
Not Rated
Andre Deed loves his cigars, but not everyone does. He heads off to a tea social, where the hostess disapproves of tobacco. There he keeps lighting up, then has to put out the cigars in various unlikely places.
Andre Deed loves his cigars, but not everyone does. He heads off to a tea social, where the hostess disapproves of tobacco. There he keeps lighting up, then has to put out the cigars in various unlikely places.
The film's subject, an 'enraged smoker,' lacks inherent political valence, and without further plot details, there is no evidence to suggest the promotion of either progressive or conservative ideologies.
Based on the movie title and the presumed historical context of an early 20th-century film, the evaluation assumes traditional casting and a narrative that does not critique traditional identities or feature explicit DEI themes. The absence of detailed content information necessitates these contextual assumptions.
This early 20th-century silent comedy, focusing on a character's attempts to smoke, does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative is entirely unrelated to queer identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
There is no evidence to suggest that "Boireau enragé fumeur" features any characters who were canonically or historically established as one gender and then portrayed as a different gender in this film. The main character, Boireau, is consistently male.
There is no evidence that any character in the 1914 film "Boireau enragé fumeur" was canonically or historically established as one race and then portrayed as a different race. The main character, Boireau, was consistently played by André Deed, a white actor.