Two co-workers, one a vain woman and the other an awkward teenager, share an increasingly bizarre relationship after becoming roommates.
Two co-workers, one a vain woman and the other an awkward teenager, share an increasingly bizarre relationship after becoming roommates.
The film's central subject matter, focusing on identity, psychological fragility, and female relationships, is primarily existential and surreal, offering no explicit political commentary or advocating for specific ideological solutions.
The film features a traditional cast without explicit diversity initiatives or race/gender swaps. Its narrative focuses on psychological themes and female relationships, without explicitly critiquing or negatively portraying traditional identities.
Robert Altman's '3 Women' is a psychological drama centered on the shifting identities and relationships of three women. The film delves into themes of female dependency, personality merging, and psychological breakdown. It does not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or explicitly explore queer themes, focusing instead on its surreal examination of the female psyche.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "3 Women" is an original story with characters created specifically for this 1977 production. There is no prior source material, historical figures, or previous installments from which character genders could have been established and subsequently swapped.
The film "3 Women" is an original story from 1977, not an adaptation or biopic. Its characters were created for this specific film, meaning there is no prior canon or historical record from which a character's race could have been established and subsequently changed.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources