The Impact of Television on Our Perception of Reality: A Joint Review of Three Recent American Films
Journal of American Studies of Turkey
8 (1998) : 93-97.
The Impact of Television on Our Perception of Reality:
A Joint Review of Three Recent American Films
Michael Oppermann
Three Hollywood movies have recently taken a supposedly critical look at American
television: Barry Levinson’s Wag the Dog (1997), Gary Ross’s Pleasantville (1998) and Peter
Weir’s Truman Show (1998). Each film focuses on different aspects of the presence of TV in
people’s lives.
Wag the Dog is based on Larry Beinhart’s novel American Hero (1994). Directed by
Levinson and adapted to the screen by David Mamet, the film is a fairly stunning satire on the
power of US media and their apparently complete control of people’s lives. It tells the tale of
the final triumph of oblivion. In Wag the Dog an imaginary war is being created in order to
detract public consciousness from the US president’s most recent amorous affair with an
adolescent. Cooperating with a Hollywood producer, the president’s adviser creates an
artificial war situation with Albania; a virtual war which only exists on TV and which justifies
itself entirely by the power of the images that have been created in Hollywood studios. At this
point some of the representatives of the Old Power interfere. A group of CIA agents stop the
president’s car in Los Angeles, maintaining that, according to their information, there is
absolutely no war with that country. “Our satellite pictures reveal the truth!” replies Conrad
Brean, the president’s advisor, and manages the situation admirably by giving a long lecture
on tradition, duty and patriotism. He talks about loyalty and differentiates between a truth of
the eye and a truth of the heart. In the end, the CIA agent (William H. Macy) is convinced. He
is convinced that a good American believes in the latter—the truth of the heart.
Wag the Dog is a film about rhetoric. It is a film about playing a role that gradually absorbs
the entire personality. And it is a film about the art of creating images that become more
powerful and real than reality itself. In short, Brean is in charge of a classical disinformation
campaign. Superbly portrayed by Robert de Niro, Brean seems to represent the sort of
personality that has turned his mask into his real self. He is a twentieth-century Man for all
Seasons with a multitude of faces and no character at all. Dustin Hoffman is equally good. He
is the Hollywood producer who wants to finish his career with a kind of big bang, a virtual
war that establishes itself as prime reality. There is a grandiose sense of direction when he
manipulates the sound of the fake war with Albania. “Gimme some Anne Frank cries!” he
shouts in the studio when creating a supposedly gruesome war scene for the national TV news
network. He loses it, though, when he asks for production credits.
The film presents itself with a sense of inevitability that is underlined by the film’s central
metaphor, the totentanz or death dance. Medieval frescoes present the figure of the knight, the
peasant and the maiden united in a dance directed by Death himself (in his medieval
personification). What is visualized here in a kind of implicit commentary is the death of truth
itself.
Pleasantville is the directorial debut of former scriptwriter Gary Ross. The film is certainly
less spectacular than Wag the Dog; nevertheless, it is a highly funny and entertaining movie
that should have been a major success. The title points to a fictitious black-and-white TV
series from the 1950s, which depicts the life of a family in an American small town by the
name of Pleasantville. Week by week the series draws its audience into a world without racial
conflicts, sex or violence; Pleasantville represents an America before the killing of John F.
Kennedy or the massacre of My Lai. It designates an America before the Fall in which even
the fire brigade have very little to do. From time to time they go after cats that have run
astray. In short, Pleasantville is indeed very pleasant.
In the film two youngsters from the 1990s (one of them a passionate TV watcher who never
misses the series’ re-run) are beamed into Pleasantville by some kind of magical trick. David
and Jennifer, the two youngsters, both disappear in their TV set in order to reappear in black
and white. Apart from their family and familiar surroundings, even their skin has changed in
such a way that they have become part of the TV series. Needless to say that both of them
undergo an incredibly dull experience. They nevertheless try and make the most of it. David
starts to neglect his job in the series (he works in a fast food restaurant) and establishes
friendship with a painter, while Jennifer seduces a fellow pupil. Her first tongue kiss
introduces a new element of color to the town of Pleasantville. All of a sudden, lips and roses
shine in red and faces start to reveal their human complexion. Even the pages of the novels in
the town’s library are no longer blank; sentences start appearing so that whole books come
into existence. However, the youngsters face the rebellion of the monochromes; the rebellion
of those town people, that is, who have decided to remain black and white. In this manner, the
lack of color turns into a kind of metaphor. All of a sudden, colored people become outcasts;
color is linked with a supposedly immoral attitude. Pleasantville’s no longer silent majority
opts for a world in black and white. Thus, their lack of color turns into a symbolic
representation of small-town America and an apparent dictatorship of the WASPs. Still, the
introduction of color changes everything in Pleasantville. In the film’s best scene, David’s TV
mother successfully explores her body in a bathtub. She touches herself and her feelings
become so intense that, in a kind of metonymical extension, the tree next to her house catches
fire. So finally even the fire brigade in Pleasantville gets something to do. However, since
they do not know how to extinguish a real fire, they display a highly comic sense of
confusion.
Pleasantville has been criticized in America for its open symbolism whereas European critics
have unanimously praised the film. I personally see Pleasantville as a kind of implicit
commentary on the Clinton-Lewinsky case. It comes out that the moral values that have
brought Clinton to trial do not come from the Bible, as many representatives of America’s
Moral Right want us to believe. On the contrary, the film makes it clear that these values are
associated with American TV. The Moral Right defends a puritan and purified vision of the
world which is raised on the concept of American family series. The film reveals that this
vision of America hides a highly repressive outlook on life.
Peter Weir’s Truman Show tells the story of a man who discovers that his whole life has been
televised since his birth and broadcast to the whole world. Truman Burbank (Jim Carey) is a
walking soap opera; he is on the air twenty-four hours a day, and his small world i (...truncated)