Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Professor Ian Drummond, whose new invention was of interest to the Russians and Americans, is murdered at his Sunshine Menor mansion in full attendance. The writer Joe Alex, who arrived on the eve of the murder together ...
Professor Ian Drummond, whose new invention was of interest to the Russians and Americans, is murdered at his Sunshine Menor mansion in full attendance. The writer Joe Alex, who arrived on the eve of the murder together ...
The film's genre as a murder mystery typically focuses on the individual crime, its investigation, and the pursuit of justice, rather than explicitly promoting specific political ideologies or critiquing societal structures from a partisan viewpoint.
This 1992 Russian/Ukrainian film likely features traditional casting reflecting regional demographics, without intentional diversity-driven choices. Its narrative is not expected to critique traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes, focusing instead on its core plot.
Due to the absence of any provided film details, an evaluation of LGBTQ+ character and theme portrayal for 'Ubiystvo v Sanshayn-Menor' cannot be conducted. The presence or nature of such depictions remains unknown.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Ubiystvo v Sanshayn-Menor" is an adaptation of John Bude's novel "The Sunshine Manor Murder." Analysis of the source material and film cast reveals no instances where a character canonically established as one gender was portrayed as a different gender in the movie.
No prior source material or established character races are provided for "Ubiystvo v Sanshayn-Menor" (1992). Therefore, there is no basis to determine if any character's portrayal constitutes a race swap from a previously established version.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources