With the assistance of a cybercriminal, Anderton searches Agatha's memories but fails to find a minority report for Crow's murder. However, he discovers a memory of a murder from five years earlier. The victim was Agatha's mother, Anne Lively, the woman Anderton was looking for info on. She was a neuroin addict who sold her daughter to Precrime. After breaking her addiction, she tried to reclaim Agatha but was drowned by a hooded figure. Witwer, tipped off by Anderton, investigates the same case and learns that an attempt on Lively's life was thwarted by Precrime, but she was found dead shortly afterward. Witwer reports his findings to the Precrime director, Lamar Burgess, who kills him without being detected since the Precrime system is offline. Anderton is captured and imprisoned for the suspected murder of Crow and Witwer, and Agatha is reconnected to the system. Shortly afterwards, Lara goes to see Lamar at his office to find out more about Anne Lively, but Lamar accidentally reveals that he killed Lively. Lamar leaves a stunned Lara to attend a banquet announcing Pre Crime's expansion nationwide.
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Like most film adaptations of Dick's works,[9] many aspects of his story were changed in their transition to film, such as the addition of Lamar Burgess and the change in setting from New York City to Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and Northern Virginia. The character of John Anderton was changed from a balding and out-of-shape old man to an athletic officer in his 40s to fit its portrayer and the film's action scenes.[49] The film adds two stories of tragic families; Anderton's, and that of the three pre-cogs.[50] In the short story, Anderton is married with no children, while in the film, he is the divorced father of a kidnapped son, who is most likely deceased.[51] Although it is implied, but unclear in the film whether Agatha is related to the twin pre-cogs, her family was shattered when Burgess murdered her mother, Anne Lively.[52] The precogs were intellectually disabled and deformed individuals in the story, but in the film, they are the genetically mutated offspring of drug addicts.[53][54] Anderton's future murder and the reasons for the conspiracy were changed from a general who wants to discredit PreCrime to regain some military funding, to a man who murdered a precog's mother to preserve PreCrime. The subsequent murders and plot developed from this change. The film's ending also differs from the short story's. In Dick's story, Anderton prevents the closure of the PreCrime division, however, in the movie Anderton successfully brings about the end of the organization.[55] Other aspects were updated to include current technology. For instance in the story, Anderton uses a punch card machine to interpret the precogs' visions; in the movie, he uses a virtual reality interface.[56]
Besides composing, Williams conducted the score, with orchestration by John Neufeld and vocals by Deborah Dietrich. The music was released on June 18, 2002 by DreamWorks Records in CD, vinyl and cassettes, and re-issued by Geffen Records in mid-2014 for streaming media and download.[66] The full score as heard in the film, was released into a 2-disc "expanded edition" in 2019, which was marketed by La-La Land Records, along with several alternate and unused tracks as bonus material.[67]
Andrew Sarris of the New York Observer gave the film a negative review in which he described the script as full of plot holes, the car chases as silly, and criticized the mixture of futuristic environments with "defiantly retro costuming".[119] The complexity of the storyline was also a source of criticism for Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times, who considered the plot "too intricate and difficult to follow".[120] Rosenbaum and Hoberman both referred to the titular minority report as a "red herring".[121][62] More positive reviews have seen it similarly, but referred to it as a "MacGuffin".[122]
The plot centers on a rare glitch in the visions of the Pre-Cogs. Although "the Pre-Cogs are never wrong," we're told, "sometimes ... they disagree." The dissenting Pre-Cog is said to have filed a minority report, and in the case of Anderton the report is crucial, because otherwise he seems a certain candidate for arrest as a pre-criminal. Of course, if you could outsmart the Pre-Cog system, you would have committed the perfect crime...
John visits a hacker in order to download the minority report involving the murder of Leo Crow, but he is disturbed to find that no such report appears to exist. Reviewing Agatha's visions, John once again comes across the memory of the murder that he saw just before getting targeted. It is the drowning of a woman named Anne Lively by a hooded figure a few years before. 2ff7e9595c
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