A telepathic mutant recruits a post World War III TV game show warrior to lead her band of mutants to safety.
A telepathic mutant recruits a post World War III TV game show warrior to lead her band of mutants to safety.
The film's central narrative focuses on individual survival and a quest for a mythical safe haven in a post-apocalyptic world, without explicitly promoting or critiquing specific political ideologies in its depiction of the problem or its solution.
The movie features a predominantly traditional cast without explicit DEI-driven recasting of roles. Its narrative focuses on post-apocalyptic action and survival, presenting traditional identities neutrally or positively without incorporating explicit DEI critiques or themes.
The film 'Endgame' by Joe D'Amato does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. Therefore, there is no portrayal of LGBTQ+ identities or issues to evaluate as positive, negative, or neutral.
The film features Lilith, a female character with psychic abilities. However, her actions do not include direct physical combat victories against male opponents using skill, strength, or martial arts. No other female characters engage in or win such physical confrontations.
Endgame (1983) is an original film and not an adaptation, reboot, or biopic. There are no pre-existing characters from source material, previous installments, or history whose gender could have been altered.
Endgame (1983) is an original film, not an adaptation of pre-existing source material with established character races. Therefore, its characters do not have a prior canonical race that could be subject to a race swap.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources