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In Reply to: Another way to watch minority report posted by Bulkington on July 23, 2004 at 09:53:40:
Unfortunately, Spielberg went for the cheap thrills & gross out effects and expected folks to leave their minds and any semblance of "logic" at the door (i.e., fast pacing can cover a multitude of sins that are painfully apparent in repeated viewings). For instance, there's no way one could do a retina scan on a decomposed eye, which is exactly what Cruise's eye would be after the passage of any time and in consideration of the manner in which it was handled. The eyeball rolling across the floor scene had an almost Keystone Kop quality to it; it was predictable & lame. The fact that the security was tight when tension was desired and lax when a resolution was needed was far too precious. The spider-bots were cool, but the whole scene and bathtub set-up didn't really work, and again way to precious in terms of a last minute resolution.IMHO, AI-Artificial Intelligence, the film that Steven Spielberg completed prior to Minority Report is FAR and away the better SF film. I do believe that Minority Report is a "return to form" for Spielberg, but that carries baggage as well as kudos. Few Directors are as good at creating and resolving tension, developing interesting characters and producing believeable effects as Mr. Spielberg, but by the same token few are as sloppy when it comes to recurring continuity gaffs, precious coincidences and obvious audience manipulation, too. There are many of his films I dearly love, but I'm often frustrated with his sloppiness as a filmmaker, especially since it's obvious how passionate he is about his craft.
Follow Ups:
I agree on those points. I don't like the Brazil-like quality of the cops either. One impressive feature of Minority Report to me was its attempt, over and above most sci-fi films, to create a plausible, palpable future. The camp you cite and the heavyhandedness and possibly even the allusiveness of its "Big Brother" elements betray the artifice and, I think, keeps the audience at arm's length.Interestingly, I liked AI less, but that has more to do with its having fallen farther short of my expectations than did Minority Report, which, frankly, exceeded them on some points. AI fell flat for me, and I couldn't help wondering "what would Kubrick have done?" when I saw it. I haven't seen AI since it was in the theaters, though. Maybe I'll give it another look.
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