
Not Rated
Frank Orth is a husband who is hen-pecked both by his wife and by her mother. He comes home on his birthday and finds his wife has given him a birthday party, and that her gift to him is a cemetery plot, and his mother-in-law thinks it is past due, and should be used soon.
Frank Orth is a husband who is hen-pecked both by his wife and by her mother. He comes home on his birthday and finds his wife has given him a birthday party, and that her gift to him is a cemetery plot, and his mother-in-law thinks it is past due, and should be used soon.
The film's title, "The Victim," suggests a focus on individual suffering and injustice, which are broad human themes. Without specific plot details or an identified ideological cause or solution, the film is assessed as neutral, likely exploring universal moral and dramatic elements rather than promoting a specific political agenda.
Based on the historical context of director Raymond Cannon's active period, the film is assumed to feature traditional casting without explicit diversity initiatives. The narrative is also presumed to maintain a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, consistent with filmmaking practices of that era.
Based on available information, 'The Victim' by Raymond Cannon does not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Consequently, its portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements is rated as N/A due to the absence of relevant content.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "The Victim" (1931) is an original production, not an adaptation of existing source material or a reboot of established characters. Therefore, no characters had a pre-existing canonical gender that could have been swapped.
There is no widely established prior canon or historical record for characters in the 1931 film "The Victim" that would indicate a race swap occurred. The film predates common instances of such changes.