I Saw the TV Glow Review
Astonishingly beautiful and vulnerable art-horror from the director of We’re All Going to the World’s Fair
Posted:
Jan 20, 2024 4:00 pm
This review is based on a screening at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival.
Jane Schoenbrunâs debut narrative feature, Weâre All Going to the Worldâs Fair, premiered at Sundance in 2021 â an edition of the film festival held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given that itâs an immersive journey into creepypasta culture, Weâre All Going to the Worldâs Fair actually benefited from debuting in that format. For their second feature, I Saw the TV Glow, Schoenbrun has teamed with A24 â an indie juggernaut thatâs become a brand unto itself â to expand the scope of their vision. The money is well spent: This is a film that needs to be seen on the largest screen possible.
There are some astonishingly beautiful shots in I Saw The TV Glow: hazy, ephemeral images that turn humdrum suburbia into Day-Glo dreamscapes. An abandoned ice cream truck, glowing green with smoke billowing out of its back. A Fruitopia vending machine that radiates like a pink beacon in the darkness of a school cafeteria. The vegetable aisle of a supermarket, transformed into a neon fantasia under Schoenbrunâs lens. A similar hand-sketched, luminous aesthetic appeared in Worldâs Fair, but itâs upscaled here, enhanced by Schoenbrunâs superb eye for composition. This is a labor of love, and it shows.
The Best Horror Movie of 2023The content is hazy and ephemeral as well, following two decades in the life of Owen (Ian Foreman and Justice Smith). When we first meet Owen in 1996, heâs a lonely kid who finds an unlikely ally in Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine), a slightly older outcast at his high school. The pair connect over their shared love for the TV series The Pink Opaque, a teen horror anthology about two girls, Tara (Lindsey Jordan) and Isabel (Helena Howard), who use their psychic bond to fight supernatural evil. âClipsâ from the âseriesâ â basically a hybrid of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Goosebumps â are woven into the film, switching from radiant HD to grainy VHS with a touch of LumiĂšre Brothers-style stop motion. Theyâre surreal and comedic and occasionally terrifying, and enhance the feeling that weâre watching a dream, or maybe a half-remembered episode of TV from 20 years ago.
Maddy and The Pink Opaque become an escape for Owen as his family life turns dark. His father (Fred Durst) doesnât get it â âIsnât that a show for girls?,â he asks when Owen asks to stay up late to watch it â and his mother (Danielle Deadwyler) is preoccupied. So Owen starts spending Saturday nights sleeping over in Maddyâs basement, watching the show (â10:30-11 Saturdays on the Young Adult Network,â characters repeat like a mantra) and slowly opening up to one another. Maddy speaks in sullen, angry bursts and rarely makes eye contact. Owen sucks on his inhaler and hesitates to give an opinion on anything. Both leads give heart-rending performances, but Lundy-Paineâs is especially moving, with a clear personal connection between actor and material.
In one touching scene, Maddy tells Owen that her former best friend has abandoned her because she âlikes girls.â âI think I like TV shows,â Owen replies. Owen is asexual, but thereâs more going on than just that; later on, Maddy dramatically reappears in Owenâs life, reminding him of things he needs to remember but would rather forget. The line between reality and TV blurs beyond comprehension, and an episode of The Pink Opaque where Tara and Isabel are buried alive by âbig badâ Mr. Melancholy becomes a metaphor for Owenâs stunted self-realization. Here, I Saw the TV Glow gets scarier and more surreal: The âTV Glowâ of the title is no longer a friendly hum, but a paralyzing scream. Alex Gâs score gets louder and more grating as well, accompanying a shift in the soundtrack from dream-pop to doom-rock.
At Sundance, Schoenbrun described I Saw the TV Glow as an âegg crackâ movie, a slang term for the thrilling, terrifying moment when someone realizes that theyâre trans. In a knockout monologue that takes place inside an inflatable astronomy tent, Maddy describes feeling âlike I was watching myself on TVâ â an echo of characters talking about âturning into plasticâ in We’re All Going to the World’s Fair. That feeling of dysphoric dissociation carries over, but the overall treatment of the gender-transformation theme in I Saw the TV Glow is more nuanced, urgent, and even hopeful: âItâs not too late,â a message in sidewalk chalk reads late in the film.
Thereâs something here to speak to every high-school outcast whose only friends were TV characters.
The vulnerability with which Schoenbrun explores their own feelings about gender in I Saw the TV Glow makes for a painful tenderness at times, as if everyone â including the audience â is about to break out in tears. If it occasionally feels vague, thatâs because the emotions being articulated here are that way as well. Speaking of ephemeral longing: Another major driver of I Saw the TV Glow is nostalgia. There are abundant references to â90s cultural touchstones, and Schoenbrun commissioned 16 original songs from artists like Phoebe Bridgers and King Woman to create a soundtrack like the Donnie Darko CD the director wore out in their youth.
Thereâs something here to speak to every high-school outcast whose only friends were TV characters, as well as anyone who woke up one day and realized that somehow theyâve gotten old. An earnest personal statement wrapped in a gorgeously surreal art-horror movie, itâs on a wavelength of its own, one most readily accessed by other lost, sensitive souls. But if it keeps one lonely kid company the way The Pink Opaque does for these characters, then it will all have been worth it.
VerdictI Saw the TV Glow is an earnest personal statement wrapped in a surreal art-horror movie, a labor of love whose originality and astonishing beauty establish writer-director Jane Schoenbrun as a major cinematic talent. Schoenbrun envelops a tale of two lonely teenagers â and the director’s own feelings about gender â in an ephemeral haze that transforms 1990s suburbia into Day-Glo dreamscapes. Stars Justice Smith and Brigette Lundy-Paine deliver heart-rending performances, with Lundy-Paine expressing a clear connection to the material.
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Astonishingly beautiful and vulnerable, I Saw the TV Glow’s surreal art-horror speaks to lonely teenagers, past and present.
Katie Rife
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