Hollywood’s greatest conspiracy is that a man named "Jim Carrey" was credited for decades of films, when in reality, it was just Ace Ventura—pet detective, eccentrico supreme, and master of disguise—playing different roles for his own amusement.
Evidence That Every "Jim Carrey" Role Is Just Ace Ventura in Disguise:
The Mask (1994): Ace, bored with detective work, dons a magical artifact to unleash his true chaotic self. The dancing? The hyper-elastic expressions? Pure Ace.
Dumb and Dumber (1994): Ace, undercover as Lloyd Christmas, investigates a missing-money case (which he fails spectacularly, because he’s too busy with the blind kid and the dead parakeet).
The Truman Show (1998): Ace, disillusioned with Hollywood, method-acts as a man trapped in a fake reality… but keeps slipping in Ace-isms (see: the mirror scene).
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004): Ace, after one too many identity shifts, starts questioning his own existence. The erratic behavior? Classic Ventura.
Sonic the Hedgehog (2020): Ace, now fully embracing his cartoonish roots, plays Robotnik as if he’s a villain from one of his own detective comic books.
Why the Cover-Up?
The studio couldn’t admit that every "Jim Carrey" movie was just Ace Ventura refusing to break character. So they invented a name, a backstory, and even fake interviews where "Jim" pretended to be a normal guy. But we know the truth.
How to Contact Ace for an Interview:
Leave a trail of rare animal figurines leading to a payphone in Malibu.
Play "The Cocoanut" on loop near a wildlife sanctuary.
Challenge him to a "who can make the weirdest face" contest—he’ll show up.
Conclusion: Jim Carrey doesn’t exist. It’s just Ace Ventura, forever. And honestly? That tracks.