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Coming out from jail, Lucas has decided to change his life and behave like a good citizen. But when he is taken hostage in a bank by a hare-brained robber, no cops can believe he is not part of the action.
Coming out from jail, Lucas has decided to change his life and behave like a good citizen. But when he is taken hostage in a bank by a hare-brained robber, no cops can believe he is not part of the action.
The film is a comedic narrative centered on an unlikely bond and the formation of an unconventional family unit, focusing on individual relationships and escape from the law rather than promoting any specific political ideology or critiquing societal structures.
The movie features a traditional European cast without intentional race or gender swaps. Its narrative is a classic buddy comedy that does not critique traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes, presenting its main characters in a neutral to positive light.
The film "The Fugitives" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the comedic misadventures of two heterosexual men and their interactions with other characters, none of whom are depicted as queer.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film 'The Fugitives' (1986), directed by Francis Veber, is the original work for its characters. There is no prior source material or established canon from which any character's gender could have been swapped.
The 1986 film "The Fugitives" is a remake of the 1982 French film "ComDads." A review of the main characters in both films shows no instances where a character canonically established as one race in the original was portrayed as a different race in the remake.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources