In Fishbelly White, a farm boy has become a teenager but still retains his pet chicken, and his favorite trick is to put the head of the chicken in his mouth for several seconds. The boy puts the chicken in the basket of his bicycle as he pedals around the countryside. Although he wants to be accepted as one of the boys, he does not know how. He hangs out with a handsome older teenager, who pushes him into the local swimming hole, a jump of several feet. After the two get out of the water, the older boy successfully tempts the younger boy to provide sexual service under a bridge. The rowdier boys make fun of the younger boy because of his pet chicken and dare him to kill the chicken to prove his manhood. As the film ends, the younger boy bites off the head of the chicken and finally gains acceptance, a paradigm for the way in which sensitive preteens become macho teens, for the way in which a command performance of male violence is a rite of passage among peers in violent, conformist America. The film, directed by Michael Burke, is 22 minutes in duration and was produced at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. MH