‘I Saw the TV Glow’ Review: How We Used to Escape (2024)

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Critic’s Pick

An outstanding not-quite-horror film about being a fan just before the internet took over.

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‘I Saw the TV Glow’ Review: How We Used to Escape (1)

I Saw the TV Glow
NYT Critic’s Pick
Directed by Jane Schoenbrun
Drama, Horror
PG-13
1h 40m

We’ve forgotten how hard being a fan used to be. You had to labor at it in multiple media: scouring listings and keeping tabs on schedules, reading books of lore and compiling episode recaps. Pop culture was built around presence, real physical presence: To see the latest episode of “The X-Files” or “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” you had to show up at your TV when it aired. If you missed a key episode, you were out of luck, unless someone remembered to tape it for you, at least until it went into reruns or syndication. And if your taste ran to the niche, discovering that someone else loved the same thing you loved felt revelatory, like you’d stumbled upon a person who spoke a language only you could understand.

The social internet, algorithms and streaming blew most of this up, shoving our favorites at us and making them available all the time. Some of the magic disappeared as well, the uncanny immersive quality. You can bury yourself in a binge-watch for a day or a week, but then it’s over, no long in-between stretches to hash out each episode. Sustaining a relationship with the world a show built is still possible; connecting with others over your shared love is preposterously easy. Something, however, has been lost.

“I Saw the TV Glow” captures this obsessive, anticipatory submersion in a long-form weekly TV show, to the point where it ignites the same feeling. A lot of movies tell you stories, but the films of the writer and director Jane Schoenbrun evoke them; to borrow a term, they’re a vibe. Like “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair,” Schoenbrun’s previous film, this one isn’t quite horror, but it gives you the same kind of scalp crawl. In this case I think it’s the mark of recognition, of feeling a tug at your subconscious. It’s oddly hard to put into words.

“We’re All Going to the World’s Fair” was the tale of a lonely teenager living in the oddness of our internet era, where intimacy is free and plentiful and confusing and could be dangerous, or could be banal. “I Saw the TV Glow” dials that same tone back a generation, centering on a couple of lonely teenagers who find one another through a show called “The Pink Opaque.” It’s a mash-up show, instantly recognizable in its own way: It airs on something called the Young Adult Network (clearly a stand-in for The WB, the teen-focused TV network that turned into The CW) at 10:30 p.m. on Saturday nights, a time reserved for shows barely hanging on by a thread. The opening credits we glimpse suggest the show is “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”-adjacent (it even uses the same typeface), but with elements reminiscent of “The X-Files” and “Twin Peaks” — in all these cases, not exactly horror, but not quite anything else. (There’s also a band in the show, one that apparently performs a song in every episode, which plays expertly tuned mid-90s teen-show music; the musicians are Phoebe Bridgers and Haley Dahl.)

“I Saw the TV Glow” is set in 1996, right at the moment when entertainment was about to dive over the cliff and become what media theorists sometimes refer to as convergence culture. Back then, TV was still a few years away from being participatory for most youthful viewers. The internet wasn’t mature enough yet for the majority of teens to really haunt it, and those who did were posting on the kinds of message boards and websites that would eventually come to define both the TV and the fan-driven internet of the early aughts. (“The X-Files,” for instance, which premiered in 1993, was one of the first shows with a developed online fandom; they communicated through a Usenet newsgroup.) If you knew how to find message boards and chat rooms, you might have bonded with other fans. But if you were just a kid at home in the suburbs, you were most likely planning your schedule around episodes.

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‘I Saw the TV Glow’ Review: How We Used to Escape (2024)

FAQs

What was the point of I Saw the TV Glow? ›

Go with her, Owen,” and in asking you to make that choice, TV Glow is simulating the act of self-accepting a trans identity. See, the grimmer read of the film's ending truly is a nihilistic one. It leaves no hope, no potential for growth, no exit. Yet you must actively choose to read that ending as nihilistic.

Are the characters in I Saw the TV Glow autistic? ›

I Saw The TV Glow (A24, 2024) is an incredibly impactful film in a number of ways, but one that is yet to really be discussed is that alongside being transgender and being affected by internalized transphobia, Owen as a character can also be said to be autistic.

Why was Maddy crying in I Saw the TV Glow? ›

Later, at Maddy's house, Owen notices her crying while watching the episode. Maddy explains that she has resolved to run away to escape her abusive stepfather.

Does I Saw the TV Glow have jump scares? ›

Eventually, Maddie goes missing, which leads Owen to search for answers about both her and himself. It is difficult to classify the movie under one category, given that the movie wasn't entirely a horror. Often, the horror aspects were psychological, and there was minimal gore or jump scares.

Is there anything at the end of I Saw the TV Glow? ›

His cries aren't just ignored; they don't even seem to make an impact on anyone around him, and the last thing the audience sees before the credits is Owen wandering through his dead-end job, apologizing to every single person around him.

What is the metaphor in "I saw the TV glow"? ›

I Saw the TV Glow acts as an allegory for the trans experience, specifically the "egg crack" where a trans person realizes that their gender identity does not match their assigned gender.

What is the plot of I Saw the TV Glow? ›

Is the actor in I used to be famous actually autistic? ›

The kid is Stevie, who is autistic, and he's played by the neurodivergent actor Leo Long. The seamlessness with which the actor and his compelling character fit into picture, directed by Eddie Sternberg, is the most noteworthy thing about it.

Was I Saw the TV Glow a good movie? ›

Not for everyone but a memorable experience. Writer/director Jane Schoenbrun made a highly atmospheric little film a couple of years ago called ' We're All Going To The Worlds Fair' on a shoestring budget but the film left an inedible impression on me that I included it on my ten best of the year.

Is I Saw the TV Glow about gender dysphoria? ›

It created, through its subtext and aesthetic approach, a mood comprising the constant, oppressive white noise of gender dysphoria. I Saw the TV Glow picks up that baton and charges headfirst through the screen.

Was the pink opaque real in I Saw the TV Glow? ›

The Pink Opaque remains a fantasy. Neither Owen nor the audience gets confirmation, leaving us with a terrifying sense of uncertainty and tragedy. Owen never got a chance to fully see himself inside the TV glow.

Why is Fred Durst in I Saw the TV Glow? ›

But even if Durst was cast in the film because his music career made him the perfect prop for a '90s fever dream, he rises above the novelty casting and gives a foreboding performance that helps imbue Owen's secret TV binges with life-and-death stakes.

Why is I Saw the TV Glow disturbing? ›

The world of I Saw the TV Glow is nightmarish, not in the way that most horror movies are but in a way that resembles an actual nightmare. The pace of each scene is drawn out to maximize discomfort. There are long spaces between each line of dialogue, and every word out of Owen's mouth is a struggle.

How gory is I Saw the TV Glow? ›

Violence & Gore (4)

There is no blood or gore, but rather a tv screen inside his body in place of any organs. 2 girls have their hearts removed off-screen. We see their hearts, and a bloody wound. A strong scene of close-up self-harm where a man slices his chest open.

Is I Saw the TV Glow ok for kids? ›

Brilliant, moody horror movie

The film is probably appropriate for a 12-year-old, but I think older teenagers may appreciate it more.

What was the point of the picture in The Shining? ›

The ending of The Shining, particularly the photo of Jack in the 1921 ballroom, suggests that Jack is a reincarnation of a former hotel employee, although this explanation is not explicitly stated in the film.

What was I Saw the TV Glow shot on? ›

When the pair reunites as twenty-somethings, both wonder if what they experienced together only existed in the pale glow of the television. Shot on gorgeously hypersaturated 35mm and fuzzed-out VHS, director Jane Schoenbrun teases out the surreal side of nostalgia in this confident, sophom*ore feature.

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