A gallerist risks her family and flourishing career when she enters into an affair with a talented painter and slowly loses control of her life.
A gallerist risks her family and flourishing career when she enters into an affair with a talented painter and slowly loses control of her life.
The film's narrative, while exploring personal addiction and its psychological aspects, ultimately champions the restoration of marital fidelity and the traditional family unit, aligning its dominant themes with conservative values of personal responsibility and the sanctity of marriage.
The movie "Addicted" features a predominantly Black cast, reflecting the diversity of its source material. Its narrative centers on a personal drama of addiction and relationships, without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or focusing on broader DEI themes.
The film "Addicted" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses exclusively on heterosexual relationships and a woman's struggle with sex addiction and its impact on her marriage.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Addicted" (2014) is an adaptation of Zane's novel of the same name. All major characters in the film retain the same gender as established in the source material, with no instances of a character canonically established as one gender being portrayed as another.
The film is an adaptation of Zane's novel 'Addicted.' While the novel describes the character Quinton Canosa as white, the film casts William Levy, a Cuban-American actor. This is considered an ethnicity shift rather than a change in broader racial category, aligning with the exclusion criteria.
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