Grey's Anatomy, is the daughter of Kate Capshaw -- Willie Scott in Director Steven Speilberg's 1984 film "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom". Capshaw the younger became Speilberg's step-daughter when he and her mother were married in 1991.
Basically,if you really want to think about it,she explains what it is was for him and his child to grow up together,like a loving parent raising his child.
the villain in this film was really good in "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR", starring robert redford. a profoundly underrated cia drama from 1975 also starring faye dunaway.
That film has aged so well. Watched it again the other day and thought the relationship between Redford and Dunaway was so well executed. So much else I could talk about but better to hope that these guys watch it.
Max von Sydow, Director Lamar Burgess, was a huge international star, growing his reputation through his work with Swedish director Ingmar Bergman. He is probably best known in the States as Father Merrin in The Exorcist (1973). A few years later, he was in an excellent film (whodunit/whydunit)with Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway, Three Days of the Condor (1975, dir. Sydney Pollack)
Before Hollywood, he starred in Ingmar Bergman films. And so did Peter Stormare! Will somebody make an influence analysis of Bergman on The Minority Report? I suspect it'll have a lot to cover.
I've always felt like Raiders is Spielberg's masterpiece in terms of action-adventure. But this is a very close second for me, Cruise is so good and the visuals and story all work so well. One of the best sci-fi movies of all time
I love this movie for its dark vision of the future. And I feel and fear that we are getting closer to it every year. Just think about how people use their smartphones, letting them track where they go, what they do, what they buy etc. I love dystopian worlds but I never wanted to live in one!
The look on Agatha's face when she tells John, "You can choose" had me in a chokehold but when John yells, "DON'T YOU EVER SAY HIS NAME" grips my heart and gives me goosebumps EVERY TIME. Tom Cruise and Samantha Morton were acting their asses off in this movie.
I've often thought this is Tom Cruise's best work as an actor, rather than as an action star. The emotions he pulls off here are so far beyond what he does in most other of his films. Likewise, Spielberg is known for his hits but I agree with others that this is one of his most underrated movies. Last comment- this was the first time I remember seeing Colin Farrell, and I feel like he has rarely had an opportunity to work as well in a big Hollywood film as he does here. He's awesome in The Lobster though.
Tom Cruise is an amazing actor. Doesn’t get the credit he deserves on that front. Makes sense why Tarantino wanted him for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. “DONT YOU EVER SAY HIS NAME” kills me every time.
Well, it's not actually "related to" Total Recall. What people MAY be referring to is the fact that both movies were based upon a Philip K. Dick story, who also wrote the original stories for Blade Runner ("Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?") and "A Scanner Darkly", among many others. The story that would become "Total Recall" was called "We Can Remember it for You Wholesale"..
This movie has several major red herrings that almost make the movie too convoluted. 1. There actually aren't any "minority reports" in the film. The movie is called Minority Report. The concept of a minority report is that sometimes the head psychic sees things slightly differently than the other two. This information is stored but ignored. Cruise thinks maybe there's a minority report of his future crime. But it turns out there isn't. Then later in the film there's an implication that the drowning murder that was never solved was a minority report, but it turns out that was actually just a full-on new murder that was assumed to be an echo (a repeat viewing of the previous murder). 2. The disappearance of the main character's son is never solved nor even clued at. But it's toyed with to no end. Even at some point the psychic woman is able to see what his future could have been, but can't even see what his actual fate was. Or refuses to say what it was. So throughout the entire film, everything revolves around the son's disappearance, but every avenue it leads us down is a red herring. 3. Colin Farrell's entire existence was a red herring. He finds evidence enough to ruin Cruise's career, but that gets ignored ultimately because of timing. He's presented as the bad guy but doesn't do anything the other cops wouldn't have done. He eventually figures everything out and gets conveniently murdered right when the murderer could get away with it. His death is blamed on Cruise but even that is irrelevant due to timing because Cruise was getting the same punishment for the other supposed murder. 4. The man who gives Cruise new eyes is a red herring. We are led down this path of terror from the moment Cruise is unwittingly stuck with a needle to knock him out. The eye man then proceeds to explain that his career was ended and he was imprisoned because of Cruise. You think he's going to try to get some kind of revenge. And then he doesn't. He says it's water under the bridge and mentions Cruise's drug dealer is a mutual friend so everything's cool. This gets even further toyed with when Cruise wakes up and wants his sandwich and milk, but ends up grabbing an older moldy one and drinking an older moldy milk. The only reason the guy would leave the older food in there would be to screw with Cruise after eye surgery. But he DID put good milk and good sandwich in there too, so it was only a coin flip if Cruise picked the moldy sandwich over the good one.
Un-RAVIOLI-ng!!! You are a genius!! A ravioli starts nice and orderly with all the meat (lies) stuffed inside. Once someone starts proding inside and opens the ravioli, all the meat, sauce, garnishes inside starts to be revealed and when it does, becomes a chaotic mess!
I can't stand when my ravioli descends into a chaos state. All the luscious fillings are neatly tucked within the pasta casing, but when molested, the innards launch in all directions. I'm terrified of the meat when its wrapping deflates, and everything ricochets around the room and douses me in sauces and flesh.
19:05 Something crazy; that bubble is not a special effect. Spielberg figured they'd have to CG it, but Tom Cruise was like "No wait, I can totally make one bubble come out." And he was right!
@@Tigermania I'm pretty sure it's CG when it pops on the surface of the water. But that shot of Cruise in profile when he's laying still in the tub? I think that bubble was real.
The air bubble coming out of his nose is almost a bookend to the drop of sweat falling from his glasses and nearly hitting the floor in Mission Impossible.
Tom Cruise’s story arc on struggling with loss was brilliant. The pre-cogs were named after mystery writers. Dashiell Hammett, creator of Sherlock Holmes stories Arthur C Doyle and the Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie. I knew Agatha was gonna grab Tom Cruise from the pool but Spielberg still managed to scare me!! Love how they used Schubert’s music when Tom was browsing the images early in the movie.
This whole movie was brilliant...the action sequences, the acting and the soundtrack all top notch. Although it did get mix reviews as I remember it. I agree with TBR that my favorite scene is at the cottage with John, his wife and Agatha...the story of their son's progression growing into adulthood was so touching and very moving. Being the father of a son, this hit home right in the feels. I love Samantha Morton (Agatha).
Philp K Dick -- who wrote the original story -- is one of my favorite authors. In his stories, reality sort of peels away and reveals what's underneath.
When Minority Report was made it was set 50 years in the future. The laughably miniature cell phones which resulted in the scene where Cruise rages at nobody visible as he storms through the restaurant kitchen became reality within less than a decade in the form of bluetooth headsets, and it was eerie to see that scene being enacted in real life by actual people.
Cruise (almost age 40 at the time) in his first of 2 collaborations with Spielberg. Much like Blade Runner, futuristic crime drama and from the same author of the source material. The storytelling raises so many questions about the nature of fate and destiny with good or bad intentions. The script is just as smart as the science of the film itself with good actions and visualization. The infamous 'Industrial Light & Magic' special effects house designing the most incredible to bring this world to life. This was a new classic for a new century.
Hey Daniel and Sam, This vision of the future is so next level in this movie. From self-driving cars that use the sides of building to double as roadways. To interface teach that can scan your mind fro their thoughts and on the flip side implant new ones to create fantasies. Flying police cars, roll up digital newspapers. Near-instant body part replacements, artificial body parts. And the list goes on and on. THe only one I would leave off the list is the constant eye scans. But our cell phones can do that trick to have us tracked, so were screwed either way.
Spielberg made Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can within a short time of one another. Two great, but very different films. It was an incredible burst of creativity.
It’s amazing to say that a Steven Spielberg/Tom Cruise movie is underrated, but Minority Report is. It’s one of the best sci-fi movies that’s a “cautionary tale” of where the future might take us with science and technology. This along with Blade Runner and Gattaca are the best examples of that sub-genre of sci-fi.
One wonders how far we already have that future in many ways, eg. how often "inconvenient" evidence is ignored during police investigations because it contradicts the narrative the investigators have chosen to believe - often a problem during high stress investigations when there is strong public and/or political pressure to get a result, but it likely happens to some degree all the time. In the UK, the Birmingham Six and the Guildford Four were prime examples of this, men wrongly convicted for acts of terrorism which ignited public anger, released years later after proof of the bungled investigations and deliberate falsification of evidence came out. People assume it is the role of prosecuting authorities to find out the truth, but that's wrong, instead their role is to press for prosection of any offense for which there is apparent 'evidence', regardless of whether the relevant act actually happened or not; since the presentation of such evidence is by definition selective, the potential for excluding contradictory data is significant. In recent decades, several fields of forensic science have been downgraded in relevance in trials as their reliability has come into question, especially areas for which there was never any baseline data. DNA testing and ballistics have both been found flawed, indeed resulting in wrongful convictions, partly because juries are misled about the supporting science. Facial recognition has also ruined innocent lives.
@@itsalwayssomething7490 The Post is very good. I was a teen interested in movies when Spielberg, Scorsese, De Palma, etc were at their peak. I hope they still have some great films to make. I do not denigrate Marvel films, but Disney is like the old studio system, monopolizing the most talented film makers. I wonder who the next great directors might be.
@@brachiator1 Haven’t watched a marvel film since Iron Man. They may be “well made,” but they just aren’t the films and stories I want to watch anymore. Sadly, more and more of my favorite films are 25-40 years old now, not to mention classics like Casablanca, The Godfather, etc.
I remember this in the theaters and not liking it. Caught it later on TV and thinking it was an "okay" movie. But then caught it on streaming one night and was hooked. Never really had a movie that went from not liking to completely liking on multiple views and knowing the story. Think this really had more to do with noticing a bit more the real acting behind the action instead of simply the action and "familiar" sci-fi tropes. And when you focus on how Tom really dug deep to convey as many emotional moments as he had to go through with the set-up and resolution and hearing about his son's possible life really makes it hit home.
Same. It grew on me. Even the cgi/special effects don't feel to dated. I think this movie struggled because this might be in the "crazy tom" jumping on couches part of his life. I think people were pushing away from him.
This movie was definitely ahead of its time. I always kind of mix it up with I Robot a bit, but I think I like this one more. If you want some more excellent sci fi, I would recommend Edge of Tomorrow with Tom Cruise or Predestination with Ethan Hawke or Equilibrium with Christian Bale.
@Dayspring Is what? Both have fast moving cars. Futuristic environments with big robotic machines, a conniving plot with a big Hollywood A Lister in the lead. You´re acting like the comparison would be SO outrageous as if I had compared Star Wars with Fifty Shades of Grey.... smh
@Dayspring Oh, ok. Sorry. I couldn't read past the "To compare I Robot and Minority Report is....." point. It wouldn't show me more. I thought your comment was over at that point. Still, my point still stands, you're completely overreacting. I even specified "A BIT". Chill tf out!
I robot was really bad. Felt like a bad uninspired version of Minority Report. Equilibrium is a good movie, worth the watch. The dog scene is still a bit much.
I'm sure I'm not the first to mention this, but in fact actor Malcolm McDowell did injure his eyes during the iconic scene in 'A Clockwork Orange'... First, one of his corneas got scratched by the 'hook' that held his eyes open, and second he went temporarily blind from having his eyes held open for as long as they were. Thankfully he did recover fully from both injuries! 'Minority Report' is a great flick, I saw it in the theater when it first came out, and loved it! Glad you guys watched it for the channel. Kudos!
If you'd like to see another role of Samantha Morton's, I would highly recommend "In America". Tim Blake Nelson was in O Brother Where Art Thou (if you've seen that).
Great reaction, but what really drives it home is your "take" or analysis afterward. My favorite overall, as I have said before, is your analysis (take) on True Detective Season 1. But you guys always seem to dissect a film or series to great effect. This one's no exception. This is one of my favorite Spielberg movies, because of all the elements - story, directing and acting - are so spot on. Daniel, I'm with you, one of my favorite scene's in any Spielberg film is the one at the cottage with John, his wife and "Agatha." The storytelling of their son's life is both poignant and heartbreaking and so masterfully done by all parties...Samantha Morton (Agatha) absolutely crushed it, and TC was brilliant in portraying a father's grief and anguish. But that scream to "run" morphing into the roar of the hover craft is worth the price of admission to the theater. Please do "In America" - not sci-fi but a wonderful story and it has much more of Samantha Morton.
This is the first time I've heard the Mrs. do all the "What the f----?!" One of my favorite details in this was when Kathryn Morris put the bag of eyeballs on the piano, triggering the dramatic music cue within the movie. It was reminiscent of a certain "Saving Private Ryan" scene when a piano on set was used like a score element to punctuate the tone. This came out July 2002 right after "Attack of the Clones." The scene where the car was built around Cruise thus giving him with a getaway car was like a better outcome to how the "Episode II" droid factory scene should have ended.
There was a Minority Report TV series based on the movie that was released in 2015 taking place 10 years after the event of the movie, where the Precog, Dash, comes out of hiding to help the new characters in the show try to stop murders and terrorist attacks after the Precog program was dismantled, must use their expertise to save the day. The show was cancelled after 10 episodes.
I remember this, but the casting was a bit off. Great idea, but for it to be a hit, you have to nail the characters casting. Picking a great "Agatha" was key. Without Samantha Morton you were taking a big chance, a gamble. I say that knowing full well that Tom Cruise was the star of MR, but Morton was so brilliant and central to the film's "believability." I liked elements of it, but...
Fun fact: the hotel clerk watching soft core porn is William Mapother, real life cousin of Tom Cruise. My favorite Philip K Dick adaptation! Can't wait to see you get to A Scanner Darkly(2006)
Cube got a super raw deal in that poll, arguably the best movie in the list! And on such a budget too. Hope you’re able to get to it in time, great film.
just want to say you two have the best hair of any reaction duo. 👍🏼 sam's appears longer and shiner every video, and daniels thick full mane... i miss hair. 😥
Two things I love about this movie (SPOILER WARNING, PLEASE SKIP IF YOU DON'T WANT SPOILERS FOR MINORITY REPORT): 1. The precogs can detect premeditated murder--but NOT who premeditated it, which is how the movie avoids the grandfather paradox. If Anderton doesn't know Crow, then how could he plan his murder without the prediction itself setting him on that path? Without the prediction, Anderton would never know Crow existed and would thus never murder him, so the prediction seems to be a self-fulfilling prophecy--but it's not. It was Lamar arranging Crow's murder that set events in motion. LAMAR premeditated the murder, thus triggering the prediction. It's a very clever way to avoid a paradox, AND it exposes another weakness of Precrime--it won't necessarily bring people who hire contract killers to justice, allowing the chance to frame people just like Lamar does to Anderton. 2. There's a Total Recall-style "alternate ending": the prison warden mentions that the people in the prison are experiencing dreams while they're being held in stasis--specifically, that "all their dreams come true." Since we see Anderton being placed in a cell, everything that happens afterwards--Lara's meeting with Lamar and subsequent realization, Lamar's unmasking, the disbanding of Precrime, Agatha being released to live out her life in peace and especially--ESPECIALLY--Anderton and Lara getting back together and having another child--it could very well be all in Anderton's head. He's still in that cell, having his dreams come true, while who-knows-what is happening in the real world. I also just love how many wham lines Dr. Hineman has in her conversation with Anderton. She delivers every single one of them in such rapid succession, but it doesn't feel like plot exposition at all even though that's exactly what it is.
I’m a huge fan of minority report and the dark undertones that feature within it. Colin Farrell is amazing in it as is everyone else, in fact 3 out of 4 of Tom’s sci-fi films are amazing (with Oblivion and Edge of Tomorrow also being Fantastic!)
Did anyone else notice that scene with him on the car assembly line was extremely similar to the scene in Star Wars: Episode II where Anakin is on the droid assembly line? The two movies came out in the same year, and the John Williams music is strikingly similar there, too.
Thanks guys i love this movie. Yes colin Farrell's character is from Irish originally. From Dublin like colin. ( i am too) he definitely toned down the accent but there are different accents ( north or south side ) but there are around 30s something Irish accents. Odd because its a tiny country.
I grew up in Ireland's hated next door neighbor's. Same in England, small island with so many accents. Colin has always been good with accents. Never feels false or unnatural.
I love this movie! one of the things that always creeps me out is the way you can see the way eye scanning could be exploited for ads and marketing. it really is the next logical step from the way social media tracks your usage to market to you specifically and I can totally see something similar to that happening in the near future. we already have face scanning on our smartphones; not really that much different. anyway, great reaction guys! Samantha is so sharp! ❤️
This movie is one of my all time favorites! I feel it tells a good story of a flawed need for a perfect law system, but of course things are usually more complex and ugly under the surface of such "perfect" systems, but the fact that the system genuinely works to some extent is grimly intriguing, and I love when a story goes into showing imperfect perfection, or even perfect imperfection. I'm glad to see your reactions and take on this movie!
Another film based on the works of Phillip K. Dick. Here are some more, actually there are short films and so forth that add up to about 25 or 30 altogether. The Man in the High Castle (TV Series) Electric Dreams (TV Series) The Adjustment Bureau A Scanner Darkly Paycheck Minority Report Total Recall Blade Runner
It's always the boss you thought was always your friend. The second they got Colin Farrel and Max Von Sydow in the same room, I was like, "Oh jeez, it's gonna turn out to be Max's character isn't it."
That actor that Cruise talks to at 23:04 is actually his real life cousin William Mapother that popped up in his films occasionally to this point before taking off on his own successful career.
One of my favourite films ever! I am a sucker for time themed movies/books and even academic research! In my masters thesis (arts education) I even quoted this book!
"Agatha" is played by an actress named Samantha Morton. She also played "Alpha". The hated leader of the "Whispers", from "The Walking Dead". She played Mary "Queen of Scot's" Stuart in 2007's "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" too. She had long hair in that one.
It's crazy how much this movie predicted-or perhaps inspired-so many technologies that, since the movie's production, have actually been invented or are beginning to be implemented now: facial recognition and retina scanning, targeted advertising, self-driving cars, touch screens, etc. Spielberg actually consulted with scientists before filming to try and predict what the world might look like 52 years (now only 32, which is also crazy) into the future, as accurately as possible. Our world today probably looks more like Minority Report now, than it looks like the world just 20 years ago when the film was released.
I was working in the eyeglass industry in this movie came out and we sold a ton of PERSOL sunglasses during this time. PERSOL was making sunglasses for NASA back in the 60’s. Great lenses.
Colin Farrell was a rising star going into this film! In 2003 he appeared in five films. Yes, that's Jessica Capshaw (aka Dr. Arizona Robbins) in the film. When this film came out Capshaw was starred on the legal drama series The Practice. In fact, Steve Harris (who plays Jad Watson) was, also, on The Practice!
@@samantha_schmitt I really think if you enjoy trying to figure movies out. I recommend the movies, The Generals Daughter and Basic. Twists and turns..
BTW, a TV show that deals with "pre-crime" and artificial intelligence that is definitely worth checking out is "Person of Interest," with Jim Caviezel, Michael Emerson, and Taraji P. Henson.
I would love to see some reaction channels react to Person Of Interest! I remember assuming POI was just another police procedural show, like Criminal Minds, Law & Order, CSI, etc. Then I started watching it; God-like A.I.s playing with human pawns, CIA black ops espionage, government assassins, underground resistance with their own assassins ... VERY creative "soft" sci-fi at its best!
28:14 - I find this scene to be the most poetic in the entire film; combination of great acting, lighting, the music, and what it signifies in the story . . . so heartbreaking.
Philip K. Dick wrote a lot of great stories. One of the stories that became a movie called Screamers, the original story was called "Second Variety". It had Peter Weller in it as the main character. The Doctor that performed the surgery played Lucifer in Constantine and the cousin in John Wick 2. His name is Peter Stormare.
"Minority Report", "Total Recall" and "Blade Runner" are adaptations of Philip K. Dick's novels. There are many other adaptations. I recommend You "The Adjustment Bureau", if you haven't seen yet.
So much of this movie can just be explained by reading the novel but they did change a few things. for example in the novel the precogs can see all kinds of crime, in the movie they only focus on murder because of "The Nature of Murder." Since they can't see Suicides they didn't know Leo Crow and Lamar were gonna kill themselves. as far as the film its one of my personal favorite Spielberg film. and im so glad you guys reacted to it. also i wish Concussion Rifles would exist in this world (the gun they use in the Lexus Factory) and Billboards that use your name for advertisement. The man behind the desk at the hotel lobby is Tom Cruise's cousin Sick Sticks are a modified version of a cattle prod and police baton that makes the perpetrator vomit upon getting hit to drain their stamina so they can't fight back.
Something I don’t see mentioned a lot about this film is the amazing sound design. Particularly in the scene with spiders going around the apartment complex and scanning eyes.
This is a great movie, this is one of the first DVDs I ever bought--I bought 3 with my first DVD player at Blockbuster around 2003 to 2004: The Rookie, Reign of Fire, Minority Report. Tom Cruise likes to do a lot of things himself, so I don't doubt he did the eye thing. I was also more shocked my Danny's death than the plot twist of Lamar's betrayal. Once again you guys picked another great movie. P.S.: I just looked it up, that is Arizona (Jessica Capshaw) from Grey's. I've seen this movie quite a few times and I never took that in.
During the early 2000s, Spielberg was very interested in classic science fiction, so the movie before Minority Report was: "Artificial Intelligence" (2001), a movie that was originally going to be directed by Stanley Kubrick, but he dies during pre-production, so Spielberg takes charge of directing it, and then in 2005 he directs The War of the Worlds, another classic science fiction story, both are recommended, they will be taken into account for future reactions.
Is this a re-upload? I recall making a comment on a Minority Report reaction where Dark City and Gatica polled incredibly low and I couldn't believe the vast difference in % for those 2 films. Even if you don't record a reaction to either of them, they are a must watch for sci-fi fans. (i've seen that many reactions to films, that I may have this confused with another) Philip K Dick did write some great books that turned into films. Minority Report, Blade Runner, Paycheck (another good watch).
Yeah it is Arizona from Greys, her step-dad is the director so... Other small roles directly related to nepotism include the hotel clerk at the murder hotel is Tom Cruise's cousin William Mapother
This sci-fi gem is 20 years old and I remember seeing it in the theatre when it came out here. Left the theatre being totally amazed by it and I still am today. Thanks for another great reaction... you 2 are the best!
Really enjoyed this one TBR and Sam. It was a lot of fun watching you go through this great and somewhat overlooked movie. It’s a decent story and both Tom Cruise and Colin Farrell do a great job here. I love seeing Cruise in science fiction. It just seems to fit him so well. Check out Oblivion if you’ve not seen it already as that’s a lovely and very simple story. It has great visuals and an even better soundtrack.
For underrated movies sci-fi or otherwise, I always mention Dark City and Minority Report. Thanks for doing a reaction to this great movie and one of Tom's best.
Philip K. Dick wrote the story this is based on. Amazing SciFi writer. Wrote book Blade Runner was based on (Do Androids Dream of Sheep) and the book Total Recall was based on.
The moment Agatha screams "RUN" is such a memorable moment for me.
Gives me chills everytime
Ditto, and the story of how their son grows to be a man like his dad who loves to run. So moving. Can't help it, I'm a dad!
Interesting you would tie Minority Report to Total Recall and Blade Runner, all based on stories by Philip K. Dick. Dick was a brilliant man, who unfortunately was writing science fiction at a time when the genre had no respect whatsoever. He spent his life just barely scraping by financially.
Just like all “starving artists” he/she is recognized AFTER they die and their work, be it paintings or books are only then worth many millions of dollars…. It’s really cruel but all so true… 🤷♂️
When Tom Cruise yells “Don’t you ever say his name!” I really feel that.
Minority Report is based on a Phillip K. Dick story. He also wrote the stories that became Blade Runner, Total Recall, Paycheck, and Imposter, which I recommend watching. It stars Gary Sinese.
I think he wrote A Scanner Darkly too
@@jomckellan I believe he did. Terrific mind he had.
@@jomckellan
Yep, the one major Philip K. Dick adaptation that closely followed the book.
Also I, Robot
@@cklambo That is Asimov.
Sometimes I forget how gorgeous Colin Farrell is 😍 My favorite of his films is In Bruges.. the best dark comedy of all time.
In Bruges is wonderful. I love that movie. Absolutely second that.
"This looks traumatizing for these guys." -- Samantha figures out the entire plot 6 minutes in
She's a psychic,but when she gets visions,she's confused and doesn't entirely know what's going on.
I love how quick Samantha picks up on screen writing narratives. She'll be like "wait a minute this person should totally be caring about why this other thing happened From 25 minutes ago", And without skipping a beat the character she's talking about will start caring about what she's talking about. She's the perfect movie watcher.
Yeah, she's a sharp lady, alright.
Wow! Thank you so much! 🥰
I love watching films with people who are that engaged
@betrixc Wow, thank you! I didn't think anyone would notice.
@@samantha_schmitt Sam we've constantly commented that you are one of the smartest people on the internet next to Neil Tyson Degrass. To see your mind work is such a pleasure to behold.
4:07: Yes, that is Jessica Capshaw, who in addition to being Arizona Robbins on Grey's Anatomy, is the daughter of Kate Capshaw -- Willie Scott in Director Steven Speilberg's 1984 film "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom". Capshaw the younger became Speilberg's step-daughter when he and her mother were married in 1991.
The scene where Agatha tells John about what his son could've been if he'd grown up breaks my heart every single time.
Same
@betrixc I think you may have suffered a head injury.
Losing his son is the worst!
Basically,if you really want to think about it,she explains what it is was for him and his child to grow up together,like a loving parent raising his child.
actually she's seeing the future of John's next child.
One of the greatest Sci-fi films ever made in Hollywood. Also, in the top 5 of Spielberg's best blockbuster films. Great reaction! 👍🏿
Nah, top 3, at least.
the villain in this film was really good in "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR", starring robert redford. a profoundly underrated cia drama from 1975 also starring faye dunaway.
That film has aged so well. Watched it again the other day and thought the relationship between Redford and Dunaway was so well executed. So much else I could talk about but better to hope that these guys watch it.
Awesome movie
Max von Sydow, Director Lamar Burgess, was a huge international star, growing his reputation through his work with Swedish director Ingmar Bergman. He is probably best known in the States as Father Merrin in The Exorcist (1973). A few years later, he was in an excellent film (whodunit/whydunit)with Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway, Three Days of the Condor (1975, dir. Sydney Pollack)
I liked him a lot in Judge Dredd and Needful Things.
Good actor. Saw The Seventh Seal a long time ago.
Three Days of the Condor is AWESOME. A classic that would be good to get reviewed here
Before Hollywood, he starred in Ingmar Bergman films. And so did Peter Stormare! Will somebody make an influence analysis of Bergman on The Minority Report? I suspect it'll have a lot to cover.
@YT see videodrome's comment above.
I've always felt like Raiders is Spielberg's masterpiece in terms of action-adventure. But this is a very close second for me, Cruise is so good and the visuals and story all work so well. One of the best sci-fi movies of all time
I love this movie for its dark vision of the future. And I feel and fear that we are getting closer to it every year. Just think about how people use their smartphones, letting them track where they go, what they do, what they buy etc. I love dystopian worlds but I never wanted to live in one!
The look on Agatha's face when she tells John, "You can choose" had me in a chokehold but when John yells, "DON'T YOU EVER SAY HIS NAME" grips my heart and gives me goosebumps EVERY TIME. Tom Cruise and Samantha Morton were acting their asses off in this movie.
I've often thought this is Tom Cruise's best work as an actor, rather than as an action star. The emotions he pulls off here are so far beyond what he does in most other of his films. Likewise, Spielberg is known for his hits but I agree with others that this is one of his most underrated movies. Last comment- this was the first time I remember seeing Colin Farrell, and I feel like he has rarely had an opportunity to work as well in a big Hollywood film as he does here. He's awesome in The Lobster though.
Tom Cruise is an amazing actor. Doesn’t get the credit he deserves on that front. Makes sense why Tarantino wanted him for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. “DONT YOU EVER SAY HIS NAME” kills me every time.
24:38 “I am going to kill this man” that line always give me chills
Well, it's not actually "related to" Total Recall. What people MAY be referring to is the fact that both movies were based upon a Philip K. Dick story, who also wrote the original stories for Blade Runner ("Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?") and "A Scanner Darkly", among many others. The story that would become "Total Recall" was called "We Can Remember it for You Wholesale"..
I sure want to see about a dozen reactions to "A Scanner Darkly"
This movie has several major red herrings that almost make the movie too convoluted.
1. There actually aren't any "minority reports" in the film. The movie is called Minority Report. The concept of a minority report is that sometimes the head psychic sees things slightly differently than the other two. This information is stored but ignored. Cruise thinks maybe there's a minority report of his future crime. But it turns out there isn't. Then later in the film there's an implication that the drowning murder that was never solved was a minority report, but it turns out that was actually just a full-on new murder that was assumed to be an echo (a repeat viewing of the previous murder).
2. The disappearance of the main character's son is never solved nor even clued at. But it's toyed with to no end. Even at some point the psychic woman is able to see what his future could have been, but can't even see what his actual fate was. Or refuses to say what it was. So throughout the entire film, everything revolves around the son's disappearance, but every avenue it leads us down is a red herring.
3. Colin Farrell's entire existence was a red herring. He finds evidence enough to ruin Cruise's career, but that gets ignored ultimately because of timing. He's presented as the bad guy but doesn't do anything the other cops wouldn't have done. He eventually figures everything out and gets conveniently murdered right when the murderer could get away with it. His death is blamed on Cruise but even that is irrelevant due to timing because Cruise was getting the same punishment for the other supposed murder.
4. The man who gives Cruise new eyes is a red herring. We are led down this path of terror from the moment Cruise is unwittingly stuck with a needle to knock him out. The eye man then proceeds to explain that his career was ended and he was imprisoned because of Cruise. You think he's going to try to get some kind of revenge. And then he doesn't. He says it's water under the bridge and mentions Cruise's drug dealer is a mutual friend so everything's cool.
This gets even further toyed with when Cruise wakes up and wants his sandwich and milk, but ends up grabbing an older moldy one and drinking an older moldy milk. The only reason the guy would leave the older food in there would be to screw with Cruise after eye surgery. But he DID put good milk and good sandwich in there too, so it was only a coin flip if Cruise picked the moldy sandwich over the good one.
Un-RAVIOLI-ng!!! You are a genius!!
A ravioli starts nice and orderly with all the meat (lies) stuffed inside. Once someone starts proding inside and opens the ravioli, all the meat, sauce, garnishes inside starts to be revealed and when it does, becomes a chaotic mess!
I can't stand when my ravioli descends into a chaos state. All the luscious fillings are neatly tucked within the pasta casing, but when molested, the innards launch in all directions. I'm terrified of the meat when its wrapping deflates, and everything ricochets around the room and douses me in sauces and flesh.
19:05 Something crazy; that bubble is not a special effect. Spielberg figured they'd have to CG it, but Tom Cruise was like "No wait, I can totally make one bubble come out." And he was right!
This is the trivia I read the comments for. :D I assumed it was fx.
I feel like Tom is like, "you need to remove my eyes and replace them? I can do that."
@@Tigermania I'm pretty sure it's CG when it pops on the surface of the water. But that shot of Cruise in profile when he's laying still in the tub? I think that bubble was real.
The air bubble coming out of his nose is almost a bookend to the drop of sweat falling from his glasses and nearly hitting the floor in Mission Impossible.
What a great movie, even 20 years later it’s still very well done
Can't believe this is already 20 years old
@@omegawhite6943 I worked at a local theater when this was on the way.
One of the most awaited of that summer.
Crowds were packing for this one.
I feel like outs Steven Spielberg's last great movie.
Tom Cruise’s story arc on struggling with loss was brilliant.
The pre-cogs were named after mystery writers. Dashiell Hammett, creator of Sherlock Holmes stories Arthur C Doyle and the Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie. I knew Agatha was gonna grab Tom Cruise from the pool but Spielberg still managed to scare me!!
Love how they used Schubert’s music when Tom was browsing the images early in the movie.
This whole movie was brilliant...the action sequences, the acting and the soundtrack all top notch. Although it did get mix reviews as I remember it. I agree with TBR that my favorite scene is at the cottage with John, his wife and Agatha...the story of their son's progression growing into adulthood was so touching and very moving. Being the father of a son, this hit home right in the feels. I love Samantha Morton (Agatha).
Philp K Dick -- who wrote the original story -- is one of my favorite authors. In his stories, reality sort of peels away and reveals what's underneath.
When Minority Report was made it was set 50 years in the future. The laughably miniature cell phones which resulted in the scene where Cruise rages at nobody visible as he storms through the restaurant kitchen became reality within less than a decade in the form of bluetooth headsets, and it was eerie to see that scene being enacted in real life by actual people.
Cruise (almost age 40 at the time) in his first of 2 collaborations with Spielberg.
Much like Blade Runner, futuristic crime drama and from the same author of the source material.
The storytelling raises so many questions about the nature of fate and destiny with good or bad intentions.
The script is just as smart as the science of the film itself with good actions and visualization.
The infamous 'Industrial Light & Magic' special effects house designing the most incredible to bring this world to life.
This was a new classic for a new century.
Hey Daniel and Sam, This vision of the future is so next level in this movie. From self-driving cars that use the sides of building to double as roadways. To interface teach that can scan your mind fro their thoughts and on the flip side implant new ones to create fantasies. Flying police cars, roll up digital newspapers. Near-instant body part replacements, artificial body parts. And the list goes on and on. THe only one I would leave off the list is the constant eye scans. But our cell phones can do that trick to have us tracked, so were screwed either way.
Spielberg made Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can within a short time of one another. Two great, but very different films. It was an incredible burst of creativity.
It’s amazing to say that a Steven Spielberg/Tom Cruise movie is underrated, but Minority Report is. It’s one of the best sci-fi movies that’s a “cautionary tale” of where the future might take us with science and technology. This along with Blade Runner and Gattaca are the best examples of that sub-genre of sci-fi.
One wonders how far we already have that future in many ways, eg. how often "inconvenient" evidence is ignored during police investigations because it contradicts the narrative the investigators have chosen to believe - often a problem during high stress investigations when there is strong public and/or political pressure to get a result, but it likely happens to some degree all the time. In the UK, the Birmingham Six and the Guildford Four were prime examples of this, men wrongly convicted for acts of terrorism which ignited public anger, released years later after proof of the bungled investigations and deliberate falsification of evidence came out. People assume it is the role of prosecuting authorities to find out the truth, but that's wrong, instead their role is to press for prosection of any offense for which there is apparent 'evidence', regardless of whether the relevant act actually happened or not; since the presentation of such evidence is by definition selective, the potential for excluding contradictory data is significant.
In recent decades, several fields of forensic science have been downgraded in relevance in trials as their reliability has come into question, especially areas for which there was never any baseline data. DNA testing and ballistics have both been found flawed, indeed resulting in wrongful convictions, partly because juries are misled about the supporting science. Facial recognition has also ruined innocent lives.
To me, it's the last great Spielberg movie.
@@itsalwayssomething7490 I mean catch me if you can was brilliant!
@@itsalwayssomething7490 The Post is very good. I was a teen interested in movies when Spielberg, Scorsese, De Palma, etc were at their peak. I hope they still have some great films to make. I do not denigrate Marvel films, but Disney is like the old studio system, monopolizing the most talented film makers. I wonder who the next great directors might be.
@@brachiator1 Haven’t watched a marvel film since Iron Man. They may be “well made,” but they just aren’t the films and stories I want to watch anymore. Sadly, more and more of my favorite films are 25-40 years old now, not to mention classics like Casablanca, The Godfather, etc.
I remember this in the theaters and not liking it. Caught it later on TV and thinking it was an "okay" movie. But then caught it on streaming one night and was hooked. Never really had a movie that went from not liking to completely liking on multiple views and knowing the story.
Think this really had more to do with noticing a bit more the real acting behind the action instead of simply the action and "familiar" sci-fi tropes. And when you focus on how Tom really dug deep to convey as many emotional moments as he had to go through with the set-up and resolution and hearing about his son's possible life really makes it hit home.
Same. It grew on me. Even the cgi/special effects don't feel to dated. I think this movie struggled because this might be in the "crazy tom" jumping on couches part of his life. I think people were pushing away from him.
This movie was definitely ahead of its time. I always kind of mix it up with I Robot a bit, but I think I like this one more.
If you want some more excellent sci fi, I would recommend Edge of Tomorrow with Tom Cruise or Predestination with Ethan Hawke or Equilibrium with Christian Bale.
Equilibrium is amazing! :)
Oblivion is another good Cruise scifi flick
@Dayspring Is what? Both have fast moving cars. Futuristic environments with big robotic machines, a conniving plot with a big Hollywood A Lister in the lead. You´re acting like the comparison would be SO outrageous as if I had compared Star Wars with Fifty Shades of Grey.... smh
@Dayspring Oh, ok. Sorry. I couldn't read past the "To compare I Robot and Minority Report is....." point. It wouldn't show me more. I thought your comment was over at that point. Still, my point still stands, you're completely overreacting. I even specified "A BIT". Chill tf out!
I robot was really bad. Felt like a bad uninspired version of Minority Report. Equilibrium is a good movie, worth the watch. The dog scene is still a bit much.
The humour in this film is so well done. All lands perfectly, in an awkward yoga pose.
I'm sure I'm not the first to mention this, but in fact actor Malcolm McDowell did injure his eyes during the iconic scene in 'A Clockwork Orange'... First, one of his corneas got scratched by the 'hook' that held his eyes open, and second he went temporarily blind from having his eyes held open for as long as they were. Thankfully he did recover fully from both injuries! 'Minority Report' is a great flick, I saw it in the theater when it first came out, and loved it! Glad you guys watched it for the channel. Kudos!
If you'd like to see another role of Samantha Morton's, I would highly recommend "In America".
Tim Blake Nelson was in O Brother Where Art Thou (if you've seen that).
"In America" please next. Not sci-fi, but a brilliant movie. Love Samantha Morton.
"We thought you was a... to-aad." lol
He was also Buster Scruggs
Great reaction, but what really drives it home is your "take" or analysis afterward. My favorite overall, as I have said before, is your analysis (take) on True Detective Season 1. But you guys always seem to dissect a film or series to great effect. This one's no exception. This is one of my favorite Spielberg movies, because of all the elements - story, directing and acting - are so spot on. Daniel, I'm with you, one of my favorite scene's in any Spielberg film is the one at the cottage with John, his wife and "Agatha." The storytelling of their son's life is both poignant and heartbreaking and so masterfully done by all parties...Samantha Morton (Agatha) absolutely crushed it, and TC was brilliant in portraying a father's grief and anguish. But that scream to "run" morphing into the roar of the hover craft is worth the price of admission to the theater.
Please do "In America" - not sci-fi but a wonderful story and it has much more of Samantha Morton.
This is the first time I've heard the Mrs. do all the "What the f----?!"
One of my favorite details in this was when Kathryn Morris put the bag of eyeballs on the piano, triggering the dramatic music cue within the movie. It was reminiscent of a certain "Saving Private Ryan" scene when a piano on set was used like a score element to punctuate the tone.
This came out July 2002 right after "Attack of the Clones." The scene where the car was built around Cruise thus giving him with a getaway car was like a better outcome to how the "Episode II" droid factory scene should have ended.
@ 23:09: Fun Fact: the hotel clerk is played by Tom Cruise's cousin, William Mapother.
That guy from the prison, you recognized him from O Brother Where Art Thou
"... mechanical spiders in the future...", reminded me of the film "Runaway" (1984) with Tom Selleck, and written and directed by Michael Crichton.
:)
There was a Minority Report TV series based on the movie that was released in 2015 taking place 10 years after the event of the movie, where the Precog, Dash, comes out of hiding to help the new characters in the show try to stop murders and terrorist attacks after the Precog program was dismantled, must use their expertise to save the day.
The show was cancelled after 10 episodes.
Canceled too soon, it had a lot of promise.
He should have seen that coming.
I remember this, but the casting was a bit off. Great idea, but for it to be a hit, you have to nail the characters casting. Picking a great "Agatha" was key. Without Samantha Morton you were taking a big chance, a gamble. I say that knowing full well that Tom Cruise was the star of MR, but Morton was so brilliant and central to the film's "believability." I liked elements of it, but...
Fun fact: the hotel clerk watching soft core porn is William Mapother, real life cousin of Tom Cruise.
My favorite Philip K Dick adaptation!
Can't wait to see you get to A Scanner Darkly(2006)
this movie feels slept on but its one of my favs. glad you guys did this one
This and Collateral, prob my two favorite Tom Cruise movies. Can't even count the number of times I've seen em, so rewatchable.
Cube got a super raw deal in that poll, arguably the best movie in the list! And on such a budget too. Hope you’re able to get to it in time, great film.
Hard to believe it came out 20 years ago, I remember watching it in the theater.
Who would have thought that our future Would be foretold with 100% accuracy If you simply took Idiocracy and mixed it with Minority Report.
21:43 "Hey, that's the name of the movie," says Jen Reacts. Thats her catchphrases. Lol!!
I heard her voice when I read this.
just want to say you two have the best hair of any reaction duo. 👍🏼 sam's appears longer and shiner every video, and daniels thick full mane...
i miss hair. 😥
Two things I love about this movie (SPOILER WARNING, PLEASE SKIP IF YOU DON'T WANT SPOILERS FOR MINORITY REPORT):
1. The precogs can detect premeditated murder--but NOT who premeditated it, which is how the movie avoids the grandfather paradox. If Anderton doesn't know Crow, then how could he plan his murder without the prediction itself setting him on that path? Without the prediction, Anderton would never know Crow existed and would thus never murder him, so the prediction seems to be a self-fulfilling prophecy--but it's not. It was Lamar arranging Crow's murder that set events in motion. LAMAR premeditated the murder, thus triggering the prediction. It's a very clever way to avoid a paradox, AND it exposes another weakness of Precrime--it won't necessarily bring people who hire contract killers to justice, allowing the chance to frame people just like Lamar does to Anderton.
2. There's a Total Recall-style "alternate ending": the prison warden mentions that the people in the prison are experiencing dreams while they're being held in stasis--specifically, that "all their dreams come true." Since we see Anderton being placed in a cell, everything that happens afterwards--Lara's meeting with Lamar and subsequent realization, Lamar's unmasking, the disbanding of Precrime, Agatha being released to live out her life in peace and especially--ESPECIALLY--Anderton and Lara getting back together and having another child--it could very well be all in Anderton's head. He's still in that cell, having his dreams come true, while who-knows-what is happening in the real world.
I also just love how many wham lines Dr. Hineman has in her conversation with Anderton. She delivers every single one of them in such rapid succession, but it doesn't feel like plot exposition at all even though that's exactly what it is.
I’m a huge fan of minority report and the dark undertones that feature within it.
Colin Farrell is amazing in it as is everyone else, in fact 3 out of 4 of Tom’s sci-fi films are amazing (with Oblivion and Edge of Tomorrow also being Fantastic!)
This is one of my all time favorite movies! Glad you both enjoyed it 😁
Tom Cruise is a beast
Did anyone else notice that scene with him on the car assembly line was extremely similar to the scene in Star Wars: Episode II where Anakin is on the droid assembly line? The two movies came out in the same year, and the John Williams music is strikingly similar there, too.
I noticed.
The car scene was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock, who said that he always wanted to do a scene where the hero gets away in a newly assembled automobile.
Yes!!! Me too!
Thanks guys i love this movie. Yes colin Farrell's character is from Irish originally. From Dublin like colin. ( i am too) he definitely toned down the accent but there are different accents ( north or south side ) but there are around 30s something Irish accents. Odd because its a tiny country.
I grew up in Ireland's hated next door neighbor's. Same in England, small island with so many accents. Colin has always been good with accents. Never feels false or unnatural.
I love this movie! one of the things that always creeps me out is the way you can see the way eye scanning could be exploited for ads and marketing. it really is the next logical step from the way social media tracks your usage to market to you specifically and I can totally see something similar to that happening in the near future. we already have face scanning on our smartphones; not really that much different. anyway, great reaction guys! Samantha is so sharp! ❤️
This movie is one of my all time favorites! I feel it tells a good story of a flawed need for a perfect law system, but of course things are usually more complex and ugly under the surface of such "perfect" systems, but the fact that the system genuinely works to some extent is grimly intriguing, and I love when a story goes into showing imperfect perfection, or even perfect imperfection.
I'm glad to see your reactions and take on this movie!
Another film based on the works of Phillip K. Dick. Here are some more, actually there are short films and so forth that add up to about 25 or 30 altogether.
The Man in the High Castle (TV Series)
Electric Dreams (TV Series)
The Adjustment Bureau
A Scanner Darkly
Paycheck
Minority Report
Total Recall
Blade Runner
'Agatha' did a fantastic job, what a performance. Tom is always Tom, he killed it as per usual
2:13 that's what she said! 🎱🎳
I hoped to be the first to comment that, but you beat me)
@@daniilashurov135 daniel has to have fun editing sometimes. twice as funny because neither realizes what sam is saying.
It's always the boss you thought was always your friend. The second they got Colin Farrel and Max Von Sydow in the same room, I was like, "Oh jeez, it's gonna turn out to be Max's character isn't it."
That actor that Cruise talks to at 23:04 is actually his real life cousin William Mapother that popped up in his films occasionally to this point before taking off on his own successful career.
One of my favourite films ever! I am a sucker for time themed movies/books and even academic research! In my masters thesis (arts education) I even quoted this book!
This movie is FANTASTIC!! So ahead of it’s time as well
"Agatha" is played by an actress named Samantha Morton. She also played "Alpha". The hated leader of the "Whispers", from "The Walking Dead". She played Mary "Queen of Scot's" Stuart in 2007's "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" too. She had long hair in that one.
It's crazy how much this movie predicted-or perhaps inspired-so many technologies that, since the movie's production, have actually been invented or are beginning to be implemented now: facial recognition and retina scanning, targeted advertising, self-driving cars, touch screens, etc. Spielberg actually consulted with scientists before filming to try and predict what the world might look like 52 years (now only 32, which is also crazy) into the future, as accurately as possible. Our world today probably looks more like Minority Report now, than it looks like the world just 20 years ago when the film was released.
I was working in the eyeglass industry in this movie came out and we sold a ton of PERSOL sunglasses during this time. PERSOL was making sunglasses for NASA back in the 60’s. Great lenses.
Colin Farrell was a rising star going into this film! In 2003 he appeared in five films. Yes, that's Jessica Capshaw (aka Dr. Arizona Robbins) in the film. When this film came out Capshaw was starred on the legal drama series The Practice. In fact, Steve Harris (who plays Jad Watson) was, also, on The Practice!
This is one of Tom Cruise’s best movies, as well as Spielberg’s. The eye doctor scene was equally hilarious and disgusting.🤮🤣
This is one of the only Tom Cruise films I like actually. This and Rainman. Really good
Gives me the heebie-jeebies just thinking about it! 🤢
@@samantha_schmitt when he sneezed into his hand I just about puked in my popcorn.🤣
@@samantha_schmitt I really think if you enjoy trying to figure movies out. I recommend the movies, The Generals Daughter and Basic. Twists and turns..
I can't watch that bad food part.
BTW, a TV show that deals with "pre-crime" and artificial intelligence that is definitely worth checking out is "Person of Interest," with Jim Caviezel, Michael Emerson, and Taraji
P. Henson.
I was about to say that Minority Report was a tv series as well.
Didn't last long.
Not as good as the movie.
I would love to see some reaction channels react to Person Of Interest!
I remember assuming POI was just another police procedural show, like Criminal Minds, Law & Order, CSI, etc. Then I started watching it; God-like A.I.s playing with human pawns, CIA black ops espionage, government assassins, underground resistance with their own assassins ... VERY creative "soft" sci-fi at its best!
This is a shockingly underrated movie. Really enjoy it and I can rewatch it and still enjoy it too
28:14 - I find this scene to be the most poetic in the entire film; combination of great acting, lighting, the music, and what it signifies in the story . . . so heartbreaking.
Philip K. Dick wrote a lot of great stories. One of the stories that became a movie called Screamers, the original story was called "Second Variety". It had Peter Weller in it as the main character. The Doctor that performed the surgery played Lucifer in Constantine and the cousin in John Wick 2. His name is Peter Stormare.
22:07, "I can't give any information." Lol!
"Minority Report", "Total Recall" and "Blade Runner" are adaptations of Philip K. Dick's novels. There are many other adaptations. I recommend You "The Adjustment Bureau", if you haven't seen yet.
The three precogs were named for mystery novelists: Agatha for Agatha Christie, Arthur for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Dashiell for Dashiell Hammett.
The actress who plays Arizona Robins in Grey’s Anatomy is in the movie. She is Jessica Capshaw, Steven Spielberg’s stepdaughter.
So much of this movie can just be explained by reading the novel but they did change a few things. for example in the novel the precogs can see all kinds of crime, in the movie they only focus on murder because of "The Nature of Murder."
Since they can't see Suicides they didn't know Leo Crow and Lamar were gonna kill themselves.
as far as the film its one of my personal favorite Spielberg film. and im so glad you guys reacted to it.
also i wish Concussion Rifles would exist in this world (the gun they use in the Lexus Factory) and Billboards that use your name for advertisement.
The man behind the desk at the hotel lobby is Tom Cruise's cousin
Sick Sticks are a modified version of a cattle prod and police baton that makes the perpetrator vomit upon getting hit to drain their stamina so they can't fight back.
Cool reaction as always Schmitt & Samantha, you both take care
Something I don’t see mentioned a lot about this film is the amazing sound design. Particularly in the scene with spiders going around the apartment complex and scanning eyes.
I love the very subtle VERY subtle comedic moments in this movie
This is a great movie, this is one of the first DVDs I ever bought--I bought 3 with my first DVD player at Blockbuster around 2003 to 2004: The Rookie, Reign of Fire, Minority Report. Tom Cruise likes to do a lot of things himself, so I don't doubt he did the eye thing. I was also more shocked my Danny's death than the plot twist of Lamar's betrayal. Once again you guys picked another great movie.
P.S.: I just looked it up, that is Arizona (Jessica Capshaw) from Grey's. I've seen this movie quite a few times and I never took that in.
I’m not certain it shares a universe with Total Recall but both stories are by Phillip K. Dick.
My favorite performance by Samantha Morton, a stellar actor, who played Agatha, is in SWEET AND LOWDOWN. Check it out when you can.
If you guys like to figure out things you should react to the series Dark. Putting together the many plot lines in that show feel sooo rewarding
Such a good series.
Yaaaaayy 20yrs later it's still the best film
This movie is so under-rated.
I love your channel. Cheers from 🇨🇦
During the early 2000s, Spielberg was very interested in classic science fiction, so the movie before Minority Report was: "Artificial Intelligence" (2001), a movie that was originally going to be directed by Stanley Kubrick, but he dies during pre-production, so Spielberg takes charge of directing it, and then in 2005 he directs The War of the Worlds, another classic science fiction story, both are recommended, they will be taken into account for future reactions.
One of the first "grown-up" movies I watched when I was a kid. Such a great movie. Had forgotten quite a lot in all faireness, been so long.
Is this a re-upload? I recall making a comment on a Minority Report reaction where Dark City and Gatica polled incredibly low and I couldn't believe the vast difference in % for those 2 films. Even if you don't record a reaction to either of them, they are a must watch for sci-fi fans. (i've seen that many reactions to films, that I may have this confused with another)
Philip K Dick did write some great books that turned into films. Minority Report, Blade Runner, Paycheck (another good watch).
The Talented Mr. Ripley and A.I. and Road To Perdition are Classics like this! I''d love to see you guys do those movies! This was great!
Yeah it is Arizona from Greys, her step-dad is the director so...
Other small roles directly related to nepotism include the hotel clerk at the murder hotel is Tom Cruise's cousin William Mapother
5:20 Technically it wouldn't have been "future murder." It would've been attempted murder because it was stopped in the process.
This movie was amazing when it came out 20 years ago. I’m glad that it still holds up.
This sci-fi gem is 20 years old and I remember seeing it in the theatre when it came out here. Left the theatre being totally amazed by it and I still am today. Thanks for another great reaction... you 2 are the best!
Really enjoyed this one TBR and Sam. It was a lot of fun watching you go through this great and somewhat overlooked movie. It’s a decent story and both Tom Cruise and Colin Farrell do a great job here. I love seeing Cruise in science fiction. It just seems to fit him so well. Check out Oblivion if you’ve not seen it already as that’s a lovely and very simple story. It has great visuals and an even better soundtrack.
As a minority myself, thank you for representing our kind.
For underrated movies sci-fi or otherwise, I always mention Dark City and Minority Report. Thanks for doing a reaction to this great movie and one of Tom's best.
4:24 🤣🤣 open house 🏠
Philip K. Dick wrote the story this is based on. Amazing SciFi writer. Wrote book Blade Runner was based on (Do Androids Dream of Sheep) and the book Total Recall was based on.