
Not Rated
A poor woodcutter abandons his 7 children in the woods.
A poor woodcutter abandons his 7 children in the woods.
The film's central narrative, a classic fairy tale, focuses on universal themes of survival, wit, and overcoming adversity through individual ingenuity, rather than promoting any specific political ideology or systemic critique.
This 1901 French silent film, an adaptation of a classic fairy tale, features traditional casting consistent with its era, without intentional race or gender swaps. The narrative focuses on the fairy tale plot, presenting traditional identities in a neutral or positive light, without explicit DEI themes or critiques.
This early 20th-century film, an adaptation of the traditional fairy tale 'Hop o' My Thumb,' does not contain any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the classic story of a young boy outwitting an ogre, with no elements related to queer identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 1905 film adapts the classic fairy tale "Hop o' My Thumb." There is no historical or critical evidence suggesting that any character, such as Hop o' My Thumb himself or the Ogre, was portrayed as a different gender than established in the source material.
The characters in the traditional fairy tale "Hop o' My Thumb" do not have an explicitly specified or visually unambiguous race in their source material. Therefore, any portrayal in the 1905 film would not constitute a race swap according to the provided definition.