Liar Liar/Headscratchers

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • So, I probably forgot some bits, so please bear with me. Max's wish for his father only to tell the truth is pretty wide, and I couldn't help but wonder a few implications... for example, is Jim Carrey's character forced to tell the truth in a matter in which he doesn't know the answer? What about matters of opinion, is there a "true" opinion he's forced to state? I'm really more asking this because I'm not sure if it was addressed anywhere in the movie...
    • Well, the wish was that he tell the truth; it didn't give him psychic powers. If he didn't know the true answer to something, he couldn't give it, obviously. As for matters of opinion, the movie doesn't directly address it; presumably they'd either be exempt, because they fall outside the 'true/false' dichotomy, or he'd be forced to say whatever he thought was true.

      That said, there are some truths he said that could be construed as opinion; his impromptu roast of his superiors, and telling the woman in the elevator that people are only helping her because of her gazongas, for instance.
    • IIRC, she didn't even ask him a question. She just made a statement. Since she didn't ask a question, he was under no obligation to acknowledge her statement. So why didn't he just keep his trap shut?
      • Regardless of whether a question is asked, everything he says still has to be the truth. Since he didn't even know about the wish at the time, he was merely trying to have a normal chit-chat conversation. What he probably meant to say was something like "Yeah, all the people here are great," which to him would be a lie since he almost certainly doesn't think they're all that great, therefore it got replaced with the truth. And of course when he tried repeatedly to lie to cover up what he blurted out, he just ended up making the situation worse.
      • If you mean his boss, she did ask him a question. "Well, what do you think of him?" She seemed to add that precisely because she knew he had to tell the truth when answering a direct question.
    • On the opinion question, most likely if he's asked for it, he has to give his honest opinion; like when the one secretary asks about her outfit, and he goes, "Whatever takes the focus off your face!" Her looks aren't an objective truth; certainly, she at least thinks she looks good; so he's giving his most honest opinion rather than lying to placate her.
    • It's not that he's forbidden to speak an untruth, it's that he's forbidden to say anything dishonest. He can say anything he wants so long as he honestly believes it.
      • Evidenced by his comment to the Judge about "holding it" causing cancer and impotence. It's prefaced with "I've heard...".
        • Not necessarily, prefacing his comment with "I've heard" just indicates that he's heard it, not that he necessarily beleives it to be true. This would imply that he can indirectly lie by saying that he has heard an untrue statement, for example answering a question by saying 'I heard that blue is red' even when he knows it's not. He's not lying because he may well have heard someone saying that blue is red but at the same time the statement is false as blue is not red.
          • Except he knows that blue is not red. He doesn't know if holding your pee for too long can damage your prostate. However, he has heard that it can do that, which is why the curse allows him to say "I've heard blahblahblah". He's heard it and doesn't have any reason to believe it's untrue, therefore it's not dishonest to say that he's heard this. See also other lines such as "I can't ask a question if I know the answer is a lie" and "I can't do anything dishonest until 8:15 tonight". He's not required to speak only the objective truth, he's simply forbidden to say or do anything dishonest for the duration of the curse.
      • Yeah, the simplest answer is that he has to tell the truth as he knows it. If he's asked about something he doesn't know, then the truthful answer is "I don't know", along with however much rambling elaboration he wants to get into. If he's asked for his opinion, then he has to say his real opinion ("that's just something we tell ugly people to make them feel better!").
      • And as for the woman in the elevator, this troper always interpreted it as Reed opening his mouth to say something flattering and flirtacious but, to his horror, having the curse force him to say what he was really thinking about: primarily, her mammary glands and how, of course no one would be rude to her. Note that this isn't because someone actually wouldn't be rude to her but only because Fletcher himself couldn't imagine it because he could never bring himself to be anything but flattering and flirtacious with an attractive woman.
    • Basically, the curse doesn't compel simple, actual facts to come out of his mouth when he speaks, it makes him say what he's truthfully thinking. There's lots of times where he could have said something technically true, but it wouldn't have been honest to what he was thinking and feeling inside. Again using the lady in the elevator as an example, he probably could have said something noncommittal and technically true like "I imagine they have" (which would have been both truthful: he can certainly imagine other people being nice to her because she has big boobs), but what he was really thinking was "They're being nice because you have big boobs". So that was his truth, and what he had to say.
  • When Carrey's character has to answer his secretaries questions which he doesn't what to, why doesn't he just not answer at all, it was only for him to tell the truth, not answer every question he is asked.
    • You answered your own question. The wish was for him "to tell the truth." I.e., if he knows a truth, he has to tell it.
    • One word (or at least I'm going to type it without spaces) Rule of Funny
    • Because not answering would have the same effect as answering. The secretary would have very easily concluded that he wasn't answering because he knew she wouldn't like the answer.
    • But then why didn't he just answer with a simple "I don't like it."?
      • See above: Fletcher's not just forced to tell the truth, he has to tell his personal truth. "I don't like it" might be technically true, but not what he really thinks.
    • I believe he is forced to say whatever pops into his head at that moment so he can't word something to be technically true. You can see this when he clamps his hand over his mouth when he answers his own question of what's wrong with me, hurls a phone away after admitting he was sleeping with his boss when he culd have just said I was with my boss last night, and at one point wraps his head in his jacket and tries to nod and shake his head as an answer but screams the opposite of what he's indicating.
        • I think a lot of this can be chocked up to Fletcher not understanding exactly what's happening to him at first, and and later the stress of what's going on causes him to have outbursts, which of course have to be the truth.
  • Ok, so the prenuptual agreement doesn't count because the wife was too young to get married when she married her husband, so then the wife doesn't lose out on her husband's money due to violating the agreement. But then, in that case wouldn't the whole marriage not count, if she was too young to get married, and she would therefore lose out on the money?
    • She was old enough to get married, but not old enough to sign a binding legal contract (the pre-nuptial agreement). The age when you can marry varies widely state-to-state and country-to-country, just like the age you can have sex, join the military, drink, sign documents, or vote. So the marriage was legal, but the pre-nuptial agreement was void.
    • But she said she changed her age so that she could get married. Why would she do that if it were legal?
      • Possibly just to make the contract appear legal. Alternatively, even if she was below the legal age to get married at the time, they're probably legally married by now.
      • Likewise, she might not have even realized that she could get married at her age, and just assumed that if she couldn't sign a contract, she also couldn't get married.
        • It still seems shady that the husband would be penalized for acting in good faith, not to mention rewarding the woman for falsifying records. Besides which, if she were married, and therefore emancipated from her parents, wouldn't she then be granted many of the legal rights granted to adults? Not necessarily the ability to buy alcohol ("I got married at 17! Give me a brewski!"), but signing contracts and entering into agreements on her own behalf?
          • I think you sign the pre-nuptial before the marriage.
        • If nothing else, with her being in her thirties, and them getting the pre-nuptial when she was 17, they are married by common law, if nothing else...
          • Actually the whole thing should have been thown out. The judge and Mr. cole's lawyer really dropped the ball on that one because like Fletcher said "a minor cant sign a legal binding document in the state of california" alteast not without parental consent but that also includes a marriage license. If she was a minor and got married but lied about her age, her marriage is void. As for "common-law" marriage, that is not recognized in the state of california anymore so it makes no sense that they let her walk away with that win. Now, if she was not a minor on the day of the weddding things would be a little different but not by much. She would still be legally married to him but he could get the marriage annuled upon learning of her falsification of her age and unlike divorce this is retroactive in most cases so she should get nothing still. It makes no since that community property laws would still apply when her marriage it technically non-existant and she has proven to be unfaithful.
  • I always saw Fletcher and his ex-wife getting back together as incredibly tacked-on and undermining of the whole point of the movie being Fletcher's love for his SON. What is this, Hays code fallout?
    • Actually the point of the movie was more about Fletcher learning to be a better person (or at least less of a lying, scheming jerk). Part of that process is repairing his relationship with his son, but his relationship with his ex-wife was just as much in need of repairing.
    • At least it puts that a year in the future, making it a little more believable.
    • If you pay attention, there's obviously still a lot of feelings there between Fletcher and his ex-wife. Their relationship deteriorated because Fletcher was a workaholic and wasn't honest with her, not because of irreconcilable differences of personality or viewpoint. Once Fletcher sorted out his priorities and learned to be honest, the thing that drove them apart was gone, getting back together actually made sense.
  • Fairly minor but as Fletcher is being dragged out of court to be held in comtempt he clearly yells. "I am Jose Canseco! I AM JOSE CANSECO!!!" While absolutely hilarious it would fall under the category of lying. I guess you could write it off as he didn't mean it as a lie, he was just refering to a game of catch he was going to play with Max...but it still bugs me.
    • Fletcher says lots of crazy, whacky things when he goes on one of his Truth rants. Remember when he goes off on that one guy the wife had been cheating on? "You dunked her donut! You gave her dog a Snausage! You stuffed her like a Thanksgiving turkey!" None of that was literally true (he didn't actually give her dog a Snausage), but he still said it because the metaphorical meaning was true.
      • Also, as you said, he was being dragged out at the time. We don't know what he might or might not have said after the door closed on him, so he could very well have yelled out something clarifying like "MY SON WANTS ME TO PRETEND TO BE JOSE CANSECOOOOOOO!!!" after the scene cut.
    • See the "Fletcher's personal truth" explanation. He's not lying because in that moment what he's saying is the truth for him... he doesn't believe he's actually, literally Jose Canseco, but that he's going to "be" Jose Canseco for his son that night, and for him that's the truth.
  • Max's fifth birthday is a HUGE to-do, with friends, a clown and music. His sixth birthday is... his two parents and a cake.
    • Well, when your birthday doesn't fall on a weekend, you tend to have a little birthday party with just your parents, and then the big bash comes the next Saturday.
    • Also, Fletcher's income likely took a big hit after he left his firm, and he may also have been in jail for a while at this point.
  • He DID lie once: When Fletcher's secretary was quitting, and he had just said he could have "gotten him ten", and she continues to pack up her stuff, Fletcher desperately cries out "I didn't understand the question!" There is no application of this statement that could have been true.
    • One theory I've read is that he was referring to the secretary's question ("Is that justice?" in relation to her friend being sued). She meant "is that justice for my friend?" He answered as if it was "is that justice for the burglar"? Thus, misunderstanding.
    • He might have been able to get away with it because he had a moment of thinking "Oh crap she was asking what I'm supposed to think as a person, not what I really think as a lawyer!"
  • My fan theory (to this lie and to the whole film actually): No magic spells, Fletcher was unconsciously unable to lie (with that one exception) due to his guilty conscience catching up with him. When his son told him about the wish, it just solidified the psychological effect, and gave him a point in time which his conscience could let him off. This adds a plausibility to the story that a magic spell would not allow for.
    • So you find it more "plausible" that Fletcher was struck with some sort of acute mental illness at exactly 8:15pm one night that made him psychologically incapable of lying, and then inexplicably cured of said mental illness at exactly 8:15pm the next night? Why the need for this overcomplicated explanation when "magic spell" is so much simpler?
      • Because magic is a fake made-up thing that isn't real, one assumes. Besides, the inability to lie vanishing at 8:15 the next day isn't the mental block being completely cured, it's just manifesting in a less inconvenient manner.
        • You know what else is a fake made-up thing that isn't real? This fictional mental illness you've imagined that somehow makes a person unable to lie for exactly 24 hours.
          • The impression I got from this theory (and this is not my theory) is that this mental block made him unable to lie indefinitely, and hearing that his son had wished for a 24-hour no-lies period just gave him a convenient "out", because Your Mind Makes It Real.
            • Seriously dude, Occam's Razor. "Magic spell" is a thousand times simpler than this mythical mental disorder that somehow makes Fletcher unable to lie for exactly 24 hours. I don't understand why you would favor such an overcomplicated and bizarre explanation when the premise established in the actual movie is so much simpler and requires far fewer mental gymnastics.
  • Fletcher cannot ask a question if he knows the answer will be a lie. When he puts Samantha on the stand and questions her about her birth certificate, he had to have known she was going to lie when he asked her about the information, she'd falsified at least three things on the document. How could he ask the questions if he knew the answers would be lies?
    • Because his intent was to reveal the truth. When he was asking her the lies before, the intent was to deceive. At each of her answers about the form, he immediately shoots down her lies.
    • Yup. The problem with asking the other questions was that he knew that when the person who answered was going to lie, he would then be expected to silently move on and let the lie stand, which the spell wouldn't let him do.