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An English voice talks to the Pink Panther, who is reading a book about secret agents, and suggests to the panther that he become an agent. Intrigued at this idea, the Pink Panther dons a trench coat, hat, and pipe and walks nonchalantly on city streets, looking for enemy spies. He comes upon a gang of foreign agents scheming to detonate a series of black-ball bombs, and when they realize he is following them, they shoot him with guns, lure him into a crocodile trap, and, under cover of darkness aboard a train, replace his cigarette with a bomb.
An English voice talks to the Pink Panther, who is reading a book about secret agents, and suggests to the panther that he become an agent. Intrigued at this idea, the Pink Panther dons a trench coat, hat, and pipe and walks nonchalantly on city streets, looking for enemy spies. He comes upon a gang of foreign agents scheming to detonate a series of black-ball bombs, and when they realize he is following them, they shoot him with guns, lure him into a crocodile trap, and, under cover of darkness aboard a train, replace his cigarette with a bomb.
Pinkfinger is a slapstick spy parody focused on comedic gags and a simple criminal vs. hero plot, entirely devoid of political or ideological messaging, thus earning a neutral rating.
This animated short features traditional character designs and casting for its human roles, consistent with its production era, without incorporating intentional race or gender swaps. The narrative is centered on slapstick comedy, and it does not engage in critical portrayals of traditional identities or explicitly explore DEI themes.
Based on the provided title and directors, 'Pinkfinger' does not have any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Consequently, an evaluation of its portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements is not applicable, as there is no content to assess.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The animated short "Pinkfinger" is a parody of James Bond films, featuring the Pink Panther as a spy. Its characters are original creations for the parody, not gender-swapped versions of established characters from the source material. The Pink Panther's gender remains consistent.
Pinkfinger is an animated short film from 1965 featuring the Pink Panther, an anthropomorphic animal, and generic human caricatures. There are no established human characters with a defined canonical or historical race that were portrayed by a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources