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I'm afraid that's an artistic licence kite and has nothing in common with any real kite.
One account of the Capelis told of picking up the screws and reinstalling them after running engines or moving the plane for movies.My immediate thought was the Capelis which had a short, sad life until it became an over exposed RKO movie prop. John Wayne made it famous.
It seemed everywhere in movies, early TV and models. I know of at least two balsa, one cast metal, and a couple early plastic toys, the latter appearing without the hard to mold biplane tail.
I'd bet that some game artist found one to guide his pen for the cribbage board.
btw - The Parker-Kalon self tapping screws were used in some pre-WWII gliders and Schweizer TG-2/LNS-1 as they required less skill than riveting, where a mistake could involve complicated rework. Many of these are still flying without any issue due to lack of vibration.