Following in the footsteps of blockbuster movies, TV studios are increasingly looking to existing properties to mine for adaptation. Perhaps the most notable adaptation for this upcoming fall season is Fox’s Minority Report, a sci-fi series based on Steven Spielberg’s film (itself based on a classic Philip K. Dick story).

It’s a series perfectly positioned for a San Diego Comic-Con introduction, as FOX unveils its first look at the new sci-fi cop procedural during today’s panel in Ballroom 20. The series pairs Stark Sands (Inside Llewyn Davis) and Meagan Good (Think Like a Man) together to stop the crimes of 2065 before they happen. To kick off the panel, Rob Moynihan of TV Guide introduces the concept, and then gave us all a special preview of the first 20 minutes of the pilot episode of the show, that introduces Dash (Sands), a precognitive formerly from the Precrime program still haunted by murderous flashes, and Detective Vega (Good), the odd couple destined to prevent crimes together.

Afterwards, Sands and Good take the stage, joined by costars Mad Men‘s Laura Regan, That 70s Show‘s Wilmer Valderrama and producers Max Borenstein (Godzilla), Kevin Falls and Darryl Frank (The Americans).

Coming from a well-known property, and with Steven Spielberg’s name attached to the project, Sands points to a certain level of responsibility in bringing the show to the small screen. Regan calls it “daunting” to follow in the footsteps of Samantha Morton.

The show, like the movie, has fun with technological advancements, and as Frank notes, they “wanted to use future crime to give [a] jolt to a procedural.” “Imagine in 2065, how far technology will evolve,” Valderrama teased.

While there’s clearly a romantic past between Vega and Valderrama’s Will Blake, Falls doesn’t intend Dash and Vega to become a romantic pairing, not wanting to go down that familiar path.

Steven Spielberg’s name looms over the project, and in fact, “he’s involved in every aspect of it,” Falls said. He looks at prop designs, VFX and “sprinkles his pixie dust on everything.” Minority Report is the first TV show made from one of Spielberg’s movies, and that notion “keeps us all up at night,” Falls jokes.

While the show stands on its own, other characters from the movie will be in the show, including Daniel London’s Wally the Caretaker. What about Tom Cruise?

“That’s something that may or may not happen,” Falls states sardonically. “Maybe [when] Spielberg directs,” Borenstein jokes. “Sweeps!”

The show plans on tackling social issues. As Borenstein states, the show will be “using the prism of the future to think about today…in big social thematic ways and in fun ways, like a selfie drone.” Rest assured, that even 50 years later, The Simpsons will still be running.

Fox can only hope for the same kind of success for Minority Report. Of course, you could always ask the soothsaying Laura Regan, “I can see where it’s going, because I’ve seen it all.”

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