Legendary tomb explorer Hu Bayi is on a dangerous mission as he seeks out the Tomb of Emperor Xian, located on an island of monstrous creatures in this mystical action-adventure.
Legendary tomb explorer Hu Bayi is on a dangerous mission as he seeks out the Tomb of Emperor Xian, located on an island of monstrous creatures in this mystical action-adventure.
The film's central conflict and its resolution are rooted in apolitical adventure and fantasy tropes, focusing on survival and breaking a curse without promoting or critiquing specific political ideologies.
The movie features an entirely East Asian cast, which is culturally authentic to its Chinese origin and source material, without engaging in explicit DEI-driven recasting of traditionally white roles. Its narrative is a standard adventure story that does not critique traditional identities or center explicit DEI themes.
Mojin: The Worm Valley is an action-adventure film centered on tomb raiding and supernatural encounters. The narrative does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, nor does it explore any related social issues or relationships.
The film features Shirley Yang as a capable female character who participates in the expedition and encounters various creatures and traps. Her combat scenes primarily involve using firearms against non-human adversaries or navigating environmental dangers. There are no instances where she defeats one or more male human opponents in close-quarters physical combat.
The film adapts characters from the "Ghost Blows Out the Light" novel series. The primary characters, including Hu Bayi, Shirley Yang, and Wang Kaixuan, maintain their established genders from the source material in this adaptation.
The film is an adaptation of a Chinese novel series, and its main characters, who are canonically East Asian, are portrayed by East Asian actors. There are no instances where a character's established race from the source material is altered.
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