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IMDbPro

I Saw the TV Glow

  • 2024
  • PG-13
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
39K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,440
290
Justice Smith in I Saw the TV Glow (2024)
Two teenagers bond over their love of a supernatural TV show, but it is mysteriously cancelled.
Play trailer2:14
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgePsychological DramaSuspense MysteryDramaMystery

A teenager just trying to make it through life in the suburbs is introduced by a classmate to a mysterious late-night TV show.A teenager just trying to make it through life in the suburbs is introduced by a classmate to a mysterious late-night TV show.A teenager just trying to make it through life in the suburbs is introduced by a classmate to a mysterious late-night TV show.

  • Director
    • Jane Schoenbrun
  • Writer
    • Jane Schoenbrun
  • Stars
    • Justice Smith
    • Jack Haven
    • Ian Foreman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    39K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,440
    290
    • Director
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Writer
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Stars
      • Justice Smith
      • Jack Haven
      • Ian Foreman
    • 441User reviews
    • 179Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 91 nominations total

    Videos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Official Trailer
    2024 in 24 Films
    Clip 1:39
    2024 in 24 Films
    2024 in 24 Films
    Clip 1:39
    2024 in 24 Films
    I Saw The TV Glow (Featurette)
    Featurette 1:38
    I Saw The TV Glow (Featurette)

    Photos108

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    + 103
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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Justice Smith
    Justice Smith
    • Owen
    Jack Haven
    Jack Haven
    • Maddy
    • (as Brigette Lundy-Paine)
    Ian Foreman
    Ian Foreman
    • Young Owen
    Helena Howard
    Helena Howard
    • Isabel
    Lindsey Jordan
    Lindsey Jordan
    • Tara
    Danielle Deadwyler
    Danielle Deadwyler
    • Brenda
    Fred Durst
    Fred Durst
    • Frank
    Conner O'Malley
    Conner O'Malley
    • Dave
    Emma Portner
    • Mr. Melancholy…
    Madaline Riley
    Madaline Riley
    • Polo
    Amber Benson
    Amber Benson
    • Johnny Link's Mom
    Albert Birney
    • Mr. Sprinkly
    Michael C. Maronna
    Michael C. Maronna
    • Neighbor 1
    Danny Tamberelli
    Danny Tamberelli
    • Neighbor 2
    Tim Griffin Allan
    Tim Griffin Allan
    • Lance
    • (as Timothy Allan)
    Tyler Dean Flores
    Tyler Dean Flores
    • Cade
    Elizabeth Scopel
    Elizabeth Scopel
    • Drive-Thru Kid
    Marlyn Bandiero
    Marlyn Bandiero
    • Brenda's Friend
    • (as Marilyn Bandiero)
    • Director
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Writer
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews441

    5.838.7K
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    Featured reviews

    3NY_Georgie

    Wake me when it's over

    'I Saw the TV Glow' is about a pair of middle school kids in the '90s who get a little too involved in their favorite cable TV show.

    Justice Smith and Bridgette Lundy-Paine play two loners who have nothing in common except an obsession with the show "The Pink Opaque". We see vignettes from the show which is about two young girls using their super powers and telepathic connection to fight an evil villain who looks like the Man in the Moon. Apparently, this TV show has generated near 300 episodes.

    The two main characters of 'Glow' don't seem to have any kind of life outside of watching 'The Pink Opaque'. Transfixed in the 'TV Glow', these two exude low energy and that's the overriding vibe of the film. Not a good thing.

    The first half of 'Glow' is watchable as a vague sense of dread builds. I wondered where this was going, ready for the ride; but 'Glow' doesn't go anywhere interesting.

    It's an odd little movie that approximates that moment when you're about to fall asleep with the television on.

    I found the most interesting scenes to be the faux episodes of 'The Pink Opaque' with its intentionally cheesy era aesthetics.
    4Quinoa1984

    I saw the references and disappointment... meh

    So... the choices in both the story and the look and overall nightmarish aesthetic of I Saw the TV Glow will likely be compared to several things by film critics and watchers more astute than I, but it makes the most sense when one discovers that Jane Schoenbrun has said in interviews and such that Twin Peaks and specifically The Return left a major impact on them. I wouldn't be surprised if they watched it over and over and (repeat 10x fast) over the past several years, and look it there are few pieces of art created for the medium of television that were as daring and unsettling and just DGAF as Lynch's electrical fire of a masterwork.

    *But* and this is a big but here: taking many of the aesthetic touches and visual cues from that show doesn't automatically make a work of art meaningful. And what to see here that is not the Pink Opaque TV Show (which I'll get to)... these choices don't do it for me, to say the least.

    Also one should remember that Lynch and Frost never forgot, over the original show, Fire Walk with Me and the Return, that there had to be *shown* the kinds of depravity, abuse and total horrors from the human beings in that town and elsewhere, that comes from a world where everything that seems ho-hum and banal about small town life or typical in city life (and in the case of TV Glow the Suburbia kind) are anything but when you scratch just a little below the surface. And there is no lack of an eye with this film (shot on 35mm) and it may be to a fault, but that it isn't so much what Schoenbrun remembers they loved from the Return - electrical currents, a moody band playing at a bar while our leads talk about devastating/consequential things, a parent sitting in the eerie light of a TV alone in a room- as what they leave out.

    TV Glow I'm sure somewhere in Schoenbrun's conscious intention is about that, at least for the Owen and Maddy characters, who we are told and *not shown* (as the difference from Lynch's phantasmagoria), have been neglected and/or abused by their parents (or just made to feel like, at least for Owen, he or he may be they ultimately, can't be who they truly are). And I can dig a movie that is also about a disaffected and so much so one may say it's about autistic or even Asperger adolescents, ie cant look in a less-important person's eyes when talking to them, and how bonding over a wholly commanding and absorbing piece of media can feel like a second breath (and who cares about the quality when you're a kid, it's about the *world,* man). The problem for me, maybe the key problem, is that Owen and Maddie are drawn and directed to be almost parodies of disaffected youth.

    I don't think it is a problem with Lundy-Paine's acting talent per say as they are giving as much as they can in the role, it is just a matter of... sorry, but, delivering this monologue in the monotone damned voice I've ever heard outside of one of the student films I used to see back in my undergrad days, is not going to cut it. But Lundy-Paine doesn't come away looking like an embarrassment. Justice Smith, on the other hand, is actively bad here, to the point where there would be times he would open his mouth and I would laugh at his delivery. I'm not sure if it is simply him or the writing or directing or all of it combined into this walking morose failure pile in a sadness bowl of a performance, and I know I have seen him be decent before (Detective Pikachu was... fine!) For this, there is nowhere for this character to go, or for us to see much in the way of a change or degradation from watching this seemingly mind-bending YA show (till arguably the last couple of scenes, hoo boy), so Smith is one tone from minute one till nearly the last. Awful.

    But what about that Pink Opaque TV show, you might ask? This was the highlight of the movie for me, and mostly because it's where I could sense other conscious or possibly unconscious creative influences from Schoenbrun's youth forming into this parodic stew - and mine and my wife's as well, she came to this knowing about the Buffy influence by the way and it was obvious where it shows (Amber Benson cameo notwithstanding). It's genuinely entertaining to see these set pieces from the show unfold, from the grotesque and cheesy monsters to the "Mr Menancholy" Big-Bad of this concoction. While I wished we saw more of the show in the film, it was still not the problem of missing Maddie's father as a character or mostly Owen's mother. What we see of the Pink Opaque is cheesy and silly and crazy and, for a 90s kid, pretty spot on to a myriad of kid-leaning shows.

    The sad and frustrating part of watching this film is that I can see a lot of the potential of the ideas here, and I absolutely get why this is connecting with/for LGBTQI (or autistic/mentally ill). At the same time, and this is just my take and take my basic Cis white guy take with a grain of salt if you must, I didn't think the film goes that deep enough into the Trans allegory; Owen clearly is not at ease with himself (if again he is a he), and the idea could be interesting that perhaps the infatuation with a show aimed assumedly at a young traditionally female demographic opens a lock inside his consciousness or self awareness. That... doesn't happen, maybe at the final couple of scenes with that moment in the bathroom, kind of?

    But the drama is so... well, Opaque as a tone throughout this picture that I never got much of any humanity anyway here. Even with Owen and Maddie's bond over the show, it leaves them in a trance state, which ok fine, but a) that never leads to anything that is that satisfying as a *horror* movie, or where it would make any reasonable sense, ie its years and years later to find out what the show has done to Maddie's mind (and good lord was this mismarketed as that to the Nth degree), and b), if they were so all-consumed by this show where it dominated their lives and so on, it never extends to, say, seeing what the rest of the cult around this show is like? Or even if it is just the two of them taking this show as gospel, then no one else in the world (or as something that existed circa late 90s, the Internet and fan forums) is there as a reaction to say "hey its all just silly girl-power Mr Frostee evil-moon-man fun"?

    Or maybe the whole film is supposed to function more on the artful vibes and symbolism. Again, going back to my Twin Peaks and Lynch flag-pole, for all of the doggedly and unflappable weirdness of that world, there was always some real people or things that the weirdness could play off of. There's barely anything like that here- asshole co-workers who get like a minute of time don't count- and oddly enough the whole film mostly ends up feeling like a stitched together series of a supporting character arc from a long running show where everything else that is normal has been edited out. And all that we are left with is... Owen.

    I want to make something else abundantly clear: I think it's awesome to make a film that stands as a Trans allegory! Go for it, Trans people and non-Binary folks are great just like all other (non asshole) people out there, and if all the Genre influences and self conscious winks and nods to 90s ephemera was the way to make this unique for you, more power to you. I think in the abstract it is wonderful that a decidedly and markedly uncanny film is playing in multiplexes and will affect some kids (and adults) who find this moving.

    Yet I Saw the TV Glow is as a piece of executed material such a pretentious boondoggle, a character study where the characters are so withdrawn as to be sucked into a near black hole on the ass of Mr Melancholy, featuring casting choices for Owen from age 12 to 14 that just kills the soul, and it's all the more remarkable given how Schoenbrun's previous directorial debut, We're All Going to the World's Fair, dealt with societal isolation and disaffection and media manipulation in an exciting and satisfyingly strange collage of moments (also with its own context). I left the theater in a daze and laughing to myself; this is never boring, I'll give it that. It's too much of a WHAT IS THIS experience to leave before it ends.

    And then when it does it... ended. No season 6. Sigh.
    3guacamole-movies

    I wanted so badly to like it

    It features many dynamite indie rockers (both in cameos and musically), it started off great with interesting characters and EXCELLENT aesthetics - as a millennial, I felt a lot of nostalgia for similar shows I used to watch growing up. Ultimately though, the story fell apart and offered little substance.

    The film has an interesting and societally relevant theme, but I think that's where this falls flat - a great film may elicit the response:

    "That was a great story - what were its most prominent themes?"

    But instead I found myself asking:

    "That was an interesting theme - what were its most prominent plot lines?"
    8Stay_away_from_the_Metropol

    A brilliantly weird movie for the young weirdos who found solace in weird media

    A deeply sad, heartfelt, surrealist film that is very likely to be the most unique American film released in 2024, and even more likely to be misunderstood by at least 75% of its viewers. On the surface, it's one of the most locked-in mid-90's nostalgia pieces I've ingested, but beneath that it's one of the most complex coming-of-age films I can think of.

    To me, the movie was an expression of the kids who grew up in dysfunctional families in the 90's (the TV generation), those who were drawn to dark media due to that (which was extremely prevalent in the late 80's up through the mid 90's), and in turn, those who ended up with a far deeper connection with those dark fantasy worlds than they had with most other humans, and reality as a whole. When it's time to grow up, things get rough...I can relate, because I was 100% one of those kids during that exact era, so this one hit a lot of buttons that made a lot of sense for me.

    There are some impressively unique horror/monster effects in this film, that are equal parts comical and terrifying, simultaneously, which feels like yet another element that is heavily loyal to the era it is inspired by. This, along with many other elements, allow this movie to differentiate itself pretty boldly from everything else coming out right now. Common horror fans will likely just be confused by this film, which tends to be the case with most psychological horror films that actually offer anything with emotional purpose, but it offers plenty of cerebral scares and lots of melancholic gloom.

    Leads Brigette Lundy-Paine and Justice Smith do an immense job of keeping things deathly serious and dreamlike, Smith almost feeling like he fittingly "can't handle being human" a lot of the time. There are several sequences where their performances bring the movie to a full Lynchian realm - of course this is also due to visionary director Jane Schoenbrun's skilled directing. Speaking of that, I just realized that the segment that feels most like a nod to Lynch in a multitude of ways is the one that features bands performing live at a strange club, much like the Road House in the last season of Twin Peaks. Kris Esfandiari of King Woman makes an especially strong appearance here. It certainly doesn't hurt that they put together a very tasteful soundtrack that feels very reminiscent of the classic movie soundtracks of the 90's. It's fitting that the movie and soundtrack begin with a Broken Social Scene cover, because the whole album kind of feels like a full Broken Social Scene album, with similar dynamics and vibes throughout.

    While it's truly hard to compare this to anything, it feels HIGHLY inspired by ARE YOU AFRAID OF THE DARK?, the Canadian kids horror program broadcast in the 90's on Nickelodeon, more than anything, while it's themes remind me only of a couple other movies, Pixar's INSIDE OUT, and the very wild SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK. While I cried my eyes out at that Pixar movie, this one is too committed to its surrealism and gloom to induce actual tears, but the overall melancholy remains very heavy and very real throughout.

    This is a movie about the weirdos who found solace in media for weirdos. Brilliantly, the movie itself is weird (and sincere) enough to be that exact sort of weird type of media that the new young weirdos may find the same kind of solace in when they watch this as a teenager in reality now. I think that might be the whole point. If it wasn't, then it's awfully masterful accident. That's 2 strikingly unique and effective psychological horror films by Jane Schoenbrun now, 2 for 2...I officially deem thee a visionary force to be reckoned with.
    7chungjose

    Great atmosphere and nostalgia.

    I am a straight white man, and I liked this movie. I watched it this evening. After letting it sink in and after dwelling on it, I came here. I skimmed the user reviews. First of all, if you didn't finish watching the movie, then you shouldn't review it.

    A lot of people who didn't like it criticized the acting. To me the acting felt like awkward teenagers being awkward teenagers.

    A lot of the people who did like it saw it as a queer/trans allegory. Rock on, good for them.

    I saw it as a reminder of the awkwardness of being a teenager, trying to make new friends. The obsession with a TV show reminded me how sometimes a TV show can become your identity and can sometimes help you survive said teenage awkwardness. (For me it was The X-Files.) Go in with an open mind and let its atmosphere draw you in.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Just like the rest of the film, The Pink Opaque segments that appear throughout the film were also shot in 35mm, but later transferred to both VHS and Betamax in post-production to create the show's different period-specific degradations.
    • Goofs
      In the voting machine, the ballot shows the familiar names of candidates in the 1996 U.S. Presidential Election ("Bill Clinton / Al Gore"), but ballots for major elections have the full names of those running. The candidates should be listed as William J. Clinton, Albert A. Gore, Robert J. Dole, etc.

      This is not in any way true: candidates are routinely listed with diminutives/nicknames/initials on the ballot all the time if they're more commonly known by that name.
    • Quotes

      Maddy: Time wasn't right. It was moving too fast. And then I was 19. And then I was 20. I felt like one of those dolls asleep in the supermarket. Stuffed. And then I was 21. Like chapters skipped over on a DVD. I told myself, "This isn't normal. This isn't normal. This isn't how life is supposed to feel."

    • Connections
      Featured in Amanda the Jedi Show: The BEST and Weirdest Movies you (mostly) Haven't Seen Yet | Love Lies Bleeding (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl
      Written by Brendan Canning, Emily Haines, Kevin Drew, Justin Peroff, Jessica Moss, Charles Spearin, James Shaw and John Crossingham

      Performed by yeule

      yeule appears courtesy of Bayonet Records

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 17, 2024 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Amazon
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Vi el brillo del televisor
    • Filming locations
      • 601 Main St, Asbury Park, New Jersey, USA(The Saint music venue)
    • Production companies
      • A24
      • Fruit Tree
      • Smudge Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,017,817
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $119,015
      • May 5, 2024
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,396,508
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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