I'm a bit surprised that this version of America closed its borders to immigrants and denied citizenship rights to children of immigrants, given what a diverse, nonwhite-majority population is featured in the show. I could've bought it in the movie, with its almost exclusively white cast, but it seems incongruous here. Granted, the US population is already trending toward nonwhite-majority and might continue to do so even without immigration. And the show is set in Washington, DC, which already has a nonwhite-majority population. Still, it's not what I would've expected. This show can't seem to decide whether it's a progressive, optimistic view of the future or a dystopian cautionary tale. But then, maybe that's a good thing, because realistically, any future is likely to be a mix of both. Anyway, given how much bigoted anti-refugee rhetoric has been coming from certain circles in the wake of the Paris attacks (even though the attackers are the ones the refugees are fleeing from), it's surprisingly topical.
It's good to see Blake more fully integrated into the story, and it was nice to see attributes in him worth admiring, the effective way he handled the case and empathized with the "Fourteen" kid. But I still think he has a darker side, and I don't trust him not to turn over the Precogs to the DIA.
I can't help but wondering if the flashback incident with Blake and his abusive stepfather was one of the instances with a minority report. It could've gone either way -- Blake was about to kill his stepfather, but it was the stepfather that the Precogs pegged as the killer. It seems like just the kind of ambiguous situation where the Precogs could see two possible outcomes. I wonder if that's where they intended to go with this plot thread, since Dash saying he remembers that prediction seems like more than just a throwaway. Maybe it'll come out that Precrime arrested the wrong person, that Blake was the one who "should" have been taken. That would be a storyline that was actually about a minority report, so it would justify the series title for once.
It's good to see Blake more fully integrated into the story, and it was nice to see attributes in him worth admiring, the effective way he handled the case and empathized with the "Fourteen" kid. But I still think he has a darker side, and I don't trust him not to turn over the Precogs to the DIA.
I can't help but wondering if the flashback incident with Blake and his abusive stepfather was one of the instances with a minority report. It could've gone either way -- Blake was about to kill his stepfather, but it was the stepfather that the Precogs pegged as the killer. It seems like just the kind of ambiguous situation where the Precogs could see two possible outcomes. I wonder if that's where they intended to go with this plot thread, since Dash saying he remembers that prediction seems like more than just a throwaway. Maybe it'll come out that Precrime arrested the wrong person, that Blake was the one who "should" have been taken. That would be a storyline that was actually about a minority report, so it would justify the series title for once.