Three children, Benoît, Charles and Marie, provide housekeeping services to creatively spend their time during the summer school vacations while making extra pocket money. Their small business becomes very successful in the neighborhood, but goes terribly wrong when jealousy, sabotage, fraud, and a failed love story begin.
Three children, Benoît, Charles and Marie, provide housekeeping services to creatively spend their time during the summer school vacations while making extra pocket money. Their small business becomes very successful in the neighborhood, but goes terribly wrong when jealousy, sabotage, fraud, and a failed love story begin.
The film's central subject and championed solution are grassroots environmental activism against pollution, explicitly promoting collective action and ecological protection, which are core progressive ideologies.
Due to the absence of specific details regarding the movie's casting, characters, and narrative content, the evaluation defaults to a neutral assessment for both representation and narrative framing. This indicates a light presence of DEI characteristics based on the available information.
The film 'The Clean Machine' by Jean Beaudry, a psychological drama about obsession and voyeurism, does not contain any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on a male protagonist's fascination with a woman he observes, without any queer representation.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The Clean Machine (1992) is an original film, not an adaptation of existing source material or a reboot with legacy characters. Therefore, there are no pre-established canonical or historical character genders to be swapped.
The film "The Clean Machine" (1992) is presented as an original work without reference to any prior source material, historical figures, or previous adaptations. Therefore, there are no established characters whose race could have been altered.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources