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AK 47 (2004)
Rudra Pratap Sharma comes from an aspiring Hindu 'Bramhin' family consisting of his dad, Dayashankar, a bank manager by profession, his mom Sharda and a much younger sister Gaithri. The family resides in Banaras, India; Rudra cannot stand injustice in any form and revolts by publicly beating some college-bullies. This forces him and his family to relocate to the city of Bombay where Rudra continues to deal with wrong-doers by turning them over to the law.
Rudra Pratap Sharma comes from an aspiring Hindu 'Bramhin' family consisting of his dad, Dayashankar, a bank manager by profession, his mom Sharda and a much younger sister Gaithri. The family resides in Banaras, India; Rudra cannot stand injustice in any form and revolts by publicly beating some college-bullies. This forces him and his family to relocate to the city of Bombay where Rudra continues to deal with wrong-doers by turning them over to the law.
The provided information, limited to title, director, and cast, is insufficient to determine the film's central conflict, thematic leanings, or the nature of its proposed solutions, making a political bias assessment impossible.
The movie features a traditional Indian cast, consistent with its origin and setting, and does not appear to engage in explicit DEI-driven casting or narrative choices. The narrative is expected to portray traditional identities in a neutral or positive light, without critical framing.
Based on the provided information, there is insufficient data to accurately assess the portrayal of LGBTQ+ characters or themes in the film AK 47 (2004). No relevant details were found in the given input.
There is currently insufficient information regarding the plot, characters, or themes of 'AK 47, 2004' to assess its portrayal of transsexual individuals or related topics. Without specific details, a definitive evaluation cannot be made regarding any potential character arcs or story plots.
Based on the available information, there is insufficient detail regarding specific combat scenes involving female characters in the film. It is not possible to determine if any female character engages in and wins close-quarters physical combat against male opponents.
The 2004 film "AK 47" is a remake of a 1999 Kannada film of the same name. A comparison of the main characters and their genders between the original and the remake reveals no instances of a character's gender being changed.
There is insufficient information provided about the film's source material, whether it is an adaptation, a remake, or based on historical figures, to determine if any character was canonically, historically, or widely established as one race and then portrayed as another.
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