Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 - Box set
 - Dolby
 
  
 Description:
  "There is no real you," jokes Lynn Margulies (Courtney Love) to her  boyfriend, Andy Kaufman (Jim Carrey), as he grows more contemplative during a  battle with cancer. "I forgot," he says, playing along, though the question of Kaufman's reality is always at issue in Milos Forman's underappreciated  Man on the Moon.   The story of Kaufman's quick rise to fame through early appearances on  Saturday Night Live and the conceptual stunts that made his club and concert appearances an instant legend in the irony-fueled 1970s and early  '80s, Man on the Moon never makes the mistake of artificially  delineating Comic Andy from Private Andy. True, we get to see something of  his private interest in meditation and some of the flakier extremes of  alternative medicine, but even these interludes suggest the presence of an  ultimate con behind apparent miracles of transformation.    Screenwriters Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski (The People vs. Larry  Flynt) allege that transformation was Kaufman's purpose--more than a  shtick but less than a destiny. As we see him constantly up the ante on the credibility of his performance personae (the obnoxious nightclub comic Tony Clifton; the insulting, misogynistic professional wrestler), Forman makes it  harder and harder to detect Kaufman's sleight of hand. But it's there, always  there, always the transcendent Andy watching the havoc he creates and the  emotions he stirs.    Carrey is magnificent as Kaufman, re-creating uncannily detailed comedy pieces  etched in the memory of anyone who remembers the real Andy. But while  Carrey's mimicry of Kaufman is flawless and funny, the actor probes much  deeper into an enigmatic character who, in life, was often a moving target  even for those closest to him. --Tom Keogh
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