I saw some colleagues rather cagily recommending I Saw the TV Glow when it came out. Considered psychological horror, it is a bewildering film. This surreal story revolves around a television show, The Pink Opaque, which is ninth-grader Maddy’s favorite program. She meets Owen, who’s in seventh grade, and asks if he’s watched it. Since it’s on past his bedtime, he has to sneak to Maddy’s house to watch it with her. Like her, he become hooked on it. Maddy, however, has trouble distinguishing the show from real life. Two years later she runs away from home, ostensibly to find reality in The Pink Opaque. After a decade, Maddy finds Owen again. He’s taken a dead-end job but feels that he knows what reality really is. His parents dead, he carries on in his lackluster job. Maddy tries to convince Owen that what he thinks is the real world is a television show and that The Pink Opaque is reality. She wants to bury him alive so he can awaken to reality.
After twenty more years, Owen is still in the same degrading job, suffering in physical health and, apparently, mental as well. After a breakdown at work, he discovers a television inside his chest. It’s a bizarre tale, which is a clue that something more than meets the eye is going on. A little reading reveals that Jane Schoenbrun, the writer/director, is trans and discovering that reality is what the film is about. That does help make sense of it. I tend not to read about movies before I see them, but I’d had this one recommended to me by a couple people whose judgment I trust. Anyone who’s had an epiphany of self-discovery will probably be able to relate, at least in part.
There are some horror moments in the movie. The implications of being buried alive—which comes up for four characters—is Edgar Allan Poe-nightmare material. The ice cream man, in the original showing, is creepy. And cutting open your chest to access a television inside is scary. Also some characters have their hearts cut out. All of this is surrounded by a pink glow and a pretty amazing soundtrack. Unless a viewer has specific triggers though, I can’t see I Saw the TV Glow being especially frightening for anyone. It’s not that kind of horror movie. If, however, you are prone to existential horror, and sometimes wonder if reality is real, this could give you a bit of a jolt.
