
Not Rated
On Aug. 5, 1905, the Japanese and Russian delegations to the Portsmouth Peace Conference left New York City to board ships which would take them first to Oyster Bay to talk with TR and then to the conference in Portsmouth, N.H. Views at the wharf of the New York Yacht Club of the Japanese delegation boarding two U.S. Navy steam launches; part of the Russian delegation walks down a ramp to the wharf; the first three men are unidentified; the last two men are the chief Russian envoys, Sergius Witte and Baron Roman Rosen; the delegation is greeted by third Assistant Secretary of State Herbert H. D. Peirce and others; the Russians board a steam launch; final view of man walking down the ramp and then boarding another launch. Members of the Japanese delegation included Baron Kogoro Takahira, the Japanese Ambasador to the United States and envoy, Marquis Jutarō Komura.
On Aug. 5, 1905, the Japanese and Russian delegations to the Portsmouth Peace Conference left New York City to board ships which would take them first to Oyster Bay to talk with TR and then to the conference in Portsmouth, N.H. Views at the wharf of the New York Yacht Club of the Japanese delegation boarding two U.S. Navy steam launches; part of the Russian delegation walks down a ramp to the wharf; the first three men are unidentified; the last two men are the chief Russian envoys, Sergius Witte and Baron Roman Rosen; the delegation is greeted by third Assistant Secretary of State Herbert H. D. Peirce and others; the Russians board a steam launch; final view of man walking down the ramp and then boarding another launch. Members of the Japanese delegation included Baron Kogoro Takahira, the Japanese Ambasador to the United States and envoy, Marquis Jutarō Komura.
The film's title suggests it is a historical record documenting a specific international diplomatic event, which inherently focuses on factual representation rather than promoting any particular ideological viewpoint or narrative.
This historical document from 1905 accurately portrays Japanese and Russian peace delegates, reflecting the inherent diversity of the historical event without engaging in modern DEI-driven casting changes. The narrative is purely documentary, focusing on the event itself without critiquing traditional identities or explicitly promoting DEI themes.
Given the historical context of a 1905 newsreel titled 'Japanese and Russian peace delegates--leaving New York City,' there are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes present. The film's focus is on a specific historical event, not on personal identities or social issues related to sexual orientation or gender identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1905 film documents real historical figures, the Japanese and Russian peace delegates. As a historical record, it portrays these individuals as their documented historical gender, without any fictionalized gender changes.
This 1905 film is a historical record depicting actual Japanese and Russian peace delegates. It is not an adaptation with fictional characters, but rather a direct portrayal of real historical figures. Therefore, the concept of a 'race swap' does not apply.