I Saw the TV Glow
A Scene from Jane Schoenbrun’s “I Saw the TV Glow.” Credit: A24

In Celebration of Geek Week, the LGBTQ+ Resource Center is holding a screening of Jane Schoenbrun’s “I Saw the TV Glow” at the Union Cinema on March 5 at 6 pm with free admission for UWM students.

Although, the movie is not explicitly transgender, its message was deeply resonant with this audience, and it found its still-beating heart in queer viewers.

“As an employee of the Downer Theater, I can say that I have never seen another movie bring in so many people for re-watches,” said Ramona Peetz, a Downer Theatre employee and student at UWM studying English.

The bizarre depictions of self-discovery build a sense of being out of space and time with rich, dreamy lighting that casts an eerie glow on adolescence in suburban America.

The film is drenched in pinks, purples, greens and blues, and it looks like it was made to be reblogged as Tumblr gif sets, had it only been released 10 years earlier.

“Jane Schoenbrun’s “I Saw the TV Glow” and its gorgeous imagery has stuck with me ever since my first watch,” said UWM student and employee at Downer Theatre Marlo-Aaron Lawler-Yelk.

When audiences describe their experiences with the film, it creates an image of an unsettling and abject horror movie that absolutely must be experienced.

The horror in this movie is not outright, instead it wrestles with a more existential and human fear: speeding through your own life as a passive participant. Time moves at both a dizzying and a slow, syrupy pace in the film.

I Saw the TV Glow
Justice Smith (Owen) and Brigette Lundy-Paine (Maddy) from Jane Schoenbrun’s “I Saw the TV Glow.” Credit: A24

The movie follows Owen (Justice Smith) from childhood as he stumbles through the fearful self-discovery of adolescence, and as he bonds with Maddy (Jack Haven) over their shared interest in a monster-of-the-week style TV show called “The Pink Opaque.”

Owen’s memories of his life start to meld with the characters on the show, creating questions about which reality is “real” life. Owen is increasingly haunted by the feeling of living in a simulated reality.

“The full gamut of responses to the film; laughter, mockery, horror, impassioned praise, open sobbing, and utter confusion; has made me feel both totally alienated from and completely seen by other movie-goers,” said Peetz.

This film is worth seeing for its loving homage to 90’s media alone, and its visually stunning rendition of early digital media. “I Saw the TV Glow” is reminiscent of media like “Videodrome” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.”

The film narrows life down to the spheres of public, private, and corporate; and focuses on the suffocating constriction of the rigid norms these spaces uphold. “I Saw the TV Glow” is a beautiful, heart-wrenching exploration of the existential pain of self-repression.

“Some of you will leave the film disappointed that you wasted an hour and a half, and some of you will need a moment to collect yourself before you leave,” said Peetz. “Many of you will leave a different person. I implore you to find out which type of person you are.”

Journalism Major and Film Minor at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee.

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