3,557 posts
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Post by showgirl on Sept 26, 2023 3:15:07 GMT
Minority Report appears to be touring or at least a multi-theatre production, as part of the newly-announced Nottingham Playhouse 2024 season. Dilemma for me as I've loved everything else David Haig has written but I loathe sci-fi.
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631 posts
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Post by ncbears on Sept 28, 2023 20:39:34 GMT
Not sure this is a good idea - but you never know with the creatives involved. The Tom Cruise character is now female. Minority Report for UK
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197 posts
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Post by dan on Feb 20, 2024 10:42:41 GMT
So… oof. I struggle with the amount of criticism or more so what can feel unwarranted negativity around shows on here sometimes… and I’m fully framing this as it being an early preview and has only been performed three times so far… The positives… it’s a one act 90 minute show. Which I love. I do wish there was more of this structure across the board! I love to be home and to bed for a reasonable time (yeah, I’m getting old!). Some of the tech ideas are good here, projections etc. The story is interesting. It’s a nice difference from the movie. Oof… there’s a lot of potential and neat ideas. But this didn’t feel like it should be in front of paying audiences yet. It did feel like a workshop of a first draft and first trial of their projections and tech. Things weren’t syncing up or working properly. But for the story, it needed some wow moments if you’re going to try with tech. If you don’t have the budget for that, maybe do something more creative which I’d be here for. But a futuristic car that wobbles slightly side to side, projections supposed to evoke speed and travel but actually just feels slow and clunky. Clunky would be a word I’d use for the production as a whole. Transitions were awkwardly quiet because you stayed with characters who just weren’t doing anything. There were some cool sets, coming up and down etc, but they felt wasted. Sometimes a huge ceiling piece would shift out the way and it felt like something was going to happen… and nothing. There were interesting acting choices, but I think it was more the material and direction that didn’t serve the cast, who then could only really ham some of it up. For a future sci fi story, it felt stuck in the past. I feel quite sad saying all of this, but I want it to be great, I want it to succeed. It needs so much work to develop it further. I remember seeing Ghost the musical (& others) that evoked travel / speed / movement, and it could take lessons from those. I wish it well and hope it has some time to breathe, settle, develop, but it’s the first time in a long long time I’ve been disappointed with something like this. I had a decent 90 minutes but felt very nonplussed by it. Such great ideas and potential. It just doesn’t feel ready.
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Post by yorkshirecioffi on Mar 2, 2024 13:08:40 GMT
Caught last Saturday's performance - one of the last previews I believe (?). It seems the tech has possibly been tightened up, as the overall effect was of quite a slick production: one tiny flying cue was a bit out of sync with a sound effect, but otherwise the visual aspects of the production (set, lighting, projection) fairly impressed me for a regional production. Genuine tension in some of the action sequences - though one conversational scene in an apartment kinda lost my interest. I'm not sure if it was the mood I was in but I didn't really connect with the leading character so the play didn't have much of an emotional pull for me at the time I saw it. But I remained glad I had made the journey to check it out.
A brave choice for a regional theatre, which seemed to have pulled in a decent audience at the performance I attended. Punters behind me commenting that it was one of their favourite films.
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Post by hflame on Mar 26, 2024 15:22:08 GMT
Saw this last night at Birmingham Rep and, unfortunately, I agree completely with Dan's comments. I was very excited to see it. I love the movie and was thrilled to see Sci-Fi on stage and, after seeing The Reps recent production of The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe, I felt confident Birmingham Rep would do justice to good story-telling with a touch of dazzling tech. Sadly, this is not the case and only reinforces the trope of 'sci-fi doesn't work on stage'. Fundamentally, the show is a bag of ideas that never comes together as a cohesive whole. One minute it's high-brow SciFi, the next it's a loud and thrilling tech transition, followed by some physical theatre dance choreography leading into a serious piece of tense drama with a strange side-helping of humour. As a result, it's clumsy and underwhelming, like an A-Level drama piece with a million pound budget. I think the fundamental mistake was too much focus on set and the tech at the expense of drama and performance.
** Spoliers **
The visual and sound effects were actually really good when they were subtle. But many of the set pieces, despite being quite imposing, were underwhelming (the sliding 'doors'), sometimes comical (the wobbling taxi/futuristic perspex bubble car), and often unecessary (the rooftop escape). Many scenes felt like they had been added purely as an excuse to use some cool tech and set pieces in a strange attempt to recreate Hollywood CGI. It worked best when it was stripped back and more basic. The London Undergound was refreshingly low-tech yet still really sci-fi, the pre-cog chamber looked good too. I liked the brain scan projections even if the (more important) actual dialogue around them was rushed. Which brings me onto the second point. The actual drama element of this was also disappointing. Most of this was due to the script, but some of it was just bad directing. For some reason (I assume an intentional attempt at naturalism - bizzare given the context), the actors rarely faced the audience. Most dialogue was delivered side-on or sometimes with their backs to us! It was difficult to see any facial expressions or to make any connection with the characters (especially the 'Home Secretary'). Because of the aformentioned set pieces, there was a lot of unconvincing high-tempo running about whilst pretending to be chased. There were multiple scenes - usually involving the protagonist Julia Anderton - where some very dramatic event occours but the scenes are rushed and the opportunity for a more human element to the play completely lost. There was not enough time or space to allow the actress to explore these moments with the audience. If there had been, she needn't have bothered as most of these scenes were ruined by an irritating AI Hologram called 'David' (a female, go figure) who has a terrible habit of appearing during moments of distress only to offer some terrible comedy or sassy attitude. Why the writers/directors decided the scene in which Julia, still in shock at having her own name spat out of the Goblet of Fire, would benefit from a humourous exchange where the 'David' suggests she could gouge out her own brain implant with a corkscrew. Which then happens! Only for the horror of the moment to be immediately overshadowed by a huge, distracting - and completely uncessary - set transformation so Julia can unconvincly pretend she is now 90-storeys up, balanced precariously on what the AI joyfully describes as a 'rickety bridge'. Then there are the terrible jokes along the lines of "carry on like that David and I'll have you downgraded back to Alexa.. or worse, Siri" or the bizarre references to Apple Watches and how they are still cool in 2050 because they're retro. All of these cheap, low-quality moments really do distract from an otherwise very promising script. If they had just focussed on the elements of the book/movie that make you think, I believe that would have been much more impactful than some slightly lame special effects. For example, in this version, they describe the Pre-Crime capability as being an evolution of an 'LLM AI' that can process brain implants. Great, until Julia discovers actually, it's not powered by AI at all but by the involuntary enslavement of human 'pre-cogs' who's brainpower alone can process and understand the signals (more similar to the book/film). Cue the extremely tired trope of the socially-awkward-psycopath-computer-scientist (obviously male) who deems it a necessary sacrifice to ensure the harmony of greater society. This is a brilliant and topical twist and where the play should have focussed more of it's efforts. Sadly, this happens all in the last 5 minutes and the script does not give it the attention it deserves. A shame as the question of AI, how it works, who controls it, and what social freedoms we may surrender to it IS a very topical and important issue. Instead, AI is played for laughs as an annoying sassy hologram and the horror of the pre-cogs is because of one nerd.
Edit: Just to add... Please do go see this if you are considering it. This is not a painful watch, it's just a bit...clumsy. And often a play not hitting quite right makes you think about the bigger picture in more detail. I've had fun discussing this show and was definitely worth the cost of the preview tickets. Many people have enjoyed it and will inevitably have a different take to me. Plus, Birmingham Rep need the support given the current withdrawl of funding situation :-)
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2,416 posts
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Post by robertb213 on Mar 28, 2024 21:39:25 GMT
Saw this tonight and very much agree with the review above - definitely didn't hate it, it sounds like the tech has been made much slicker since it opened, and there's a lot to like. But the issues feel rushed and not explored fully in the writing, and the David AI character needs to go, we don't need "comedy" here, it's meant to be a sci-fi thriller! But as a quick-paced 90 minutes of escapism I've seen far worse.
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1,470 posts
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Post by mkb on Apr 3, 2024 23:12:35 GMT
You cannot help but admire the bravery of writer David Haig in attempting to adapt Speilberg's well-regarded 2002 movie for the stage. His solution is to simplify the plot massively, and also to swap the gender and occupation of the protagonist. Jodie McKee plays Julia, who is now a trailblazing company CEO (rather than a police task force chief). She's barely off-stage. It's a tall order, and McKee pulls it off for the most part.
Haig has not the cinematic luxury of detailed plots and multiple characters, so instead focuses more on the philosophical question of free will and how much the human brain can be held accountable for its actions, with symmetrical opening and closing scenes featuring said brain to hammer home the message. The fantastical sci-fi framework -- as in the film -- where we are required to believe that future crimes can be foreseen, does not bear scrutiny, but if you suspend disbelief, it provides a neat device for exploring the ethics of a society where miscarriages of justice for the few are okay if it serves the greater good. And that has echoes today where we have people imprisoned for allegedly planning crimes rather than actually carrying them out. Psychiatric reports of the mental states of such people -- not dissimilar to the evidence supplied by pre-cogs in Minority Report -- are often key in securing convictions.
As a piece of theatre, Minority Report works surprisingly well, at least now it has settled in after a few weeks. Max Webster's direction is slick, and the set, lights and effects soundtrack convincingly conjure up a warped future reality. I nearly always resent the absence of an interval, but, for once, there was no place one would have fitted, and the 85 minutes rattled along at pace.
The addition of female David as a hologram android assistant was a clever device to assist plot exposition without feeling clumsy, but it was a mistake and unrealistic to imbue David with emotions of anger and frustration. David's appearances -- a mix of on-screen and in-person -- are nicely handled; the first in-person encounter is particularly good as it takes a few seconds to register that the actress is actually present on stage.
Another mistake is giving Julia some lines of corny comedy. I suspect Haig, with his background as a comic actor, could not help himself, but he should have shown restraint. The jokes -- references to Alexa/Siri and the umpteenth variant of Covid, for example -- fall flat and momentarily destroy the audiences willingness to root for the antihero.
The simplification of the plot also means that later developments are much easier to see coming than in the movie. Nevertheless, this Minority Report is engrossing and entertaining. If this were the West End, I would be rounding down my rating. But, I paid just £17.50 for a fantastic view in the middle of the second row, and the production is running on a provincial budget, and I felt properly entertained and thought-provoked, so I'm rounding up.
Four stars.
One act: 19:33-20:56
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Post by Arcana on Apr 4, 2024 21:56:07 GMT
I appreciate the reviews here, even if they aren't as positive as I'd hoped for.
There was still a couple of £15 seats left in the stalls for the show in Lyric Hammersmith, so I decided to get one. At that price I find it's worth seeing, even if it doesn't live up to my expectations, which by now, are not that high anyway.
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2,416 posts
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Post by robertb213 on Apr 5, 2024 12:49:02 GMT
It's definitely worth seeing, I'm glad I went. It's just in the "good rather than great" category.
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Post by Sam on Apr 23, 2024 8:09:34 GMT
I really enjoyed this last night. I'm generally more a musicals than a plays person, but found this very dynamic. Held my attention all the way through despite there not being any interval.
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Post by theatre2023 on Apr 23, 2024 9:44:47 GMT
This is a poor man's theme park show ... with some cringe worthy special effects at times. The best one is the stage hand trying to hide behind the "living room curtains" to open and close the "automated" door :-) The producers would have been better off going to see The Bourne Stuntacular in Orlando to see what technology can really do... www.universalorlando.com/web/en/gb/things-to-do/shows/the-bourne-stuntacular
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Post by keyspi on Apr 23, 2024 16:10:04 GMT
This is a poor man's theme park show ... with some cringe worthy special effects at times. The best one is the stage hand trying to hide behind the "living room curtains" to open and close the "automated" door :-) The producers would have been better off going to see The Bourne Stuntacular in Orlando to see what technology can really do... www.universalorlando.com/web/en/gb/things-to-do/shows/the-bourne-stuntacular Indeed, one does wonder how they didn't manage to pull off the same level of production as Universal Studios on a comparably infinitismal budget and scene 🧐
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Post by pws on Apr 24, 2024 12:42:28 GMT
Enjoyed this very much last night. Presentation was very slick and very clever. Not sure about the characters. Perhaps it all went by too quickly for things be be developed properly. Was very busy, which was pleasing to see.
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5,138 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Apr 24, 2024 12:51:52 GMT
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Post by Steve on Apr 25, 2024 17:17:37 GMT
Saw today's matinee, and as there's some amazing reviews above, which I agree with, I'll be briefer than I otherwise would be (you are spared lol):- In Wizard of Oz terms, this has:- (1) the courage to deliver some great courage -inducing action, with just the most incredible multi-functional set, which is more adaptable and ingenious than sets many times the budget; (2) It's got a brain, as it has adapted Philip K Dick's short story usefully and thoughtfully; (3) But unfortunately, the script doesn't have a heart, relying on the wonderful actor Jodie McNee to artificially inject emotions (she cries on cue) into all the frantic running about and deep conversations of the story. Consequently, I agree that this falls into the good but not great category. Some spoilers follow. . . Amusingly, given the premise of Dick's story that there are three pre-cogs (humans with the data processing power of supercomputers), and that it takes two in agreement to create a "majority report" (a "reliable" prediction of future crimes), it is Dick's own original story that is the "minority report" here, as neither Spielberg nor Haig can stomach Dick's amoral proto-AI mind. Both Spielberg and Haig adapt Dick into more moral humanistic versions of his story, obviously neither being at all comfortable with where Dick takes it, forming their own "majority" report that invalidates the Philip K Dick story. On the other hand, like Dick, Haig fails to create any human relationships to care about, which leaves only the Spielberg film giving us the full Wizard of Oz experience of courageous action, head and heart. By making up a moving and developing relationship between Samantha Morton's lonely precog and Cruise's action-man Anderton, there's a deeply moving burgeoning human relationship at the heart of it that makes all the brains and courage matter. But again, the set in this is great, the way it tilts and slides for action, provides nooks and crannies to breathe in, and opens up spaces magically and majestically for action. The story feels topically intelligent. And Jodie McNee does a mighty job of hiding the story's tin heart. 3 and a half stars from me.
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Post by theatre22 on Apr 26, 2024 14:37:31 GMT
There are quite a few £20 tickets left in the front row for one of the days I might go. Would like to make sure I see all the staging for this. Did the stage height look ok to be at the front?
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343 posts
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Post by Sam on Apr 26, 2024 15:31:00 GMT
There are quite a few £20 tickets left in the front row for one of the days I might go. Would like to make sure I see all the staging for this. Did the stage height look ok to be at the front? It looked very high to me, but I was sat in the Circle. Watched the film again last night, having seen the play on Monday and 100% preferred the play.
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Post by Jon on Apr 26, 2024 20:49:58 GMT
The Lyric Hammersmith is small so I think the dress or upper circle would be more than sufficient.
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Post by dan on Apr 26, 2024 21:31:09 GMT
There are quite a few £20 tickets left in the front row for one of the days I might go. Would like to make sure I see all the staging for this. Did the stage height look ok to be at the front? It looked very high to me, but I was sat in the Circle. Watched the film again last night, having seen the play on Monday and 100% preferred the play. This is WILD to me 😂 I am pleased people are enjoying the play despite my experience of it. It’s not often I don’t fully enjoy something on stage. And I love the movie.
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Post by bobbievanhusen on Apr 29, 2024 18:43:22 GMT
There are 2 tickets for this on the noticeboard, for tomorrow night 30/4
2 seats in the stalls.
2 for £50 (face value £50 each)
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Post by jr on Apr 29, 2024 20:27:34 GMT
This wasn't for me. You can see they have worked on it. Set, direction and acting are fine but I couldn't get into it for some reason. I was quite bored at times despite having a good pace and being a short play.
Maybe, the main issue is that they have tried to aim too high, giving it a cinematic feeling and that does not work as a play. In any case, people seemed to liked it so I hope they'll do well.
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Post by alessia on Apr 30, 2024 19:59:26 GMT
Neither I nor my friend liked this. The set was fine, but translating the action from film to play didn't work for us and I found the acting a bit ropey. Yet again I agree with the Timeout review including their comparison with Solaris from few years ago which was very good. I liked the AI David, but that's about the only thing I liked.
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Post by mjh on May 2, 2024 11:49:50 GMT
Selling a cheap ticket for this next Tuesday on the noticeboard if anyone interested.
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Post by Arcana on May 4, 2024 9:07:31 GMT
For anyone who's seen this: any thoughts on bringing my 12 year old daughter? I'm not too bothered about swearing, but on the other hand, I just couldn't imagine bringing her to Book of Mormon for example.
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Post by kate8 on May 4, 2024 10:04:37 GMT
For anyone who's seen this: any thoughts on bringing my 12 year old daughter? I'm not too bothered about swearing, but on the other hand, I just couldn't imagine bringing her to Book of Mormon for example. I think she’d probably enjoy the design and all the action and movement, and there’s nothing much that is offensive or too adult. I thought plot and themes were quite shallow, but that could work for children/young teens who may not yet have thought much on some of those issues about punishment, AI, freedom, etc.
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