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Recreation of a real-life fire that took 602 lives.
Recreation of a real-life fire that took 602 lives.
The film depicts a historical disaster without presenting an explicit political thesis or advocating for partisan solutions. Its focus on a factual event from the early 20th century renders it apolitical in its core subject matter and narrative.
This early 20th-century silent film, a reenactment of a historical disaster, features casting and a narrative typical of its era. It focuses on depicting the event without intentional diversity in casting or explicit engagement with DEI themes or critiques of traditional identities.
This early 20th-century silent film documents the aftermath of the Iroquois Theater fire. As a historical depiction of a disaster, it does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, nor does it engage with queer identity in any capacity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This early silent film depicts a historical event, the Iroquois Theater fire, rather than adapting a narrative with established characters. There are no named or plot-relevant characters whose gender was canonically or historically established in a prior source and then portrayed differently in the film.
This 1904 film is a short, documentary-style depiction of a historical event's aftermath, not a narrative with established characters from source material or history whose race could be altered. Therefore, no race swaps are present.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources