Channels of Rage explained

Channels of Rage
Native Name:ערוצים של זעם
Director:Anat Halachmi
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Runtime:72 minutes
Country:Israel

Channels of Rage (Hebrew: ערוצים של זעם) is a 2003 documentary film by Anat Halachmi.[1]

Synopsis

The film focuses on two young rap artists, Subliminal, an Israeli Jew, and Tamer Nafar, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, and focuses on their music, friendship, and their politicization as public figures. The film traces the relationship between Tamer and Subliminal, as the events of the Second Intifada unfold, and lets the viewer draw conclusions from the souring relations between the two as an individual representation of the polarization process which took place during these years of bloody conflict. In this aspect, the film succeeds in delivering the atmosphere of the loss of hopes for peace after the failure of the Camp David summit between Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat and the renewed intensity of the conflict since. The film was featured in the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Channels of Rage . 26 October 2004 .