
Not Rated
A silent film featuring footage from the 1935 Mauna Loa eruption at Mokuʻāweoweo Crater and the 1942 Mauna Loa so-called "secret eruption" which was not publicized to prevent Japanese planes from navigating at night. There is also footage from Halema'uma'u Crater on Kīlauea from 1934. Filmed on 16mm Kodachrome, this is possibly the first color film of a volcanic eruption.
A silent film featuring footage from the 1935 Mauna Loa eruption at Mokuʻāweoweo Crater and the 1942 Mauna Loa so-called "secret eruption" which was not publicized to prevent Japanese planes from navigating at night. There is also footage from Halema'uma'u Crater on Kīlauea from 1934. Filmed on 16mm Kodachrome, this is possibly the first color film of a volcanic eruption.
The film's central subject, Mauna Loa Volcano, is a natural scientific phenomenon, which inherently places it outside of political ideology and focuses on objective scientific understanding.
The film, a documentary focused on a natural phenomenon, does not feature explicit DEI-driven casting or narrative critiques of traditional identities. Its content is primarily observational and scientific, leading to a neutral stance on identity representation and framing.
The documentary 'Mauna Loa Volcano' by Harold T. Stearns is a scientific film about geological phenomena. It does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, as its scope is entirely focused on the natural world.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1943 film is a documentary about the Mauna Loa volcano. Documentaries of this nature typically do not feature narrative characters with established canonical or historical genders that could be subject to a gender swap.
This 1943 film is a documentary about the Mauna Loa volcano. It does not feature named, plot-relevant characters with established racial identities from source material or history, thus the concept of a race swap does not apply.