Preview

rhetorical analysis of The truman show

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
517 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
rhetorical analysis of The truman show
Mrs. Hegwood
AP Lang. & Comp.
12/16/13
Creator

The Truman Show is about the intrusion of the media in the lives of celebrities and the disruption such scrutiny causes, such as in the life of Princess Diana. Or, it's a movie about the intrusion of the media into all of our lives, with shows like Oprah and Jerry Springer showcasing the lives of "average" people, delving into every nook and cranny of our private lives. It means that with the nature of the media today, we have no private life. That's what The Truman Show was trying to illustrate. In the Truman show, god, also known as Cristof, can control everything within the boundries of the dome besides whats going on in the heads of the individuals.
As the megalomaniacal creator and showrunner of The Truman Show, Cristof peers down at Truman from his live TV control room. He plays Truman's life as though he were the conductor of a symphonic orchestra. Intent on showing the "real" life of someone in a total way, Cristof creates a false reality for not only Truman and the audience, but himself. As he says in the film, "We accept the reality of the world with which we are presented.” Ironic coming from him.
Often compared to god in the film, Cristof is far less often viewed as a Big Brother. That is because while his imprint is everywhere, his image is nowhere. Truman has no idea Cristof even exists. The idea of an artificial utopia or satire of the American Dream-as-dystopia is also apparent to the viewer. But, what we might miss while thinking of Cristof is the words he uses. Maybe that's because we, as viewers, are also wrapped up in the spectacle of the film. We are busy being entertained and moved. Cristof's vocabulary echoes some of the common themes we recognize in national security language. Several of his statements and observations hit at the security vs. liberty debate Benjamin Franklin addressed in his time, and which we still grapple with in the post-9/11 years.
Camera shots were used

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    The timeline of Citizen Kane is anything but linear. The film begins by showing us the last moments of Kane's life. Consequently, almost everything after that point is comprised of multiple flashbacks and first hand accounts of his life. The only exception to this is the timeline of Thompson, a reporter finishing a new-real on Kane, as he travels around asking the people closest to him for their accounts in the hopes of understanding Kane's last word, Rosebud. Thompson eventually gives up on figuring out Rosebud because no one can offer any "useful" information, the viewers just end up realize what Kane went through and what it did to…

    • 110 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Have you ever found yourself standing in a line at an airport – at customs bored out of your mind looking for some sort of amusement? Have you ever glanced up, and noticed the small video screen of strong, happy, confident officers marching around ready to do their duty to keep you safe? These are designed to make their audience feel comfortable and safe but in many cases, these are examples of false propaganda designed to make subtle implications and guide the viewer to an intended conclusion. The Truman Show, starring Jim Carey directed by Peter Weir is a prime example highlighting either the government’s or another authoritative party’s attempts to brainwash their constituents. The movie was about a godlike figure, Christof, a Hollywood…

    • 744 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    However this connection to Truman is very rarely to Truman as a person but more a product. Christof’s connection to Truman can be seen when he speaks to his creation and says “I am the creator of a television show…you’re the star”. This demonstrates the idea that Christof is proud of and loves Truman. Yet these reasons are completely wrong and that he only loves him as he will be able to generate views and revenue. This point is furthermore emphasized when Christof is willing to kill Truman just for greater views. The Audience also feels a connection to Truman as a product. Throughout the whole film we see the two security guards constantly watching the Truman show and neglecting their real jobs in order to watch the Truman Show. We see them cherishing every moment of it. Nevertheless at the end we see that the security guards say at the end of the Truman Show say “what else is on”. This exhibits that much like normal products Truman is cherished and loved yet the moment he becomes obsolete he will simply be thrown away and discarded. These people feel a relation to Truman yet not a proper human…

    • 690 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For this event paper, I decided to see a movie on the bottom floor of the J Standish Library at Siena College. I saw The Truman Show starring Jim Carrey who played Truman Burbank. The Truman Show is about a television show that has recorded the life of Truman ever since he was born. The television show is a worldwide phenomenon, the only catch is Truman does not know his whole life has been recorded. Every person in his life is an actor, and the producer of the show determines the fate of his life, from his marriage to Meryl to the faked death of his “father”. The life of Truman Burbank connects to the theme Voice and the story Plato, Allegory of the Cave because, in the end after discovering the truth of his life, Truman leaves the set and starts a new life in the real world on his own.…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In the Truman Show, the main character, Truman, is adopted at birth by a company that wants to make a documentary of his entire life. Everything that happens to Truman is a result of decisions made by those in the company, especially the main person in charge, Christof. All of the events that take place in Truman's life including the sun and moon rising, all of the weather, and all of the human interaction that Truman has on a day-to-day basis. Everyone in the city of Seahaven (where Truman was born and lived his whole life) is just a part in the game as hired actors to work in Truman's created world. Throughout the movie, however, Truman begins to sense that some things are very odd in his life.…

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    His handling of attention to detail and imagery allows for a reader to be interested and enter the realm of his mind. The tone, however is set to be dull and grey as a journalistic tone, it even in some remark allows you to transfer your mind into the time and the imagination of Truman as a person would perceive a sense of reading it in a newspaper article. This excerpt from In Cold Blood portrays the true story remarkably smoothly and allows for an interesting that a reader can learn a great deal from, whether it be from attention or his tone he paints the image in your mind that he had…

    • 425 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Truman Show closely parallels Plato's Allegory of the Cave. Initially, Truman is trapped in his own "cave"; a film set or fictional island known as Seahaven. Truman's journey or ascension into the real world and into knowledge is similar to that of Plato's cave dweller.…

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fake In The Truman Show

    • 1267 Words
    • 6 Pages

    He was chosen out of five newborn babies whose mothers couldn’t take care of them. Christof created the set and has constantly been airing Truman’s life since his birth. The concept that he wanted to bring to the viewers was a reality show, which presented a completely unscripted and authentic person, along side with a community of characters. Nothing is fake in Truman’s world, rather controlled. Chistof is viewed in this film as if he were the God of Truman. He shapes his world through fear and love, but Truman still has the ability to think freely. He lives a normal life as many would see. He has friends, neighbors, collogues, parents, and a wife. He goes to work everyday and lives in what a typical neighborhood would look like. There is one thing that sticks out early in the film, Truman only knows about the town in which he lives in, well, and…

    • 1267 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The director of The Truman Show, Peter Weir, uses metaphors to project images to the audience. The audience of the Truman show is confronted with the metaphor of media’s portrayal on reality television. The audience is forced to look at the modern television world that they are surrounded by and the way that the big companies twist news, reality shows, political affairs in to theatrical illusions. This makes the audience think about the society they live in and the way media portrays and exploits lives.…

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Truman show demonstrates how much society affects the behaviors of the individuals who live inside of it. Throughout the movie Christoph conditions Truman to be afraid of sailing, swimming, or traveling to far off places. In the movie Truman's father is shown to have died in a massive storm by way of drowning. Because the set is a huge island, Christoph set it up so that Truman will never be able to leave because of his fear…

    • 1166 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Peter Weir’s 1998 film entitled The Truman Show stops at nothing to depict just how much manipulation and traumatization can affect a human being. The motion picture presents Truman Burbank, a man who has been legally adopted by a television network and set up to live in a constructed set entitled Seahaven filled with fictional elements. He is shadowed by an estimation of five thousand cameras in order to be broadcasted 24 hours a day, not knowing he has been the star of his own television show for nearly thirty years. In the article “The Truman Show: How’s it Going to End?” psychoanalysts Michael Brearley and Andrea Sabbadini make the decision to adjust the focus onto particular attributes of Truman’s character instead of discussing the controversial topic of what is real versus fictional in the film. The article claims The Truman Show is about something much bigger than that. It holds a larger and more prominent meaning that lies within Burbank’s search for his self-identity and the rite of passage depicting his transition from childhood to becoming a True-man.…

    • 1371 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Truman Show Comparison

    • 1258 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Animal Farm and The Truman show are two different forms of text, Animal Farm is a book written by George Orwell, and is about animals on a farm rebelling against the human owers and deciding to run a small society on their own. Whilst The Truman Show, directed by Peter Weir, is a movie about a man who grows up and lives inside a dome for the purpose of a TV show. Truman has no knowledge of this until the movie nearly ends, this is when he decides to escape. Although these are two completely different stories, they do share some similarities. They both tell a resembling message about the good life and where freedom lies in it, they both illustrate a story a story about power and what the leaders might do with it. However, their stories about utopia (the perfect society) are quite disconnected. The Truman Show talks about how when in utopia, no one would control and monitor every person's move, whereas Animal Farm portrays utopia as everyone pitching in to help toward one goal.…

    • 1258 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Using the film The Truman Show as example, the essay discusses on the ubiquitous surveillance in today’s increasingly IT-based society with the theoretical lens of culture. Using Internet, be it the conventional computer-carried Internet or the cellphone-carried mobile Internet, people tend to rely on online communication more and more than face to face communication. In particular, among the young generation, the cyber culture can be no less important than the culture in the real world. One undeniable reason for the popularity of cyber culture may be the free of others’ surveillance from the real world. Another reason, which can be proved by the prevalence of Facebook and Twitter, is the human desire of knowing other’s secrets.…

    • 1402 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The way in which we view an object, situation or concept, greatly affects how we interpret its reality. This concept is explored by using Point of view to change the viewer’s ideas about the True reality of within the Truman show. The whole idea and notion of our reality is based upon what we see, what we grow up with. We learn from a young age what we see isn’t always the truth, and therefore we adapt our reality to what we already know. This is the same for Truman Burbank, a 33 year old average man. He is the unknowingly star of a television show all of his life. Everything he does and says is recorded and televised uninterrupted 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Like us Truman has never questioned his life as his point of view has never been given the opportunity to change. That was until a series of incidents occurred that changed his Point of view. A key change in Truman’s point of view is when a series of onset glitches lead him to see a different reality that clashes with what he knows. These events lead him to become erratic and quite demented (Evident by the erratic car trip with Meryl), eventually leading to a point where Truman has Meryl by the throat with a set of dicers and Meryl screams’’ Somebody do something’’. This quote leads Truman to the core belief that there is something wrong with his reality and that he will not stop until he finds out what is real and what is not. This eventually leads him to the point in which he leaves the T.V set and has discovered the through a new point of view his true reality. This is Through…

    • 902 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Essay On The Truman Show

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages

    - The Truman show is being sold to the people watching it. At the beginning of the film the main characters are trying to sell the Truman Show through slogans, and repetition, presenting it as one of the greatest shows made…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays