Connie Sumner has a loving husband, a beautiful home, and a wonderful son, but she wants more. When she's approached one day by a handsome stranger while trying to hail a taxi, she becomes obsessed with him and eventuall...
Connie Sumner has a loving husband, a beautiful home, and a wonderful son, but she wants more. When she's approached one day by a handsome stranger while trying to hail a taxi, she becomes obsessed with him and eventuall...
The film functions as a cautionary tale, strongly emphasizing the destructive consequences of marital infidelity and the breakdown of traditional family structures, aligning with conservative values regarding the sanctity of marriage and personal responsibility.
The movie 'Unfaithful' features a traditional cast without explicit race or gender swaps of roles. Its narrative centers on a marital drama and does not offer critical portrayals of traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes.
Unfaithful centers on a heterosexual marriage and an extramarital affair, exploring themes of desire, betrayal, and guilt. The film does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, thus rendering the portrayal N/A.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Unfaithful (2002) is an original film, not an adaptation of pre-existing material, a biopic, or a reboot. All characters were created for this specific film, thus lacking any prior canonical or historical gender to be swapped from.
The 2002 film "Unfaithful" is a remake of a 1969 French film. The primary characters in both versions are consistently portrayed by actors of the same race, with no instances of a character established as one race being depicted as another.
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