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- Volume 6, Issue 2, 2016
Short Film Studies - Volume 6, Issue 2, 2016
Volume 6, Issue 2, 2016
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‘Strange times to be a chicken’: The meaning of a metaphor
By Dan ChyutinAbstractThis article addresses Cock Fight’s displacement of the Judaic metaphor of ‘sacrificial chicken’ onto the Palestinian, and its simultaneous reimagining of the Jew as a victimizing ‘cock’. Concurrently, it discusses the problematic implications of the film’s use of actual chickens as metaphors, which subverts its anti-exploitation political agenda.
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Chauchesko caught at the centre of Cock Fight
By Ryan ShandAbstractChauchesko is caught at the centre of a conflict that he attempts to defuse. This article demonstrates that he is often visually positioned between the two main characters (Shots 14, 16, 27, 29, 31, 50, 62, 88) as the situation escalates. His character provides an outsider’s perspective, and importantly an accompanying reflective tone, to this short narrative.
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Checkpoint identities: The battle of masculinities
More LessAbstractThe entirety of Cock Fight takes place at a checkpoint – a physical and symbolic space where, by definition, identities are ‘checked’ and thereby established and articulated. The article argues that this cinematic location invites four distinct constructions of masculinity, while commenting on gender discourses in the pre-second intifada Israeli society.
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Cock Fight: The limits of psychology
More LessAbstractThis well-made, engaging film depicts the Israeli Palestinian conflict as a struggle between individuals, emphasizing the attitudes – stubbornness, pride, racism, machismo – that prevent peace-making. While illuminating key aspects of the situation, this psychological approach avoids the essential political dimensions, the all-too-real conflicts of interest, both material and moral.
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Blocking space: Metaphorical spatial constraints in the cinematography and mise-en-scène of Cock Fight
More LessAbstractRoadblocks represent great spatial restrictions for the West Bank population. This article explores how the film Cock Fight employs the cinematic tools of cinematography and mise-en-scène in the framing of characters and objects to metaphorically reflect and question the effect of these imposed constraints on human relations and spatial mobility.
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Of Palestinian roadblocks: Changing attitudes among Israeli Jews
More LessAbstractCock Fight explores what happens when Israelis lose the controlling power that comes with occupation of Palestinian territory. Its portrayal of the Israeli reaction to Palestinian power – naiveté, anger, helplessness, resignation – tracks general attitudes among Israeli Jews over time, anticipating in many ways the desire for complete separation from Palestinians.
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Cock Fight – A 2015 reading
More LessAbstractThe article analyzes the 1999 short film Cock Fight from a 2015 perspective. It argues that in the late 1990s its ending seemed pessimistic. However, in retrospect, with the total collapse of trust between Israelis and Palestinians, the way out of the encounter at the checkpoint looks almost desirable.
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Two sides of a tension within Israeli society
By Amy KronishAbstractIsrael is a contentious society with strong opinions on the left and on the right. This film portrays a tension within Israeli society about the importance of serving in the army. Could it possibly be worth dying for your country?
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The return of the prodigal father
More LessAbstractThe article will show how, on the one hand, the tragic character of the father criticizes what Israel has become: a violent, militarist environment. On the other hand, his character traits raise the question as to whether he has an alternative to propose, thus leaving the viewers in a moral limbo.
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Spaces of transition and framed passages in a sphere of conflict
More LessAbstractFramed passages in Draft, such as doorways, mirrors and windows, function as barriers. They stress the unstable equilibrium between spaces and the deep senses of loneliness of the protagonists, thus underscoring both physical and emotional dimensions. In the past, painters also applied these strategies to infuse their art with layered meanings.
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Productive failure in a machine-centric universe
More LessAbstractDrawing on the writings of Borgmann, Virilio and Lazzarato, this article comments on the prevalence of failure in Draft: the failure to communicate, the failure of technology, of perception, and arguably of war. Productive failure, I set out to demonstrate, is the key component of the film’s cultural critique.
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Searching for truth: The art of the close-up in Draft
More LessAbstractFrom a visual point of view, Draft may be seen as a search for truth thanks to the use of the close-up. It enables the viewer to apprehend the father’s pain from within. As such, the close-up is about sharing emotions and not relying on the often-deceitful power of words.
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Draft, or saving the son from becoming one of the nation’s prospects
By Yael MunkAbstractDraft tells about the last night that an 18-year-old boy spends with his widowed father at home before beginning his compulsory military service. The situation between the two is tense, not only because of the objective circumstances, but mainly because the father tries to project his own military experience onto his son.
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Re(en)gendering masculinity: Female authorial voice in Draft
By Yaara OzeryAbstractExploring the relationship between text and authorship, this article will attempt to trace the voice of a female film-maker in a film that deals with masculinity. The director’s voice resonates between the two main (male) characters’ fragile masculinity and is reflected by the image of the missing mother.
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The ideological ashtray: Draft’s political allegory of disillusionment
By Pablo UtinAbstractMade after the collapse of the Oslo peace process, Draft expresses the sense of failure and disorientation of left-wing Israeli ideologies and their replacement with more nationalistic right-wing views. Through the analysis of mise-en-scène and the film’s use of narrow point of view (PoV), the article will depict Draft’s political allegory of disillusion.
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