Read this review; Journalist Jann Ruyters
shares what she feels is the deeper meaning of this film.
More than the concretization of the philosophy that television pictures shape our reality, The Truman show offers a rather pessimistic view of free will, imagination and autonomy of the individual. You get back from imagination what you put into it, the film says. Raised by soap actors in a world of pretty pictures, Truman has developed into a rather stupendous cartoon character - by no means a curious Alice in Wonderland - who is also for a long time wonderfully content with this superficial pseudo-existence. I
In the shape of over-acting comedian Jim Carrey, Truman is hardly distinguished from his hysterically smiling fake wife or from his stereotypical fake buddy. This fits within the film's argument, but at the same time diminishes the emotional impact of the story. Carrey may play a much more subdued character compared to previous roles, but he is still a plastic and rather chilly actor. This makes him suitable for the first half in which Truman still unknowingly blends in with his surroundings, but when his suspicions grow and he sets out to investigate, the ‘cardboard’ Carrey still evokes little compassion