
Not Rated
A town rat's feast is disturbed by an unwelcome visitor. Adaptation of the Fable by Jean de La Fontaine.
A town rat's feast is disturbed by an unwelcome visitor. Adaptation of the Fable by Jean de La Fontaine.
The film presents a universal moral fable contrasting the dangers of luxurious city life with the peace of simple country life, advocating for contentment and security over material wealth without promoting a specific political ideology.
This early animated film, featuring anthropomorphic rats, does not include human characters, making the assessment of human racial or gender diversity in casting irrelevant. Its narrative, a classic fable, does not engage with or critique traditional human identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes.
The film 'The Town Rat and the Country Rat' is a direct adaptation of Aesop's Fable, depicting the contrasting lives of two rodent characters. The narrative does not include any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, thus there is no portrayal to assess within the scope of this framework.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts Aesop's Fable, 'The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse.' The characters in the original fable, whether mice or rats, do not have a universally established or canonical gender. Therefore, no gender swap can be identified.
The film features anthropomorphic animal characters (rats). The concept of human race, as defined for a 'race swap,' does not apply to these characters, making a race swap impossible.