Oh man, that reminds me what they did when it came to the Minority Report TV series. Loved the movie, but turning it into a police procedural felt like it squandered its potential.
I think that's just because it was too short-lived. I have a theory that shows with unusual concepts have to start out conforming to a formulaic, procedural mold to reassure cautious executives, but after the first half-dozen episodes or so, once they've appeased the suits, they're able to start telling more interesting and daring stories and fulfilling their original potential. I've seen it happen with a number of shows, like
Dollhouse and
Threshold. Even
Orphan Black started out playing police-procedural for its first four episodes before it blew up that status quo. Sometimes it takes longer to break out of the procedural mold;
Fringe didn't really get interesting until the second season, and
Person of Interest needed 3-4 years before it really started developing the richness of its premise. And
Lucifer wasn't able to stray too far from the procedural formula until it moved to Netflix.
Unfortunately, this often means that a show starts out too bland to hold an audience, so by the time it really starts living up to its potential in the later episodes, hardly anybody's still there to see it. I've seen that happen with a number of shows, like
Threshold and Syfy's
Flash Gordon. (
Threshold was cancelled outright just before it really started to get interesting, so the best episodes never aired on the original network.)
My recollection is that I liked the
Minority Report TV series. I'm disappointed that it doesn't seem to be streaming anywhere or available from the library, since I never got the chance to watch the movie and the show back-to-back and I've always wanted to. Although for me, the main area of improvement in the show was that the movie had a nearly all-white cast, even though it was set in the future of Washington, D.C., which is a majority-black city today and is likely to be even more so in the future. The show got it right by having a regular cast that was pretty much entirely people of color except for the returning movie characters.