In interviews about the film’s release, Clotet spoke about the difficulty of filming the sequence, noting the trust required between her, the director, and her scene partner. She understood that the scene’s purpose was to provoke outrage—not at the actor, but at the circumstances that allow such violence to occur.
It is crucial to understand that Joves uses this violence not as a plot twist, but as a consequence of the ecosystem it portrays. The film argues that when young people are abandoned by systems—family, education, social services—and handed over to heroin and poverty, sexual violence becomes an omnipresent threat. The rape scene is not gratuitous; it is the logical, horrific endpoint of the character’s vulnerability. Rape -Aina Clotet In Joves -2004-
Joves is not an easy recommendation. It is a downer in the truest sense. But for students of cinema, or for those interested in the evolution of Catalan auteurism, it is an important artifact. And for Aina Clotet, it remains a testament to her willingness to look human suffering in the eye. In interviews about the film’s release, Clotet spoke
Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Long Beach, Yorba Linda, Anaheim, Anaheim Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills, Aliso Viejo, Mission Viejo, Villa Park, Brea, La Palma, Stanton, Fountain Valley, Los Alamitos, Irvine, San Clemente, Ladera Ranch, San Juan Capistrano, Garden Grove, Balboa, Corona Del Mar, Lake Forest, Lakewood, Orange, Orange County, Tustin and Dana Point. Come visit our large showroom today!