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This tongue-in-cheek cautionary tale by Croatian director Zlatko Grgic traces man's checkered history with fire, and shows how growing carelessness in the form of overloaded sockets, smoldering cigarettes and other fire hazards can have highly undesirable consequences.
This tongue-in-cheek cautionary tale by Croatian director Zlatko Grgic traces man's checkered history with fire, and shows how growing carelessness in the form of overloaded sockets, smoldering cigarettes and other fire hazards can have highly undesirable consequences.
The film addresses the universal, apolitical problem of cold weather through an individual's ingenious invention that benefits the entire community, without promoting specific political ideologies or critiquing societal structures.
This 1971 animated short features stylized, generic characters without explicit racial or gender identification, reflecting traditional casting practices of its era. The narrative focuses on a critique of consumerism and material desire, rather than engaging with or critiquing traditional identities or explicit DEI themes.
The animated short film 'Hot Stuff' by Zlatko Grgic does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on a man's humorous attempts to deal with a fly, with no elements related to queer identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Hot Stuff" (1971) is an original animated short from the Professor Balthazar series. Its characters are new creations for the animation, not adaptations of pre-existing figures with established genders from other media or history. Therefore, no gender swaps occur.
The film is an animated short from 1971 featuring original, stylized characters. There is no prior source material with established human characters of a specific race, nor does it depict historical figures. Thus, the concept of a 'race swap' does not apply.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources