The Truman Show

1998 Drama

Peter Weir directed this comedy-drama, a commentary on all-pervasive media manipulation. Scripted by Andrew M. Niccol (Gattaca), the film plays like a combination of the British TV series The Prisoner and Paul Bartel's The Secret Cinema. Truman Burbank (Jim Carrey) is unaware that his entire life is a hugely popular 24-hour-a-day TV series. In this real-time documentary, every moment of Truman's existence is captured by concealed cameras and telecast to a giant global audience. His friends and family are actors who smile pleasantly at Truman's familiar catchphrase greeting, "In case I don't see you later, good afternoon, good evening, and good night!" Employed at an insurance company, Truman is married to merry Meryl (Laura Linney), and they live in the cheerful community of Seahaven, an island "paradise" where the weather is always mild and no unpleasantness intrudes. This is the basic situation of the series, which has grown over the years into a billion-dollar franchise for the TV network. As an unwanted pregnancy, Truman was adopted by the network and raised in the zoolike environment of a TV soundstage. Thus, the TV audience became hooked when Truman was very young. Now, at age 30, he still doesn't know he's a prisoner on an immense domed city-size soundstage, simulating Seahaven. Both the illusion and the ratings will collapse if Truman ever leaves Seahaven. In addition to elaborate events staged to make sure he stays put, Truman is given constant reminders of how wonderful Seahaven is compared to dangers in other parts of the world. However, his growing suspicions make him curious enough to try to leave, and the show's director and master manipulator Christof (Ed Harris) must constantly devise ways to thwart Truman's escape attempts. To enter the harbor, Truman must overcome his fear of water, intentionally instilled in him when his father "died" in a boating accident and was written out of the script. Exteriors were filmed in the Victorian-styled upscale community of Seaside, Florida. In addition to the Burkhard Dallwitz score, original music by Philip Glass and classical excerpts are also featured. more..

Director: Peter Weir

Starring: Jim Carrey,Ed Harris, Laura Linney, Noah Emmerich, Natascha McElhone

Reviews

  • Adventurous, provocative, even daring.

    Kenneth Turan - Los Angeles Times

    11 May 2013

  • I enjoyed The Truman Show on its levels of comedy and drama; I liked Truman in the same way I liked Forrest Gump--because he was a good man, honest, and easy to sympathize with.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    11 May 2013

  • A beautifully sinister and transfixing entertainment-age daydream.

    Owen Gleiberman - Entertainment Weekly

    11 May 2013

  • An original, inspired piece of work.

    Edward Guthmann - The San Francisco Chronicle

    11 May 2013

  • Delicately subversive, hypnotically sardonic, full of terror, banality and wafer-thin lyricism.

    Michael Wilmington - The Chicago Tribune

    11 May 2013

Awards

  • Top Box Office Films

    ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards (1999)

  • Best Actor in a Supporting Role

    Academy Awards (1999)

     
  • Best Fantasy Film

    Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (1999)

  • Funniest Actor in a Motion Picture (Leading Role)

    American Comedy Awards (1999)

     
  • Peter Weir

    Australian Film Institute (1999)