Not Rated
Two bakers enjoy a break from work by drinking wine and playing cards. Soon enough, they're intoxicated and enter into a brawl with messy and fun consequences.
Two bakers enjoy a break from work by drinking wine and playing cards. Soon enough, they're intoxicated and enter into a brawl with messy and fun consequences.
The film is an early trick film focused purely on visual spectacle and slapstick comedy, with no discernible political themes or messages, making it entirely apolitical.
This early 20th-century film features traditional European casting without intentional race or gender swaps. Its short, comedic narrative focuses on visual gags and does not engage with critical portrayals of traditional identities or explicit DEI themes.
Georges Méliès's 1905 silent comedy, "Bakers in Trouble," does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The film's narrative focuses on slapstick humor and a chase sequence, typical of early cinema, without exploring aspects of sexual orientation or gender identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Bakers in Trouble (1907) is an original short film by Georges Méliès. It does not adapt any pre-existing source material, historical figures, or legacy characters. All characters are new and original to this specific film, therefore no gender swap can occur.
This 1907 Georges Méliès film is an original short and does not adapt characters from prior source material with established racial identities, nor does it depict specific historical figures. Therefore, no race swap occurs.