An eclectic foursome of aspiring teenage witches get more than they bargained for as they lean into their newfound powers.
An eclectic foursome of aspiring teenage witches get more than they bargained for as they lean into their newfound powers.
The film's central thesis explicitly promotes progressive ideology by depicting young women reclaiming collective power to challenge patriarchal oppression and address social injustices, making its core conflict and solution clearly left-aligned.
The movie features a diverse main cast, including a transgender actress in a prominent role, reflecting intentional DEI-driven casting. Its narrative explicitly frames a white male character as the central antagonist, portraying him negatively as a patriarchal force the female protagonists must defeat.
The film features Lourdes, one of the main characters, as an openly lesbian witch. Her identity and relationship are normalized and presented without being central to the plot or a source of conflict, resulting in a neutral, incidental portrayal.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film introduces a new coven of witches and supporting characters, none of whom are gender-swapped versions of established characters from the original 1996 film. The new protagonists are original to this installment.
The film introduces a new coven of witches and supporting characters. These characters are original to this installment and are not re-castings of established characters from the prior film, thus no race swaps occur.
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