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Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
When Moore Street market-trader Agnes Brown finds her livelihood under threat from a ruthless developer, she and her family embark on a campaign to save her stall, aided as only the Browns will be by a motley troop of blind trainee Ninjas, an alcoholic solicitor, and a barrister with Tourettes Syndrome.
When Moore Street market-trader Agnes Brown finds her livelihood under threat from a ruthless developer, she and her family embark on a campaign to save her stall, aided as only the Browns will be by a motley troop of blind trainee Ninjas, an alcoholic solicitor, and a barrister with Tourettes Syndrome.
The film centers on a comedic struggle where a family and community defend their local market against a corrupt developer, emphasizing local justice and family loyalty rather than promoting a specific political ideology or offering a broad systemic critique.
The film features a predominantly white cast without intentional race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. Its narrative focuses on comedic family dynamics and does not critically portray traditional identities or explicitly center DEI themes.
The film features an openly gay character, Rory Brown, whose identity is accepted by his family but remains incidental to the main plot. The central comedic element of a man in drag is used for traditional humor rather than an exploration of gender identity. Overall, the portrayal avoids strong positive or negative arcs, leaning towards neutral.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The central character, Agnes Brown, is canonically female and is portrayed as female on screen. While a male actor plays the role, the character's gender within the narrative remains consistent with her established identity, not constituting a gender swap.
This film is an adaptation of an existing TV series and stage show. All established characters are portrayed by actors of the same race as in previous iterations, with no changes to their canonical racial depiction.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources