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Minority Report - Precrime Intro
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- čas přidán 18. 08. 2009
- The movie doesn't waste any time. It immediately immerses the viewer into this possible future where digitized precognition becomes legitimate evidence for stopping crimes before they happen. As a precrime enforcement officer, Mr. Cruise scrubs the data, taking apart the imagery to narrow down the location of the suspect. It is a riveting combination of fast thinking and intense action, and I couldn't begin to imagine a better introduction for the story to follow.
this is one of my all time favorite sci fi films. the sad part is that it might not be sci fi forever.
Tom Cruise's movements as he searches through the data, face-matching the murderer, are chillingly smooth. On the one hand it's super satisfying watching him work and move images around the screen to determine his suspect, on the other hand it's terrifying that this is all going to happen in the future.
It's ingenious: Schubert's unfinished symphony playing to an eerie backdrop of the murderer killing his wife. The murder is unfinished, the affair is unfinished, justice is unfinished. Perhaps the most horrifying scene in a movie where not a single drop of blood is ever shed.
Heh, all unfinished. That's a nice motif I never even noticed.
this is a real comment, I love stuff like that that's neat to me and definitely something else to appreciate and tell everyone when I watch it
I live in Washington DC. That park is lovingly called Minority report park..But the Carousel has since been removed
0:44 We still get newspapers in the future 😂
Yes but there’s a scene later on where someone is reading the paper on an iPad type device - years before the iPad was invented so I wonder if they were inspired by this movie?
One thing about this movie I always wondered and thought of…. Apparently pre crime only works in Washington DC. Could you imagine how expensive it would be to live in a city with pre crime? A city that had zero murders for the years of pre crime? Just to visit would be expensive.
Everyone on the planet would want to live there. It would be filled with just billion and millionaires lol
Lol no. Just move to the good neighborhood and your chance of being murdered is on par with lightning striking.
If I were the Tom cruise character I would’ve taken my sweet time getting there
Definitely 💯
Lol same
Had you deliberately failed to prevent the murder, you'd have been arrested for complicity. Failing to help someone is a criminal offense to begin with. Then as a precrime cop, you'd be convicted.
@godfunk Another thing you notice is that as he waves his hands around, manipulating the screen, it is the same thing that a conductor (maestro) does when he conducts a symphony. The parallel being that he is directing destiny like a conductor directs a symphony.
Except that, as the movie goes on to show, some of the people arrested for "future" murders may have had alternate futures in which they DIDN'T end up killing someone, and didn't even attempt to. This scene isn't one of those cases, but where do you draw the line?
The way the screens are operated by hand 🖐 movements is 😎
Check out Oculus Quest hand tracking, it's the closest you'll find today
I love how the movie we see like We see What is gonna happen Because it's a future murder you have to prevent the murder from going to happen.
The funny thing about this movie is that the "Minority Report" isn't where you think it is. Anderton's prediction happened exactly as it was shown to have happened, with Anderton's gun shooting Leo Crow. And while it could be argued about the intention no longer being there and it not being technically a "Murder". And Ana Liveley's murder again, happened as it was shown to have happened. The tech dismissed it as an echo when it was in fact a valid prediction. Both of these events didn't demonstrably prove the precogs being wrong, just either incomplete with their visions, the failure of the team to interpret them correctly. Or an outright failure of the system, in that the tech dismissed information.
The real minority report, the only time one of the predictions DIDN'T happen, thus proving the fallibility of precrime was at the end, when Lamar chose to shoot himself. The prediction was dead wrong, Anderton was not the victim and did not die and Burgess did not kill him. Thus proving beyond a shadow of doubt, the precogs can be wrong and that their predictions can be demonstrably false. Because that vision clearly showed Burgess, shooting Anderton, and Anderton dying, that event DID NOT happen at all. The only prediction in the entire movie that was actually wrong.
This clip cuts before the end of the scene, in which Precog 'echoes' are explained to Witwer. Right before the technician cuts the feed, we see Agatha repeating verbatim--or *almost* verbatim--the words Sarah Marks spoke to her husband Howard Marks in the murder prevision. A very clever way to hint early on that there might be some doubt in the supposed certainty of the future events that Precrime is stopping.
About the murder they stopped, couldnt you technically provoke someone into trying to kill you, only to have the precog unit stop them, and then arrest them for an indefinite amount of time?
Yes.
Spoiler Alert: That loophole was found to be exploited in the movie
8:28 "Negative. The front door is open. Front door is open." ...technically it's ajar.
I really like this movie, and while I can see why some people would not, you cannot deny that this opening scene is absolutely incredible. It's one of, if not my favorite, action scenes ever put to screen. It's soooooo good!
some murders such as crimes of passion aren't premeditated
That's why they're red balls.
You would think they could just look up the home address of the killer when they have his name...
thought so too, then heard the dialogue as they said the family moved to a new house that wasn't listed.
How come they don't have an adultery pre-crime unit?
Because adultery, while taboo in most religions, isn't a crime. Duh.
@@bobwalsh3751 18 states in the us consider adultery illegal
They do in pre-crime Saudi Arabia edition, you'd probably prefer it there
They explain in the movie why the pre-cogs can’t see rapes and assaults and stuff. Haven’t seen it in a while but something about murder being such a pervasive act creates a rip in space time or something that the pre-cogs can sense.
Tom Cruise scrubs the data, taking apart the imagery to narrow down the location of the suspect.
I would like to point that in this scene, the precrime unit actuallys stops the crime after it started to happen, so this guy should be charged for attempted murderer instead of future murderer
Why oh WHY don’t they have WiFi; the real world had it when the movie came out.
This is how the troublemakers get caught
They like to argue and be contrived and think they can argue their way out. They give themselves falsehope and egg themselves on to bully people. They apply such theories to their victims but fail to apply the same theories to themselves. The aggressors want to make others self-incriminate. The aggressors want to catch people before a crime is commited. The aggressors argue about their theories in a contrived manner
Sequence of events
1=Collaborate to bully, 2=move out to attack, 3=bully people
When they move out, they have weapons and poisons and ... in their hands. They self incriminate because they cannot see step 2
They want to predict and catch others while they are the sore-losers leading to being aggressors (with the profile and behavioural charactertistics, traits, mentality, attitude, bad past, ... ...) they cannot see themselves for who they are because they are hypocrites and are in-denial of reality.
@TheRohBoat It's confusing, but you can say 7th or 8th and still be right. Go to iTunes or Amazon and try both. Same song.
Don't put that thing on me!
@AnthonyCL13 Insightful observation. Honestly never would have thought of it.
I am referring to the scene, not the entire movie. Re-read the sentence -- "scene in a movie" is the subject, not "movie where not a single drop of blood is ever shed." :P
@adeemel2
Schubert - Symphony No. 7 in B minor "Unfinished"
What is the song that Tom Cruise put in the computer two seconds into this clip
@AnthonyCL13 well spotted. Know what else I like about this sequence? When Tom Cruise has 30 seconds to stop the murder, it plays out in real-time; just as we hit the 30 second mark he intervenes!
im gonna point out abe lincolns speech, that the kid was reciting, in my analytic essay as a last minute decision o.o hope i'll be alright. xP i dunno much about american history sigh...
I don't think anyone disagrees really.
wasn't easier stooping that affair before developing to an actual murder!.
7:18 Wait a minute isn't it a school day? Why is that kid still on the Mary go round and not at school? 🤔
In a perfect world, the husband would be let go, and the adulterous man would be the one going to prison. The husband would keep all the marital assets in the divorce. The wife would get nothing.
why would the husband be let go for attempted murder? 😂😂 that’s much worse morally and legally than cheating if the world worked the way you suggested we’d be throwing people in prison for life for littering but let murderers go because their feelings were hurt lmao
@godfunk Was the 8th not the 7th
Borat at 01:50 the top right license
@AnthonyCL13 That was beautiful
What a bad future
TVA
Howie many coffee & sugar have you have? =>._.
Je vois. Je vois. l'Allemagne nazie
stop wasting time daydreaming and start finding solutions for crime in real life.
9:21 real eye scan device exist irl?