Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
He Fei's wife, Li Muzi, disappears during their anniversary trip. When she reappears, he insists that she is not his wife. As Chen Mai, a top lawyer gets involved in this bizarre case, more mysteries start to emerge....
He Fei's wife, Li Muzi, disappears during their anniversary trip. When she reappears, he insists that she is not his wife. As Chen Mai, a top lawyer gets involved in this bizarre case, more mysteries start to emerge....
The film's core narrative revolves around a personal mystery, deception, and the pursuit of justice, which are universal human themes rather than politically charged ones. It does not explicitly promote or critique specific political ideologies, making its bias neutral.
This Chinese mystery thriller features a cast predominantly of East Asian ethnicity, which reflects its cultural origin rather than explicit DEI-driven casting. The narrative does not engage in critical portrayals of traditional identities or explicitly center DEI themes in a Western context.
The film "Lost in the Stars" is a Chinese adaptation of a French play and a Russian film, where characters originally established as white are portrayed by East Asian actors, constituting a race swap.
The film "Lost in the Stars" does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters, storylines, or themes. Its narrative focuses exclusively on a heterosexual couple's marital issues and a complex mystery, resulting in no portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Lost in the Stars (2022) is loosely adapted from a 1960 French play. While it reinterprets the story, the core characters and their genders remain consistent with the source material. There are no instances of established characters being portrayed as a different gender.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources