Jim Carrey's masterpiece Jim Carrey's best movie, partly because of how The Truman Show's ambiguous ending kept viewers thinking.

It's an abrupt ending to a film that has charted every moment of Truman's quest for freedom, and some viewers may wonder why The Truman Show didn't depict anything Truman did after leaving the set of the show. After all, the entire film was building up to the moment when Truman finally leaves his fake reality and steps out into the real world, but instead of showing it, The Truman Show cuts to the credits. Luckily, it's endlessly interesting to speculate about what Truman did in the real world, and how his life would have turned out after the movie ended.

Truman Seemed Ready To Meet The Real World (Despite How Traumatic It Would Be)

Truman Stepped Into The Real World With A Smile On His Face

The prospect of stepping into the real world for the first time as a fully-grown adult would have been incredibly daunting for Truman. He spent every second of his life up to that point in a carefully constructed and entirely danger-free world that was so far removed from reality it may as well have been a different planet. When Truman left the set, he would have instantly had another traumatic experience of re-learning how the world works. People dressed differently, acted differently, and simply were different, and it would have taken a lot of time and pain for him to get used to that.

Jim Carrey's Top 5 Movies On Rotten Tomatoes

Title

Year

Score

The Truman Show

1998

94%

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

2004

92%

Liar Liar

1997

83%

The Mask

1994

80%

Dr Seuss' Horton Hears a Who!

2008

79%

Luckily, Truman seemed ready to face those challenges head-on. The last glimpse we get of Truman shows him smiling, rubbing his victory in Christof's face, and taking a bow. By the end of The Truman Show, Truman had become a person who had literally challenged his own reality and won. It definitely would have been a shock to integrate into a brand-new society and start a real life from scratch, but if anyone was up to the task, it was Truman.

Truman Would Need A Lot Of Psychological Help To Integrate Himself Into Society

Truman Would Have Had Major Trust Issues, Problems Adjusting To Society, & Needed Help With Basic Parts Of Life

Jim Carrey looking and looking in the camera in The Truman Show

A good attitude could only have taken Truman so far, however, and he would have needed a good therapist, too. He experienced an almost unprecedented change in his life in The Truman Show, and his world quite literally fell apart. Truman would have needed psychological help to cope with all the betrayal, shock, trust issues, and remorse for lost time he would have had. On top of all that, there are plenty of things in the real world that Truman simply wasn't prepared for. Tragedies that normal people are mostly accustomed to, from natural disasters to wars, famines, and widespread suffering, would have rocked Truman's world.

There's no telling exactly how many mental health issues Truman would have had in the real world, but it's safe to say they would be numerous.

The fact of the matter is that Truman simply had no way to deal with the outside world. He was completely sheltered in every aspect of his life, and he didn't have any experience with the everyday struggles and challenges normal people face in society. Truman hadn't even interacted with a rude person before - everyone in Seahaven was there to cater to his every whim - so something as mundane as an insult might have rocked him psychologically. There's no telling exactly how many mental health issues Truman would have had in the real world, but it's safe to say they would be numerous.

Truman’s Life Would Still Be A “Reality Show” Given How Famous He Was

Truman Would Be Hounded By Paparazzi, Fans, Lawyers, & More In The Outside World

Jim Carrey drawing a space suit in the mirror in The Truman Show

While Truman would have had quite a bit of trouble dealing with the normal facts of the real world, he also wouldn't have been a normal person. Truman was a worldwide star for his entire life, and that fact wouldn't have changed after he left Seahaven. As soon as he stepped out into the real world, Truman would have been hounded by reporters looking for interviews, paparazzi taking pictures of him, lawyers trying to sue on his behalf, adoring fans looking for autographs, and more. Truman's constant surveillance and lack of privacy probably wouldn't have gotten much better in the real world.

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The only solace Truman would have from his adoring fans and media frenzy is The Truman Show's famous last lines. As "What else is on?" suggests, people would lose interest in Truman sooner or later. He'd likely continue to be a public figure in some regard, in the same way certain tabloids circulate pictures of celebrities years after they were famous, but he'd probably get some measure of privacy at some point.

We Don’t Really Know What The Truman Show’s Dystopian World Looks Like

The Truman Show Takes Place In A World Where Corporations Can Adopt Humans, So The Outside World May Be As Scary As Christof Claimed

The Truman Show (1998) Ed Harris as Christof watching the show in The Truman Show

One of the hardest things to speculate about with The Truman Show is what the outside world actually looks like. The world of The Truman Show is certainly different from ours, and it's largely dystopian. This is a reality where corporations can legally adopt human children, where millions of people willfully and happily watch a man live a lie for profit, and where an entire fake city can be built right above the Hollywood sign. All of our assumptions about Truman's life have been based on our reality, but there's a lot of evidence to suggest The Truman Show is much worse.

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Based on the sheer power the OmniCam corporation wields in The Truman Show, it's possible that Truman would continue to be harassed long after he left the set. Truman was a massive earner for the corporation, and they probably wouldn't let him leave so easily. After all, they were able to manipulate the legal system enough to adopt a child, so it's feasible that OmniCam would be able to make a case that they "own" Truman, or that he's technically their intellectual property. Evidently, Christof may have been right to say that the real world was no better than Seahaven.

Why The Truman Show Doesn’t Show What Happens After Truman Leaves

The Truman Show's Ending Is Perfect - It Didn't Need To Show Truman's Life In The Real World

Collage of Christof and Truman from The Truman Show

It's endlessly interesting to wonder about what Truman got up to once he earned his freedom, but that's not really the point of The Truman Show. The film doesn't show what Truman did in his first days as a free man, because it doesn't matter: all that matters is that he's free. Whatever he does next, whether it's becoming a celebrity or avoiding attention entirely, is Truman's choice alone, with no television producers pulling the strings for him. The Truman Show is about Truman's quest for freedom, which ended the second he stepped out that door.

The Truman Show is about Truman's quest for freedom, which ended the second he stepped out that door.

There's also a sense that The Truman Show is making a statement that we, the viewers, don't get to be privy to Truman's life anymore. He's won the right to his privacy, to not having his every waking moment televised to the whole world, including us. Besides, the ending of The Truman Show is perfect as it is. There's no satisfying way to transition from the triumph of Truman taking his life back to shots of him applying for a social security card. The Truman Show ended in exactly the right place.

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The Truman Show
Release Date
June 5, 1998
Runtime
103 minutes
Director
Peter Weir, peter
  • Headshot Of Ed Harris
    Ed Harris
  • Headshot Of Natascha McElhone
    Natascha McElhone

WHERE TO WATCH

Writers
Andrew Niccol