I Saw The TV Glow Ending Explained: There Is Still Time

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Young Owen standing under a parachute in the school gymnasium in I Saw the TV Glow

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Some movies are designed to leave you feeling interrupted, intentionally cutting to credits before providing the resolution you've been craving for the last two hours. Others, especially when it comes to sci-fi, fantasy, and horror, drive their narratives and mythologies toward a specific thematic landing zone, punching it through the screen to in the final moments. "I Saw the TV Glow" is somewhere in the middle — a millennial-retro, aesthetically driven horror movie that blends heartfelt genre homage with heart-wrenching gender allegory.

If you've seen the film, you may have walked out of the theater at the end, or out of your living room, feeling like the air had been sucked straight out of you. Suffocation is a major idea throughout "I Saw the TV Glow," and it underlines the resounding horror of the ending. At the same time, the film's final moments aren't all terror. There's catharsis as well, and an open note going into the credits that leaves room for optimism, gasping for air though it may be.

For as loaded as the ending is, "I Saw the TV Glow" can lull you at times into a false sense of speed. It takes about half the movie for the plot to truly reveal itself, and even then, a lot of the biggest scenes are anchored more by tone, look, and feel than by the progression of the story. There are hints of "Twin Peaks" and David Lynch films — a major inspiration for writer-director Jane Schoenbrun — but also, the slow pace fits with the film's larger focus on time distortion.

What you need to remember about the plot of I Saw the TV Glow

Owen sitting on the cafeteria floor with Maddy between the vending machines in I Saw the TV Glow

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At face value, "I Saw the TV Glow" is about a boy named Owen (Justice Smith and Ian Foreman) who bonds with an older girl named Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine) over their shared interest in a late-night young-adult fantasy show called "The Pink Opaque." The story begins in 1996, drawing heavy inspiration from "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" for its fictional TV show. But things get much stranger after Maddy disappears, only to pop back up years later with a huge revelation for Owen.

She tells him that they are actually the protagonists from "The Pink Opaque." Owen is Isabel (Helena Howard), and Maddy is Tara (Lindsey Jordan). During the events of the show's season 5 finale — the last episode before cancellation — both girls are buried alive by the villainous Mr. Melancholy (Emma Portner) and trapped in the Midnight Realm. In this magical prison, the two heroes have different names, bodies, and lives, but the world around them isn't real — just another fiction created to subdue them. Their memories are transposed onto a TV show in this realm, hiding the truth that the show is their reality and the "real world" is their cage.

Maddy, reclaiming her identity as Tara, claims to have escaped by burying herself alive and says she's returned to help Owen/Isabel do the same. But it's too much for Owen to take, and he refuses, running off and never seeing her again.

What happens at the end of I Saw the TV Glow?

Owen standing in an empty movie theater in I Saw the TV Glow

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The final act of "I Saw the TV Glow" fast-forwards through decades of Owen's life. We're told that his father dies and that Owen eventually starts a family of his own, whom, in an unsettling moment of direct narration, he assures us he loves "more than anything." Of course, we never see the family. We only see Owen wasting away in his nightmarish forever job at the Fun Center, "refilling the ball pit with balls," until he becomes an old man, frail and struggling to breathe, even with the help of his inhaler.

Overcome by the sudden realization that he's dying, Owen screams in the middle of a kid's birthday party at work, venting a lifetime of pent-up pain and grief. The guests and his coworkers all slip into a comatose state, leaving him alone with his anguish. Afterward, Owen goes to the bathroom and slices his chest open with a box cutter. When he peels the skin back in the mirror, all he can see is the bright glow of TV static buzzing inside him, which he seems to respond to with a combination of joy, terror, celebration, and sadness.

In the final shot, Owen walks out across the main floor of the Fun Center, apologizing for his outburst to each person he passes as he continues to struggle to breathe. The movie ends before we get to see where he's going or if he'll make it out of his prison before it's too late.

I Saw the TV Glow is first and foremost a transgender allegory

Owen in a dress standing on the football field at night with Maddy in I Saw the TV Glow

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There's a lot going on thematically in "I Saw the TV Glow," from commentary on our relationship with media to ideas about the overarching queer millennial experience. But at its core, it's a trans story told by a trans nonbinary filmmaker, who's said as much in multiple interviews.

"'TV Glow' is about something I think a lot of trans people understand," Schoenbrun told The New Yorker in a June 2024 profile. "The tension between the space that you exist within, which feels like home, and the simultaneous terror and liberation of understanding that that space might not be able to hold you in your true form." In an interview with Variety, they discussed the film as being about the "egg crack," a term in the trans community referring to when a person first fully acknowledges their own trans identity to themself.

Owen isn't Owen; she's Isabel, and Maddy is Tara. But as reflected by those characters' respective personalities on the "show," Tara is much more willing to accept the scary thing. As Owen, Isabel can't make herself become her true self again. She's too caught up in the mechanical circumstances of her life — her job, her family — and how those might be forever altered by embracing her real self. Of course, the effect of this fear and denial is a slow death by suffocation — the closeted experience of letting your true self be buried alive in silence.

I Saw the TV Glow is also about living vicariously through media

Owen and Maddy in I Saw the TV Glow sitting on the couch watching The Pink Opaque

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At one point in "I Saw the TV Glow," Maddy asks Owen if he likes girls or boys. "I think I like TV shows," is his reply.

As much as the film is primarily a story about queerness (and gender dysphoria in particular), there's also a lot of commentary on media consumption and fandom. In the lore of the film, Maddy and Owen are both drawn to "The Pink Opaque" because it holds their true memories, but their fandom also reflects how media can become a vicarious vessel for those unable to fully embrace themselves.

When Owen asks in one scene if he can stay up late to watch "The Pink Opaque," his father replies, "Isn't that a show for girls?" Schoenbrun had a similar experience watching "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" as a kid, calling the show "an obsession and a real balm for me in my adolescent years" in an interview with Screen Daily. The use of the name Tara for a character in "The Pink Opaque" is an homage to a character of the same name from "Buffy," who comes out canonically as a lesbian in one of the show's more culturally groundbreaking storylines. Amber Benson, the actor who played Tara on "Buffy" and was written off the show after the character's unceremonious death, has a small cameo in "I Saw the TV Glow."

In their youth, "The Pink Opaque" helps Owen and Maddie embrace parts of themselves that they can't live out in full. Decades later, upon a rewatch, Owen finds the show corny and not at all how he remembered it. "The dissociation, the hiding in stories and hiding in fandom, was a survival tool," Schoenbrun told The New Yorker. "You're protecting yourself from yourself to not have your entire conception of home destroyed."

I Saw the TV Glow has both sadness and hope at the end

Isabel walking through a campsite at night in I Saw the TV Glow

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Like a good David Lynch ending, "I Saw the TV Glow" leaves you hanging. The decision to leave Owen/Isabel in the midst of their crisis, rather than giving them and the audience the catharsis of escape, was a very intentional choice by Schoenbrun. "I think many people, even if they are sympathetic to narratives of biological-family estrangement, still want to believe in resolution or restorative reparative work," the director told The New Yorker. "And I think this does a disservice to queer people who are not in control of whether that work can be done."

At the same time that the film's ending feels unresolved and even suffocating, there's hope there too. Before "Maddy" vanishes again, she leaves a note written on the street in chalk: "There is still time." Those words feel like a refrain through the film's final act, during which you may find yourself shouting at the screen to get Owen to escape, to embrace being Isabel. There is at least some kind of half-catharsis in Owen's speaker-shattering scream — his acknowledgment, excruciating though it is, that this is all wrong. Of course, what release might come in that scene is countered by the abject silence of the world around Owen, frozen and closed off to the pain.

There won't be a sequel, but there will be a follow-up

Jane Schoenbrun posing for pictures

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"I Saw the TV Glow" isn't the kind of film that's built for a sequel, but Jane Schoenbrun is currently working on a follow-up of sorts. However, it won't be a movie. In June 2024, it was announced that Schoenbrun's debut novel, "Public Access Afterworld," will be published by Hogarth Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House. In a statement reported by Indiewire, the writer-director referred to the book as "the culmination of my so-called 'screen trilogy' that I began with 'World's Fair' and 'TV Glow.'" The other film mentioned there, "We're All Going to the World's Fair," was Schoenbrun's first feature and also deals with our relationship with screens and media.

While the novel is apparently meant to be a thematic culmination of this trilogy, it's also intended to be a trilogy itself. At first, Schoenbrun conceived of the project as a TV series, but they turned to prose fiction when they couldn't land a deal. That struggle may have been due to the project's scale and ambition, which sounds like it could be massive.

"It's my epic and me trying to do 'Buffy,' 'Lost,' or 'Harry Potter,'" Schoenbrun told The Verge. "I've created this huge mythology about a giant cast of characters with a story that spans centuries and sprawls across alternate universes." According to the novel's official synopsis, it will involve "mysterious transmissions of a secret television network known as Public Access Afterworld that draws in a wide cast of characters."

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