
Not Rated
In the forest, a wood nymph played a pipe of reeds. A faun and his mate emerged from their cavern home. He left his mate, drawn to the nymph's captivating music. The faun's mate, searching for him, heard the nymph's pipes and felt a pang of fear. Following the sound, she found them. Overwhelmed by jealousy and anger at the faun's infatuation, she snatched the pipes and hurled them into the stream, breaking the nymph's spell. The faun, realizing his folly, returned to his mate, and the nymph vanished into the woods.
In the forest, a wood nymph played a pipe of reeds. A faun and his mate emerged from their cavern home. He left his mate, drawn to the nymph's captivating music. The faun's mate, searching for him, heard the nymph's pipes and felt a pang of fear. Following the sound, she found them. Overwhelmed by jealousy and anger at the faun's infatuation, she snatched the pipes and hurled them into the stream, breaking the nymph's spell. The faun, realizing his folly, returned to his mate, and the nymph vanished into the woods.
The film is rated 0 (Neutral/Centrist) because no plot details, thematic elements, or specific content were provided to assess any political leaning or bias.
The movie, released in 1948, features traditional casting typical of its era, with no apparent intentional race or gender swaps. Its narrative does not appear to critique traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes, aligning with the common cinematic approaches of the time.
The film "Enchantment," directed by Carl M. Leviness, does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. Consequently, there is no portrayal of queer identity to evaluate against the provided rubric.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
There is no readily available information indicating that "Enchantment" (1916) is an adaptation of a prior work with established character genders. The characters appear to be original to the film, thus precluding a gender swap.
The 1916 film "Enchantment" is an original silent drama. There is no prior source material or historical figures with established racial identities for its characters, thus precluding a race swap.