Eight year old Peter is plagued by a mysterious, constant tapping from inside his bedroom wall—one that his parents insist is all in his imagination. As Peter's fear intensifies, he believes that his parents could be hiding a terrible, dangerous secret and questions their trustworthiness.
Eight year old Peter is plagued by a mysterious, constant tapping from inside his bedroom wall—one that his parents insist is all in his imagination. As Peter's fear intensifies, he believes that his parents could be hiding a terrible, dangerous secret and questions their trustworthiness.
The film primarily explores authoritarian control and repression within a family unit through psychological horror, explicitly avoiding direct engagement with US political ideologies or systemic critique, thus remaining apolitical.
The movie primarily features traditional casting with no explicit racial or gender diversity. Its narrative focuses on universal themes of childhood trauma and family horror, without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering on DEI themes.
Cobweb does not explicitly feature LGBTQ+ characters or themes. While some analyses interpret its narrative through a queer lens, focusing on themes of repression and identity, these are thematic readings rather than direct portrayals of the LGBTQ community within the film's content.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Cobweb is an original film with new characters, not an adaptation of pre-existing source material or historical figures. Therefore, no characters have a gender that differs from a previously established canonical or historical gender.
The film "Cobweb" (2023) features original characters and does not adapt any prior source material with established racial identities. Consequently, no character's race was altered from a previously defined canon or historical record.
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