By Amanda Gilmore
I Saw The TV Glow is a visceral examination of our obsession with Media and a look at growing up queer in suburbia.
Writer-Director Jane Schoenbrun (Sundance ’21’s We’re All Going To The World’s Fair) returns to the Festival with this Midnight selection. It’s story reaches decades in the life of Owen (as a seventh-grader Ian Foreman and Justice Smith for the remainder of the Film) who’s trying to make it through life in the suburbs. Then they meet Maddy (an outstanding Brigette Lundy-Paine) a classmate a few years older than them. She introduces Owen to the late-night TV show “The Pink Opaque” (it feels like a nod to Buffy The Vampire Slayer). The two become obsessed with the show, seeing themselves within the characters. For Owen, it allows them to identify the person within. For Maddy, it’s seeing someone similar to her on screen. But soon their obsession with the show blurs their lines between reality and fiction.
Just like with their feature debut, I Saw The TV Glow has a vibe all of its own. It’s clear Schoenbrun, with only two features under their belt, is an Auteur. The hypnotic neon lights suck us into this story of Owen, a person trying to figure out who they are and where they belong. Smith is enchanting as Owen discovers the show and a world they can escape within.
The outstanding Script has haunting lines of dialogue such as Owen admitting to Maddy that, “someone took a shovel and dug out my insides.” Later when the lines between reality and fiction blur, particularly for Maddy, she’s given a monologue that Lundy-Paine delivers with an intensity that consumes the viewer.
I Saw The TV Glow is a mix of genre filmmaking that only Schoenbrun could accomplish. The Lighting, Score, and Sound assault the senses. Thus mimicking the sense of overwhelming Owen walks with every day. Schoenbrun examines the identity of their characters while providing an examination of the positive and negative effects of our TV obsessions.
There is a lot at play within I Saw The TV Glow. There are many ways to look at the Film and dissect it. But there isn’t a need. It feels more like a film you experience, one based on instinct and feeling. And does it ever pack a punch right to the gut. Just wait for that ending.
A24 has distribution of I Saw The TV Glow in the U.S., but the Film currently doesn’t have a release date.
I Saw The TV Glow screens at Sundance ’24:
Jan 18 at 10:00 PM at Library Center Theatre
Jan 19 at 9:30 PM at Redstone Cinemas – 7
Jan 21 at 8:15 PM at Broadway Centre Cinemas – 6
Jan 23 at 10:30 PM at The Ray Theatre
Jan 27 at 8:15 PM at Broadway Centre Cinemas – 6
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