A precocious young girl and her younger brother run away from home and hide in the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
A precocious young girl and her younger brother run away from home and hide in the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
The film focuses on apolitical themes of childhood adventure, self-discovery, and the pursuit of knowledge and art, without promoting a specific political ideology. Its central conflict and solution are rooted in individual growth rather than societal critique or endorsement.
The movie features traditional casting with a predominantly white cast, consistent with its source material and production era. Its narrative focuses on a whimsical adventure without critiquing traditional identities or incorporating explicit DEI themes.
The film "From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the adventure of two siblings running away to live in a museum, with no elements related to queer identity or experiences present in the story.
The film focuses on two children, Claudia and Jamie, who run away to a museum to solve a mystery. It is a gentle adventure without any scenes of physical confrontation or combat. No female characters engage in or win close-quarters physical fights against male opponents.
The 1973 film adaptation faithfully portrays the genders of all main characters as established in E. L. Konigsburg's original novel. There are no instances of characters canonically, historically, or widely established as one gender being portrayed as a different gender.
The 1973 film adaptation of E. L. Konigsburg's novel features characters whose on-screen portrayals align with their established or implied race in the original source material. No character canonically established as one race was depicted as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources