An extramarital affair leads to a young couple contracting venereal disease.
An extramarital affair leads to a young couple contracting venereal disease.
The film's central thesis explicitly promotes a conservative ideology by framing marihuana use as a direct threat to traditional values and social order, advocating for strict prohibition and moral condemnation through sensationalist propaganda.
The movie features traditional casting, consistent with films of its era, without explicit diversity initiatives. Its narrative, focused on public health, does not critique traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes.
The film "Damaged Lives" (also known as "Marihuana") focuses on the perils of drug use and its societal consequences. There are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes present within the narrative, therefore, no portrayal or impact can be assessed.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Damaged Lives (1933) is an original film, not an adaptation of existing source material with pre-established characters, nor does it feature historical figures. Therefore, no characters exist whose canonical or historical gender could have been altered.
This 1933 exploitation film features original characters without prior canonical or historical racial identities. There is no evidence of any character being established as one race in source material or history and then portrayed as a different race in the film.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources