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#4 Teen Angst and Quiet Violence? Youth, Gender, and Control in Adolescence, Benny’s Video, and Lovely Rita

This time, we dive into the alienated, disoriented, and at times violent worlds of three teenage protagonists—and ask what their silence, rage, and rebellion reveal about the societies around them. From the one-take intensity of Adolescence (UK 2025, creators Stephen Graham and Jack Thorne), to the disturbing sceneries of Benny’s Video (Michael Haneke, AT 1992), to the suburban revolt-escapisms of Lovely Rita (Jessica Hausner, AT 2001), we trace the intersections of gender, class, and power in cinematic portrayals of adolescent violence.

As always, we take a diverse-feminist lens to look at these stories: How do teenage boys and girls experience control differently? Who is allowed to act out—and who is pathologized when they do? And what role do media, technology, and social isolation play in shaping these young lives?

Each work not only depicts youth violence but also reflects on how violence itself is mediated and consumed—most strikingly in Haneke’s Benny’s Video, which directly implicates the viewer and destabilizes our position as passive observers. These are not just stories about violence; they are stories about how we watch violence. What also connects these narratives is the striking absence of honest parental affection, love, and emotional connection—an absence that becomes all the more devastating for young people growing up in a highly individualized world saturated with media images of violence, yet lacking spaces of care and genuine belonging.

Key questions in this episode include: What kinds of violence are visible, and which are suppressed? How are masculinity and femininity narrated through acts of rebellion? And how do class and parental authority shape the way teenagers are seen—and punished?