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J'ai vu la télé briller

Titre original : I Saw the TV Glow
  • 2024
  • 14A
  • 1h 40m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,8/10
42 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 362
145
J'ai vu la télé briller (2024)
Two teenagers bond over their love of a supernatural TV show, but it is mysteriously cancelled.
Liretrailer2:14
3 vidéos
99+ photos
Drame psychologiqueHorreur corporelleHorreur psychologiqueLe passage à l’âge adulteSuspense - MystèreDrameHorreurMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA 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.

  • Réalisation
    • Jane Schoenbrun
  • Scénariste
    • Jane Schoenbrun
  • Vedettes
    • Justice Smith
    • Jack Haven
    • Ian Foreman
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    5,8/10
    42 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 362
    145
    • Réalisation
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Scénariste
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Vedettes
      • Justice Smith
      • Jack Haven
      • Ian Foreman
    • 469Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 185Commentaires de critiques
    • 86Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 12 victoires et 92 nominations au total

    Vidéos3

    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)

    Photos113

    Voir l’affiche
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    Distribution principale40

    Modifier
    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)
    • Réalisation
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Scénariste
      • Jane Schoenbrun
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs469

    5,841.9K
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    Avis en vedette

    4jacobcmet

    Mysterious Skin is better. I had high hopes...

    I was thoroughly looking forward to this film but alas. The style, the cinematography and the subject matter are all well-executed and important. However, there is little to no nuisance. Any subtlety is not subtle and any message is overpowered by sub-par acting and loud, screeching, pretension.

    Mysterious Skin (2006) is a film that's similar but done exceptionally better. While the subject matter is far from metaphoric, it's execution is brilliant. I Saw The TV Glow seems like a proof of concept with a powerful core message that had the glaring plot gaps filled with flashing visuals and nostalgia-bait.

    This should've been a Tisch short.
    7pinkmanboy

    Static Grief: Watching Yourself in "I Saw the TV Glow"

    "I Saw the TV Glow" refuses to hand anything over in a simple or didactic way, yet somehow manages to carve out really specific feelings in those who connect with its world-not through direct identification with the plot, but through an intimate resonance with a sensory, emotional, and symbolic experience that only cinema and television can truly express. Jane Schoenbrun builds something here that can't be called a traditional narrative, but also isn't just a purely aesthetic experiment. It's a collage of fragmented memories, symbols of a boiling inner world, and impressions of a self that, suffocated by the everyday, finds a kind of misshapen, mystical escape through television. At its core, it's a dark, warped coming-of-age story-one where the characters never quite grow up. Or maybe they do grow, but never emerge from the thick fog of an unspoken identity.

    The movie kicks off with a surprisingly grounded premise for something so ethereal: Owen (played by Ian Foreman/Justice Smith), a shy kid from the '90s, meets Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine), an outsider teen who introduces him to "The Pink Opaque," a fictional TV show that feels like a mix of "Goosebumps" and "Donnie Darko"-but with VHS vibes, robotic acting, and villains that seem like they were ripped from a nightmare taped over too many times. What first seems like a nostalgic tribute to an analog era of formative media ends up being a twisted mirror reflecting way deeper stuff-like the kind of emotional bond you build with fiction when you're isolated, displaced, or completely adrift in your own identity. There's something deeply melancholic about the almost religious attachment Owen develops to this cheap TV show. It's not about what the show is, but what it represents: a parallel world where maybe he could exist as he really is-or as he never will be.

    Casting Justice Smith as the older version of Owen-with no attempt to smooth over the age gap, even though he clearly looks like a grown man playing a late teen-only reinforces the disconnect between physical time and emotional time. It's a bold choice that leans into its artificiality instead of hiding it, because that dissonance is the point: the feeling of watching your own life from a distance, stuck in an aesthetic that refuses to grow up, as if time froze emotionally the moment something couldn't be said, done, or lived. The film's visuals dive headfirst into this non-place aesthetic: neon lights, heavy shadows, overlapping images, and a dissonant soundtrack create a world where reality and fiction blur together-both for Owen, and for us.

    Narratively, the movie teases the structure of a psychological horror but then completely abandons any attempt to guide the viewer through a clear line. There are abrupt cuts, time gaps, vanishing characters, absurd details (like Owen's job at a rec center where his only task is to restock plastic balls in a ball pit like it's life-or-death), and a dreamlike logic that feels more like a trance than a conventional story. But logic isn't the point-feeling is. And what "I Saw the TV Glow" makes you feel is a kind of unnamed grief, a constant emptiness, a life lived by proxy. Owen doesn't know how to say what he feels, but maybe "The Pink Opaque" says it for him. When he answers Maddy's question about his sexuality with "I think I like TV shows," it hits like a quiet confession-that he can only access truth through the filter of fiction. In this world, TV isn't escapism-it's survival.

    The queer/trans symbolism is clear but never spelled out. That's part of the film's power: it doesn't label what's in crisis-body, gender, identity, voice. There's a constant discomfort that shows up in both the silences and the awkward dialogue, in alienating framing, in faces that never quite relax. The climax-or maybe anti-climax-where lights rise up from the floor and Owen breaks down visually and emotionally, could've easily come off as too much or overly derivative, but instead it carries a symbolic weight that's hard to shake off: it's the body breaking under the strain of a silenced identity, the mind imploding as it tries to reconcile the real with the ideal, the TV turned all the way up with no one left to hear it.

    Yeah, the film sometimes slips into a bit of style-over-substance-like the live musical performances that feel more like nostalgic fetish than something rooted in the themes, or some references that seem pasted on more for aesthetic than narrative need-but Schoenbrun makes up for it with rare emotional honesty and a cohesive, immersive atmosphere. "I Saw the TV Glow" isn't an easy watch, and it's not always conventionally engaging, but its refusal to explain itself is exactly what makes it feel so raw and haunting. It doesn't want to be a manifesto, or a neat little allegory. It wants to be a blurry, grainy, warped reflection of a teenagerhood that never ended, of an identity that never had space, of a trauma only fiction dared to name.

    It's hard to say whether "I Saw the TV Glow" liked you-or if you liked it. What's more likely is that it just watched you, quietly, like a TV left on late at night, glowing faintly, playing indecipherable sounds while you tried to fall asleep. And then suddenly, something in it understood you-or reminded you of something you've always known, but never had the courage to watch.
    4MrX867

    Should have never been labeled as horror.

    This film should not be labeled as a horror movie in my honest opinion. Perhaps it would be better off labeled as a teen, coming of age, sci-fi, drama? To be honest I'm actually not even sure, it's a bit difficult to even label what genre it's exactly supposed to be. Even the synopsis on IMDB doesn't feel like it's a good way to say what the movie is about.

    I get the messages that it all tried to convey but the fact that so much of the dialogue was delivered in a quite a slow and monotone way just ended up making it feel boring in the long run.

    I'm not going to tell you that it's a horrible movie, but it most definitely just wasn't for me.
    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.
    7sipofcherrycola

    You either get it or you don't.

    No judgment. Definitely not a traditional "horror" film, but scary none the less. I was a freshman girl in 1996. This is what it felt like.... Fighting to get to the next season of our lives. Fighting to be understood and to understand ourselves. We were in such a hurry to grow up we didn't fully appreciate our youth. Some of us didn't make it. I did and I wonder which outcome is better. We die quickly or we die slowly. This film made me feel very seen and also scared for the next generations. Some things are better and some are way worse. If we do it or not our teenage selves die... it's all about if we become something better. The question is "What is better?"

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    Intérêts connexes

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Du soleil plein la tête (2004)
    Drame psychologique
    Jeff Goldblum in La mouche (1986)
    Horreur corporelle
    Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out (2017)
    Horreur psychologique
    Elsie Fisher in Ma huitième année (2018)
    Le passage à l’âge adulte
    James Stewart in Fenêtre sur cour (1954)
    Suspense - Mystère
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight - L'histoire d'une vie (2016)
    Drame
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    Horreur
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    Mystère

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      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.
    • Gaffes
      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.
    • Citations

      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."

    • Connexions
      Featured in Amanda the Jedi Show: The BEST and Weirdest Movies you (mostly) Haven't Seen Yet | Love Lies Bleeding (2024)
    • Bandes originales
      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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    • How long is I Saw the TV Glow?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 mai 2024 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Sites officiels
      • Amazon
      • Official Site
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • I Saw the TV Glow
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 601 Main St, Asbury Park, New Jersey, États-Unis(The Saint music venue)
    • sociétés de production
      • A24
      • Fruit Tree
      • Smudge Films
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 10 000 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 5 017 817 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 119 015 $ US
      • 5 mai 2024
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 5 407 916 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Atmos
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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