
Not Rated
Jesus enters the temple while the merchants are selling their wares. Jesus overturns the tables of the money lenders by showing them their error.
Jesus enters the temple while the merchants are selling their wares. Jesus overturns the tables of the money lenders by showing them their error.
The film, a direct adaptation of a biblical narrative, focuses on the moral lesson of upholding the sanctity of sacred spaces against commercial exploitation, a theme that transcends specific modern political ideologies.
This early 20th-century biblical film features traditional casting consistent with its historical context and subject matter. The narrative focuses on a religious event without presenting any critique of traditional identities or incorporating explicit DEI themes.
The film depicts Jesus, a historical figure of Middle Eastern descent. Given the film's 1902 production in France, it is highly probable that Jesus was portrayed by a white European actor, which constitutes a race swap.
The film directly portrays Jesus performing a righteous act of cleansing the temple, aligning the narrative with a core virtuous event in Christian theology.
This early 20th-century film portrays the biblical event of Jesus cleansing the Temple. Its narrative is strictly confined to this religious subject, and as such, it contains no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its plot or character arcs.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film depicts a biblical event featuring Jesus and temple sellers. Jesus is canonically and historically male, and there is no indication or historical record of this 1902 adaptation portraying him or any other established character with a different gender. The sellers are a group, not specific named characters with established genders.