The Truman Show (1998)

A- SDG

Peter Weir’s The Truman Show is a remarkably layered achievement: a deceptively simple fairy tale; a hilariously subversive satire of media excess and the erosion of privacy; a sly exploration of the paranoid, solipsistic fear that the world around one is somehow staged for one’s benefit and everyone else is in on it; and finally an elegant parable about truth and happiness with evocative religious resonances.

Buy at Amazon.com
Directed by Peter Weir. Jim Carrey, Laura Linney, Ed Harris, Noah Emmerich, Natascha McElhone. Paramount.

Artistic/Entertainment Value

Moral/Spiritual Value

+2 / -1

Age Appropriateness

Teens & Up

MPAA Rating

None

Caveat Spectator

Some profane language; a discreet sexual reference; mature themes.

Jim Carrey stretches beyond his usual rubber-faced comedy for a more meaningful seriocomic role in a Jimmy Stewart mode. He plays Truman Burbank, a man who begins to question his seemingly idyllic but static life after a stage light marked “Sirius (9 Canis Major)” crashes to earth in front of his house one morning.

What Truman doesn’t know is that he’s both the victim of a massive hoax and the star of an obsessively popular 24-hour TV show — a prescient blend of “Candid Camera” and the “reality TV” frenzy that hit about two years after the film. Truman’s whole world is a giant sound stage, and everyone else — Truman’s wife, his best friend, his neighbors and coworkers — is acting. Only he is real.

The show is masterminded by “Christof” (Ed Harris), a TV impresario with a serious God complex (“Cue the sun”) who believes he’s created a better world for Truman. The imagery of the film’s final act is suggestive an anti-religious parable about rejecting God — though a fleeting climactic prayer to the real God offered on Truman’s behalf suggests that the target is not God, but his presumptuous imitators.

Comedy, Drama