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The unsettling "roo hunting" sequence mixes in footage from Mr. Kotcheff's ride-alongs on actual bloody outings.
There's even a hunting sequence in which Christian Bale sights, lines up and then merely admires a stately beast, not so much a nod as a kneel to Michael Cimino's template.
I kept saying, how the hell does he do that?" A moment in the film that has elicited a similar question over the years (perhaps more "what the hell?" than "how the hell?") is Wake in Fright's kangaroo hunting sequence.
The film starts with a pair of symbolic, documentary-style incidents: the hunting of a gazelle by jihadists chasing it by jeep (a nod at the hunting sequence in Jean Renoir's "The Rules of the Game") and a matching sequence, in which the jihadists fire upon local artworks — first at masks and then at statues, many of which feature bare-breasted women.
In the hunting sequence, the boar flees but is cornered before a ravine.
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Wake in Fright's notorious kangaroo hunting sequences (which were real) take the film's exploration of Australiana to a deeper and more penetrating level.
Tells about the planning of the film, the plot & the editing, especially of a hunt sequence.
Kerekes and Slater call the anti-fox hunt sequence "self-parody", and Goodall labels the same scene as "ludicrous".
I've spent at least dozens of hours discovering various patterns in this sequence and hunting for explanations based in different versions of the problem.
CRISPR, as a quick reminder, is basically a molecule that cleanly and reliably snips bases out of DNA strands paired with a molecule that hunts out a single sequence of bases.
The second alternative proved correct: Another chromosomal hunt turned up a sequence on chromosome 1 that was present in the seven hearing kin, but absent in their deaf relatives, the researchers report in the December issue of Nature Genetics.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com