Marxists at the Movies
Visit www.cinemarchmedia.com and patreon.com/cinemarchmedia to support the work.In this episode of Marxists at the Movies, we dismantle the yeshiva as an ideological site in Barbra Streisand’s Yentl (1983) — viewing it not just as a musical debut, but as a fifteen-year cage match of attrition against the Hollywood patriarchy.While often remembered as a feminist fable or a "novelty premise," Yentl is something more rigorous: a study of forbidden knowledge and the brutal mechanics of exclusion. It is a film where the need for total control functions as both a survival strategy and a creative prison. The camera doesn’t just capture a performance; it documents a woman clutching her directing monitor for dear life, transforming a decade of rejection into a symbolic test case for female authorship.We examine the film as a workplace of intellectual production: where the pursuit of truth is a commodity denied to the feminine, and where "precision" stops being professionalism and starts functioning as armor. From the clandestine study of the Talmud to the non-diegetic interior monologues, Yentl reveals how intensity and ambition can only be made "respectable" through the tightest possible calibration.This isn’t a simple critique of the musical.It’s an analysis of how cultural meaning is vindicated through a struggle against the means of production.This is not just a song.This is a defense.This is the cost of truth — rehearsed down to the syllable.If Yentl once felt like a triumphant arrival — we’re asking what was lost in the "fifteen-year war" to get it made.And why the industry found a woman handling millions of dollars so threatening.And yes — Myron is listening too, tail twitching in approval from their usual spot.
45 Folgen
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