Pig
Angry ecologist
- 388
- Posts
- 6
- Years
- Age 30
- Seen Jan 30, 2025
First one being, doesn't that make the people Truman grew up with his entire lives just as well victims in this whole situation? He grew up right next to and with these people, so he'd know instantly if they were just swapped for different actors. and all these people had to live this life right alongside him, how is it not considered a very big part of their lives as well and not just a job they've been assigned since birth?
Has he never walked around at night, to go do stuff at night, or drive around? I get they set him up to be afraid of everything so he wouldn't try to leave the boundaries, but I mean even just within his own little town, like, go out in the middle of the night to get gas station slurpee, or a burger at mcdonalds or something, like I do all the time.
But another thing, my favourite part actually, is the scene where he's trying to have an actual conversation with his "wife," and she just responds with advertising instead, and he looks around like, "wtf are you talking about?"
He was 30, right? How do you get married to someone you went to high school with and never have a real down to earth conversation with them about literally anything and everything?
If the extras aren't allowed to talk to him, how do they get away with nobody ever talking to him, say, casual conversations while standing in line for things, or making friends in class?
Where does he think his wife goes at night when she's not spending it with him?
Do people live on set in the fake neighborhoods? Wouldn't that just make them real neighborhoods, then? What if he ran to a neighbors house in the middle of the night needing help and he found out that nobody was actually there, ever?
Anyway, very cool movie, I think they pulled the concept off very well. Just wish we saw more into the inner workings of the status quo they maintained, and more of the "Free Truman!" activism that was going on outside.
Has he never walked around at night, to go do stuff at night, or drive around? I get they set him up to be afraid of everything so he wouldn't try to leave the boundaries, but I mean even just within his own little town, like, go out in the middle of the night to get gas station slurpee, or a burger at mcdonalds or something, like I do all the time.
But another thing, my favourite part actually, is the scene where he's trying to have an actual conversation with his "wife," and she just responds with advertising instead, and he looks around like, "wtf are you talking about?"
He was 30, right? How do you get married to someone you went to high school with and never have a real down to earth conversation with them about literally anything and everything?
If the extras aren't allowed to talk to him, how do they get away with nobody ever talking to him, say, casual conversations while standing in line for things, or making friends in class?
Where does he think his wife goes at night when she's not spending it with him?
Do people live on set in the fake neighborhoods? Wouldn't that just make them real neighborhoods, then? What if he ran to a neighbors house in the middle of the night needing help and he found out that nobody was actually there, ever?
Anyway, very cool movie, I think they pulled the concept off very well. Just wish we saw more into the inner workings of the status quo they maintained, and more of the "Free Truman!" activism that was going on outside.