Several people start receiving voice-mails from their future selves -- messages which include the date, time, and some of the details of their deaths.
Several people start receiving voice-mails from their future selves -- messages which include the date, time, and some of the details of their deaths.
The film is a supernatural horror story centered on a curse stemming from child abuse and trauma. Its narrative focuses on personal investigation and confronting a vengeful spirit, without engaging in political commentary or advocating for specific ideological solutions.
The movie features a cast with some visible diversity in supporting roles, though its primary characters are traditionally cast without explicit DEI-driven recasting. The narrative focuses on a supernatural horror plot and does not engage with themes that critique or highlight traditional identities.
The 2008 American film "One Missed Call" is a remake of a 2003 Japanese film. Several main characters, including Beth Raymond (originally Yumi Nakamura) and Jack Andrews (originally Yamashita), were canonically Japanese (East Asian) in the source material but are portrayed by white actors in this adaptation.
The film "One Missed Call" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses entirely on a supernatural curse and its victims, with no elements related to queer identity or experiences present in the storyline or character arcs.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 2008 film "One Missed Call" is a remake of the 2003 Japanese film "Chakushin Ari." All major characters in the American adaptation retain the same gender as their counterparts in the original Japanese version, with no instances of a character's established gender being changed.
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