
Not Rated
After her father's death, socialite Elaine Fleetwood promises to marry a man she does not love. However, she leaves him at the altar during a wedding ceremony, cuts her hair and decides to disguise herself as a boy and go prospecting in northwest Tasmania. She meets a handsome miner who figures out she is a woman, saves her from a villain and marries her.
After her father's death, socialite Elaine Fleetwood promises to marry a man she does not love. However, she leaves him at the altar during a wedding ceremony, cuts her hair and decides to disguise herself as a boy and go prospecting in northwest Tasmania. She meets a handsome miner who figures out she is a woman, saves her from a villain and marries her.
The film's central narrative focuses on a romantic drama involving a city girl's choice between a bushman and a wealthy suitor, exploring social contrasts and personal happiness rather than explicit political ideologies.
Based on the limited information available, there are no indications of explicit DEI-driven casting choices or narrative themes that critique traditional identities or promote DEI. The movie is assessed as adhering to traditional representation and narrative framing.
Based on available plot summaries and historical information for the 1925 film "Jewelled Nights," there are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in the narrative. The film's storyline focuses on heterosexual relationships and adventure, without any depiction relevant to LGBTQ+ identity.
The film is a 1925 silent melodrama. Its plot focuses on romance and drama, with no documented instances of female characters engaging in or winning direct physical combat against male opponents.
The film features a female protagonist who disguises herself as a man within the story. This falls under the exclusion criteria for in-plot gender disguise, as the character's canonical gender is maintained.
There is no available information indicating that "Jewelled Nights" (1925) is an adaptation of prior source material with established character races, nor does it feature historical figures whose race would be documented. Therefore, no race swap can be identified.