A friendly St. Bernard named "Cujo" contracts rabies and conducts a reign of terror on a small American town.
A friendly St. Bernard named "Cujo" contracts rabies and conducts a reign of terror on a small American town.
The film's narrative centers on a mother's primal struggle for survival against a rabid animal, with its core conflict and resolution being apolitical and focused on individual courage rather than societal or ideological issues.
The movie features traditional casting with no intentional race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. Its narrative focuses on a survival horror story without explicitly critiquing or negatively portraying traditional identities.
Cujo is a horror film centered on a family's struggle for survival against a rabid dog. The narrative does not include any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or related plot points, resulting in no depiction of queer identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 1983 film "Cujo" is a direct adaptation of Stephen King's novel. All major characters, including Donna Trenton, Vic Trenton, Tad Trenton, and the dog Cujo, maintain the same gender as established in the original source material.
Based on the Stephen King novel, the 1983 film adaptation of "Cujo" portrays all major characters with actors of the same race as established in the source material. No instances of a race swap were identified.
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