Carefree electrician Tom Cathral is recruited by The Company, and is quickly offered a full-time promotion to join the Retrievers, an elite squad of crooked secret operatives. His refusal to kill botches his first mission, making Tom The Company's new target.
Carefree electrician Tom Cathral is recruited by The Company, and is quickly offered a full-time promotion to join the Retrievers, an elite squad of crooked secret operatives. His refusal to kill botches his first mission, making Tom The Company's new target.
The film's central subject matter, a family adventure about a boy and his dog, is inherently apolitical, focusing on universal themes of loyalty and perseverance rather than specific political ideologies.
Due to the absence of specific details regarding the movie's plot, characters, or casting, a definitive DEI evaluation cannot be performed. Based on a neutral assumption for both representation and narrative framing, the movie is assessed as having light DEI characteristics.
Based on the information provided, 'The Retrievers' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Therefore, there is no portrayal to evaluate, resulting in a net impact of N/A.
The film features female characters, but none are depicted as engaging in or winning direct physical combat against one or more male opponents through skill, strength, or martial arts. Their roles do not include such combat victories.
The Retrievers (1982) is an original film, not an adaptation, reboot, or biopic. There are no pre-established characters from source material, prior installments, or history whose gender could have been altered.
The film "The Retrievers" (1982) is an original production and not an adaptation of existing source material with pre-established characters. Therefore, no characters exist who were canonically, historically, or widely established as a different race prior to this film.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources