

“Everybody runs.”
Budget
$102M
Revenue
$358M
In the year 2054, a specialized "PreCrime" police unit in Washington D.C. uses three psychics ("precogs") to foresee and stop murders before they happen, arresting perpetrators for crimes they haven't yet committed. John Anderton (Tom Cruise), the unit's charismatic leader, is a true believer in the system, still haunted by the unsolved disappearance of his son six years earlier. His world is shattered when the precogs predict that he himself will murder a man he has never met within 36 hours. Now a fugitive hunted by his own colleagues, a skeptical Justice Department agent (Colin Farrell), and his own conscience, Anderton must prove his innocence. To do so, he seeks the "minority report," a hidden alternate vision held by one of the precogs (Samantha Morton) that could prove the system is fallible. His desperate chase forces him to question not only the future, but the dark shadows of his own past.
Is it just to punish someone for a crime they haven't committed yet? What if that system suddenly points its finger at you? This intelligent sci-fi masterpiece from Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise, adapted from a Philip K. Dick story, isn't just a dazzling action film; it boldly questions free will, justice, and destiny. Cruise's tormented yet determined Anderton, Samantha Morton's fragile but powerful precog Agatha, and Colin Farrell's sly agent are unforgettable pieces of this dystopian future. The film imagines future technology (jet-powered cars, AI, personalized ads) so masterfully that you'll feel like you're living in 2054. Is the 'minority report' proof of a flaw, or is it the system's self-defense mechanism? As you search for the answer, you'll find yourself reflecting on your own future and choices. If you don't want to miss this perfect blend of action and philosophy, join Anderton on the run.
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