Referat The Truman Show
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat The Truman Show si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat the truman showCiteste fragmente din Referat The Truman Show
The Truman Show
“The Truman Show†is a profoundly disturbing movie. On the surface,
it deals with the worn out issue of the intermingling of life and the
media.
Examples for such incestuous relationships abound:
Ronald Reagan, the cinematic president was also a presidential movie
star. In another movie (“The Philadelphia Experimentâ€Â) a defrosted
Rip Van Winkle exclaims upon seeing Reagan on television (40 years after
his forced hibernation started): “I know this guy, he used to play
Cowboys in the moviesâ€Â.
Candid cameras monitor the lives of webmasters (website owners) almost
24 hours a day. The resulting images are continuously posted on the Web
and are available to anyone with a computer.
The last decade witnessed a spate of films, all concerned with the
confusion between life and the imitations of life, the media. The
ingenious “Capitan Fracasseâ€Â, “Capricorn Oneâ€Â, “Sliverâ€Â,
“Wag the Dog†and many lesser films have all tried to tackle this
(un)fortunate state of things and its moral and practical implications.
The blurring line between life and its representation in the arts is
arguably the main theme of “The Truman Showâ€Â. The hero, Truman,
lives in an artificial world, constructed especially for him. He was
born and raised there. He knows no other place. The people around him
– unbeknownst to him – are all actors. His life is monitored by 5000
cameras and broadcast live to the world, 24 hours a day, every day. He
is spontaneous and funny because he is unaware of the monstrosity of
which he is the main cogwheel.
But Peter Weir, the movie’s director, takes this issue one step
further by perpetrating a massive act of immorality on screen. Truman is
lied to, cheated, deprived of his ability to make choices, controlled
and manipulated by sinister, half-mad Shylocks. As I said, he is
unwittingly the only spontaneous, non-scripted, “actor†in the
on-going soaper of his own life. All the other figures in his life,
including his parents, are actors. Hundreds of millions of viewers and
voyeurs plug in to take a peep, to intrude upon what Truman innocently
and honestly believes to be his privacy. They are shown responding to
various dramatic or anti-climactic events in Truman’s life. That we
are the moral equivalent of these viewers-voyeurs, accomplices to the
same crimes, comes as a shocking realization to us. We are (live)
viewers and they are (celluloid) viewers. We both enjoy Truman’s
inadvertent, non-consenting, exhibitionism. We know the truth about
Truman and so do they. Of course, we are in a privileged moral position
because we know it is a movie and they know it is a piece of raw life
that they are watching. But moviegoers throughout Hollywood’s history
have willingly and insatiably participated in numerous “Truman
Showsâ€Â. The lives (real or concocted) of the studio stars were
brutally exploited and incorporated in their films. Jean Harlow, Barbara
Stanwyck, James Cagney all were forced to spill their guts in cathartic
acts of on camera repentance and not so symbolic humiliation. “Truman
Shows†is the more common phenomenon in the movie industry.
Then there is the question of the director of the movie as God and of
God as the director of a movie. The members of his team – technical
and non-technical alike – obey Christoff, the director, almost
blindly. They suspend their better moral judgement and succumb to his
whims and to the brutal and vulgar aspects of his pervasive dishonesty
and sadism. The torturer loves his victims. They define him and infuse
his life with meaning. Caught in a narrative, the movie says, people act
immorally.
(IN)famous psychological experiments support this assertion. Students
were led to administer what they thought were “deadly†electric
shocks to their colleagues or to treat them bestially in simulated
prisons. They obeyed orders. So did all the hideous genocidal criminals
in history. The Director Weir asks: should God be allowed to be immoral
or should he be bound by morality and ethics? Should his decisions and
actions be constrained by an over-riding code of right and wrong? Should
we obey his commandments blindly or should we exercise judgement? If we
do exercise judgement are we then being immoral because God (and the
Director Christoff) know more (about the world, about us, the viewers
and about Truman), know better, are omnipotent? Is the exercise of
judgement the usurpation of divine powers and attributes? Isn’t this
act of rebelliousness bound to lead us down the path of apocalypse?
It all boils down to the question of free choice and free will versus
the benevolent determinism imposed by an omniscient and omnipotent
being. What is better: to have the choice and be damned (almost
inevitably, as in the biblical narrative of the Garden of Eden) – or
to succumb to the superior wisdom of a supreme being? A choice always
involves a dilemma. It is the conflict between two equivalent states,
two weighty decisions whose outcomes are equally desirable and two
identically-preferable courses of action. Where there is no such
equivalence – there is no choice, merely the pre-ordained (given full
knowledge) exercise of a preference or inclination. Bees do not choose
to make honey. A fan of football does not choose to watch a football
game. He is motivated by a clear inequity between the choices that he
faces. He can read a book or go to the game. His decision is clear and
pre-determined by his predilection and by the inevitable and invariable
implementation of the principle of pleasure. There is no choice here. It
is all rather automatic. But compare this to the choice some victims had
to make between two of their children in the face of Nazi brutality.
Which child to sentence to death – which one to sentence to life? Now,
this is a real choice. It involves conflicting emotions of equal
strength. One must not confuse decisions, opportunities and choice.
Decisions are the mere selection of courses of action. This selection
can be the result of a choice or the result of a tendency (conscious,
unconscious, or biological-genetic). Opportunities are current states of
the world, which allow for a decision to be made and to affect the
future state of the world. Choices are our conscious experience of moral
or other dilemmas.
Christoff finds it strange that Truman – having discovered the truth
– insists upon his right to make choices, i.e., upon his right to
experience dilemmas. To the Director, dilemmas are painful, unnecessary,
destructive, or at best disruptive. His utopian world – the one he
constructed for Truman – is choice-free and dilemma-free. Truman is
programmed not in the sense that his spontaneity is extinguished. Truman
is wrong when, in one of the scenes, he keeps shouting: “Be careful, I
am spontaneousâ€Â. The Director and fat-cat capitalistic producers want
him to be spontaneous, they want him to make decisions. But they do not
want him to make choices. So they influence his preferences and
predilections by providing him with an absolutely totalitarian,
micro-controlled, repetitive environment. Such an environment reduces
the set of possible decisions so that there is only one favourable or
acceptable decision (outcome) at any junction. Truman does decide
whether to walk down a certain path or not. But when he does decide to
walk – only one path is available to him. His world is constrained and
limited – not his actions.
Actually, Truman’s only choice in the movie leads to an arguably
immoral decision. He abandons ship. He walks out on the whole project.
He destroys an investment of billions of dollars, people’s lives and
careers. He turns his back on some of the actors who seem to really be
emotionally attached to him. He ignores the good and pleasure that the
show has brought to the lives of millions of people (the viewers). He
selfishly and vengefully goes away. He knows all this. By the time he
makes his decision, he is fully informed. He knows that some people may
commit suicide, go bankrupt, endure major depressive episodes, do drugs.
But this massive landscape of resulting devastation does not deter him.
He prefers his narrow, personal, interest. He walks.
But Truman did not ask or choose to be put in his position. He found
himself responsible for all these people without being consulted. There
was no consent or act of choice involved. How can anyone be responsible
for the well-being and lives of other people – if he did not CHOOSE to
be so responsible? Moreover, Truman had the perfect moral right to think
that these people wronged him. Are we morally responsible and
accountable for the well-being and lives of those who wrong us? True
Christians are, for instance.
Moreover, most of us, most of the time, find ourselves in situations
which we did not help mould by our decisions. We are unwillingly cast
into the world. We do not provide prior consent to being born. This
fundamental decision is made for us, forced upon us. This pattern
persists throughout our childhood and adolescence: decisions are made
elsewhere by others and influence our lives profoundly. As adults we are
the objects – often the victims – of the decisions of corrupt
politicians, mad scientists, megalomaniac media barons, gung-ho generals
and demented artists. This world is not of our making and our ability to
shape and influence it is very limited and rather illusory. We live in
our own “Truman Showâ€Â. Does this mean that we are not morally
responsible for others?
We are morally responsible even if we did not choose the circumstances
and the parameters and characteristics of the universe that we inhabit.
The Swedish Count Wallenberg imperilled his life (and lost it) smuggling
hunted Jews out of Nazi occupied Europe. He did not choose, or helped to
shape Nazi Europe. It was the brainchild of the deranged Director
Hitler. Having found himself an unwilling participant in Hitler’s
horror show, Wallenberg did not turn his back and opted out. He remained
within the bloody and horrific set and did his best. Truman should have
done the same. Jesus said that he should have loved his enemies. He
should have felt and acted with responsibility towards his fellow human
beings, even towards those who wronged him greatly.
But this may be an inhuman demand. Such forgiveness and magnanimity are
the reserve of God. And the fact that Truman’s tormentors did not see
themselves as such and believed that they were acting in his best
interests and that they were catering to his every need – does not
absolve them from their crimes. Truman should have maintained a fine
balance between his responsibility to the show, its creators and its
viewers and his natural drive to get back at his tormentors. The source
of the dilemma (which led to his act of choosing) is that the two groups
overlap. Truman found himself in the impossible position of being the
sole guarantor of the well-being and lives of his tormentors. To put the
question in sharper relief: are we morally obliged to save the life and
livelihood of someone who greatly wronged us? Or is vengeance justified
in such a case?
A very problematic figure in this respect is that of Truman’s best and
childhood friend. They grew up together, shared secrets, emotions and
adventures. Yet he lies to Truman constantly and under the Director’s
instructions. Everything he says is part of a script. It is this
disinformation that convinces us that he is not Truman’s true friend.
A real friend is expected, above all, to provide us with full and true
information and, thereby, to enhance our ability to choose. Truman’s
true love in the Show tried to do it. She paid the price: she was ousted
from the show. But she tried to provide Truman with a choice. It is not
sufficient to say the right things and make the right moves. Inner drive
and motivation are required and the willingness to take risks (such as
the risk of providing Truman with full information about his condition).
All the actors who played Truman’s parents, loving wife, friends and
colleagues, miserably failed on this score.
It is in this mimicry that the philosophical key to the whole movie
rests. A Utopia cannot be faked. Captain Nemo’s utopian underwater
city was a real Utopia because everyone knew everything about it. People
were given a choice (though an irreversible and irrevocable one). They
chose to become lifetime members of the reclusive Captain’s colony and
to abide by its (overly rational) rules. The Utopia came closest to
extinction when a group of stray survivors of a maritime accident were
imprisoned in it against their expressed will. In the absence of choice,
no utopia can exist. In the absence of full, timely and accurate
information, no choice can exist. Actually, the availability of choice
is so crucial that even when it is prevented by nature itself – and
not by the designs of more or less sinister or monomaniac people –
there can be no Utopia. In H.G. Wells’ book “The Time Machineâ€Â,
the hero wanders off to the third millennium only to come across a
peaceful Utopia. Its members are immortal, don’t have to work, or
think in order to survive. Sophisticated machines take care of all their
needs. No one forbids them to make choices. There simply is no need to
make them. So the Utopia is fake and indeed ends badly.
Finally, the “Truman Show†encapsulates the most virulent attack on
capitalism in a long time. Greedy, thoughtless money machines in the
form of billionaire tycoon-producers exploit Truman’s life shamelessly
and remorselessly in the ugliest display of human vices possible. The
Director indulges in his control-mania. The producers indulge in their
monetary obsession. The viewers (on both sides of the silver screen)
indulge in voyeurism. The actors vie and compete in the compulsive
activity of furthering their petty careers. It is a repulsive canvas of
a disintegrating world. Perhaps Christoff is right after al when he
warns Truman about the true nature of the world. But Truman chooses. He
chooses the exit door leading to the outer darkness over the false
sunlight in the Utopia that he leaves behind.
ì¥Â@