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The Truman Show Movie Review, Cast & Crew, Film Summary

1998 movie

Rating: 15/20

Plot: Truman Burbank begins to realize that he is the star of a reality show that people have been watching since his birth.

I love the great premise here and think it’s wonderfully prescient, but it’s hard to ignore the movie’s flaws. First, there’s Jim Carrey. I’d love to see this exact same movie with somebody who isn’t Jim Carrey, somebody not nearly as recognizable. Carrey, as you’d probably expect, overdoes things a little bit. Another issue is that this spells everything out for the viewer a little too much. This could have been cleverer if the audience would have figured out the movie’s secrets right along with its protagonist. The worst comes at around the halfway point of the movie where Cristof is interviewed, a scene that treats the movie audience like morons. The fact that they take one call which happens to be Truman’s true love interest is also a little hard to swallow. And then there’s the camera work or perspective of this thing. It seems like nobody could make up their mind whether the camera should be in the reality show or a more traditional third person thing. Still, there’s something fun about watching one everyman’s existential collapse. Watching the extras in Truman’s world and the producers of the show try to hold everything together is also a lot of fun. As waterlogged as this movie seems at times, there are more than a few great moments. The scene where Truman reunites with his father is especially magical, goosepimple-inducing. This completely artificial thing is being manufactured, but Cristof’s reaction is so good as he orchestrates and makes art out of somebody’s life, like a fist-bumping God. Speaking of God, is this a metaphor for religion? I think it might be, but I’ve never heard anybody complain about it. Cristof is played by Ed Harris who isn’t one of my favorites, but he’s really good here. Carrey’s fine, too, and would play that everyman perfectly if he was less Jim Carrey. You do really root for his character, especially when he’s trying to construct a picture of his lost love from magazine pieces. There’s just something so romantic about that. This is a good movie, but it’s frustrating knowing that it should have been a great one.

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