
Not Rated
A man is seen by a hen, which is sitting on a nest. The three little men enter, the hen eats one of the men's hats and drinks iron potion. The man takes the egg with him, tries to warm it up, a blacksmith hits it with a hammer and a scientist examines the egg, but none of them succeed in breaking the egg. The egg is thrown out of the window and a road worker tries to hammer the egg - without success. The man sees a cannon, the egg is shot out of the cannon and lands by the three little men. The egg breaks open and a hat comes out. Stumfilm.dk
A man is seen by a hen, which is sitting on a nest. The three little men enter, the hen eats one of the men's hats and drinks iron potion. The man takes the egg with him, tries to warm it up, a blacksmith hits it with a hammer and a scientist examines the egg, but none of them succeed in breaking the egg. The egg is thrown out of the window and a road worker tries to hammer the egg - without success. The man sees a cannon, the egg is shot out of the cannon and lands by the three little men. The egg breaks open and a hat comes out. Stumfilm.dk
Given the film's context as an early 20th-century animated short by a Danish humorist known for apolitical and absurdist observations, the film likely focuses on universal human experiences or comedic situations without promoting a specific political ideology.
This 1920 animated short film features non-human characters and a simple comedic narrative. It does not incorporate any explicit diversity in its character representation or engage with DEI themes in its storytelling.
The 1918 Danish silent comedy 'Jernmixturen' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on comedic situations without engaging with queer identity or experiences, resulting in no depiction.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Jernmixturen" is an original animated short from 1921. Its characters were created for this production and do not derive from pre-existing source material with established gender identities. Therefore, no gender swap is present.
There is no available information to suggest that "Jernmixturen" (1921) is an adaptation of source material with canonically established characters of a specific race, nor does it depict historical figures whose race was altered. Therefore, no race swap is identified.