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Alma and the Zoramites (1991)
Zoram and his prideful people have corrupted their religion which teaches them to boast of their righteousness and persecute the poor. Alma and Amulek fail to persuade the rich Zoramites to repent. Alma ministers to the poor believers and teaches one of the most important lessons on faith and humility. Zoram forces the believers in Antionum from their land where they finally find refuge with Lamanite converts in Jershon.
Zoram and his prideful people have corrupted their religion which teaches them to boast of their righteousness and persecute the poor. Alma and Amulek fail to persuade the rich Zoramites to repent. Alma ministers to the poor believers and teaches one of the most important lessons on faith and humility. Zoram forces the believers in Antionum from their land where they finally find refuge with Lamanite converts in Jershon.
The film's central conflict, rooted in religious apostasy, is resolved through a strong emphasis on individual repentance, adherence to traditional religious principles, and divine authority, aligning its dominant themes with conservative values.
This animated film features character designs that align with traditional, mainstream interpretations of ancient figures, without explicit efforts toward modern racial or gender diversity in casting. The narrative focuses on spiritual themes of pride and humility, and does not critique traditional identities or explicitly incorporate modern DEI themes.
The film "Alma and the Zoramites" is an animated adaptation of a religious text, focusing on themes of faith, apostasy, and repentance. There are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or storylines present within the narrative. The film's content does not engage with LGBTQ+ issues in any capacity.
The film "Alma and the Zoramites" is an animated adaptation of a religious story from the Book of Mormon. It does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes, as its narrative focuses exclusively on religious teachings and historical events within its source material.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film faithfully adapts the Book of Mormon narrative, portraying all major characters, such as Alma and Amulek, with the same gender as established in the source material. No canonical characters undergo a gender change.
Characters from the Book of Mormon, such as Alma and the Zoramites, do not have a canonically or widely established modern racial identity in their source material. Therefore, a race swap, as defined, cannot occur.
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