Utopia is a seemingly perfect world with happiness, honesty, equality and peace. In the novel, in 1984, George Orwell, and Peter Weir 's movie "Truman Show", both readers and viewers presented a negative utopian society. A negative utopia society is a perfect world, and somewhere is wrong. Novel and film controllers succeeded in achieving complete control and power. It is their efforts to create an ideal society. It was Lenovo in the movie "Truman Show" isolated from the outside world in 1984.
Orwell 's 1984 and the Truman show were similar in some respects, but one was that the 1984 citizen and Truman could not get rid of their sight impairment. Winston is a strong opposition person, completely transformed, transformed, brainwashed, eventually leading to the concept of mistakenly believing, like what he once despised. Truman was trapped in his "utopia" until he faced the fear of the sea and eventually escaped from the exit to find escape. These worlds, parties, and Christian creators have very similar incentives. Both consume power and maintain ongoing control over the subject
When I was a high school student, I was influenced by Jim Carrey 's movie at Truman' s performance as Truman Burbank. Truman is a casual hero of a television program, showing it to an unknown viewer of Truman. Since the show could not exist in a character who realized his dilemma, Cast was composed of a dual agent who played a family with Truman's friends and offered TV programs to viewers. Occasionally, like a Truman's whole universe, events like light may fall from the ceiling of a movie. He will find a special situation, he is usually rustic, but it creates a program that can be continued with it
In the wonderful movie "Truman Show", the hero does not know, but all of Truman's life is part of a large TV. The producer carefully planned the "Truman show." This is a live broadcast of every action taken by Truman for a hidden camera. However, as Truman gradually discovers the truth, he must decide whether or not to take action. Similarities can be derived from "Utopia" by Thomas More issued in 1516. More describes an island with one entrance and one exit. Only people in this island know how to safely pass through dangerous openings. This situation is similar to Truman's show, as Truman knows the limited entrance passage in the world. Truman does not belong to the utopia he planted and the childhood trauma fears him to leave this little community prospect.