Sam has been one of the best arcade gamers of his time. Once in an international tournament NASA sent the video recording of all the games to space for intelligent beings to find and know more about humans. However the a...
Sam has been one of the best arcade gamers of his time. Once in an international tournament NASA sent the video recording of all the games to space for intelligent beings to find and know more about humans. However the a...
The film's central conflict of an alien invasion and its solution, which relies on individual skill and teamwork to defend Earth, are fundamentally apolitical, focusing on entertainment and nostalgia rather than promoting specific political ideologies.
The movie "Pixels" features a predominantly traditional cast, with white male actors in central heroic roles. Its narrative positively frames these traditional identities without incorporating any explicit DEI themes or critiques.
The film 'Pixels' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. There are no depictions, positive, negative, or neutral, of queer identity or experiences.
The film features female characters, such as Violet Van Patten and Lady Lisa, who participate in action sequences. However, Violet primarily uses advanced weaponry against alien threats, and Lady Lisa, a martial artist, engages in combat against non-human, pixelated alien constructs rather than human male opponents in direct physical combat.
The film primarily features original human characters and faithfully portrays established video game characters like Pac-Man and Donkey Kong with their canonical genders. Q*bert's transformation into Lady Lisa is an in-plot disguise, not a re-gendering of his core identity.
The film "Pixels" features original human characters and digital arcade game characters. None of these characters have a pre-established race from source material or history that could be subject to a race swap.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources