
Not Rated
Fairytale teleplay based on the fairytale "The Water of Life" by the Brothers Grimm. The wizard, ruler of the black forest, can be defeated if someone manages to draw water from the spring containing the water of life. The princess sets off to find the water of life for her terminally ill father. The sorcerer transforms the girl into a dragon. A fairy gives the king new courage to face life. He defends himself against the sorcerer. He is supported by the blacksmith, who takes up the fight and defeats the wizard.
Fairytale teleplay based on the fairytale "The Water of Life" by the Brothers Grimm. The wizard, ruler of the black forest, can be defeated if someone manages to draw water from the spring containing the water of life. The princess sets off to find the water of life for her terminally ill father. The sorcerer transforms the girl into a dragon. A fairy gives the king new courage to face life. He defends himself against the sorcerer. He is supported by the blacksmith, who takes up the fight and defeats the wizard.
The film's central conflict and resolution are deeply rooted in traditional, apolitical fairy tale tropes, focusing on universal themes of love, courage, and overcoming a magical curse rather than engaging with specific political ideologies.
This German fairy tale film is assessed as having traditional casting, without explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. Its narrative is also expected to maintain a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, rather than featuring explicit DEI critiques.
The children's fantasy film 'Die Drachenprinzessin' does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on traditional fairy tale elements without exploring queer identities or relationships, resulting in no direct impact on LGBTQ+ representation.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 1980 film "Die Drachenprinzessin" is an original fairy tale production. Its characters were not established in prior widely recognized source material or history with a different gender, therefore no gender swap occurred.
This 1980 German fairy tale film does not appear to be an adaptation of source material with characters whose race was canonically established and subsequently changed. There is no evidence of any character undergoing a race swap.