MovieBias

See all results for ""
BrowseAnalyticsAbout

Baby Blues (1999)

Baby Blues poster

Baby Blues (1999)

Overview

One hot summer's day in a little french town, a building worker accidentally finds the skeleton of a newborn baby and calls the police. Detective Jacques Deveure (Vincent Winterhalter) is placed in charge of the investigation. His investigation uncovers evidence of numerous shady dealings, revealing a strange underbelly of the private lives of a cadre of people including Grandier (Francois Berleand) and Blandine Piancet (Audrey Tautou). This multi-layered story continually unveils new twists and turns.


Starring Cast


Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Leans Traditional
Political: Center
Diversity: Low

Viewer Rating
3.9

Overview

One hot summer's day in a little french town, a building worker accidentally finds the skeleton of a newborn baby and calls the police. Detective Jacques Deveure (Vincent Winterhalter) is placed in charge of the investigation. His investigation uncovers evidence of numerous shady dealings, revealing a strange underbelly of the private lives of a cadre of people including Grandier (Francois Berleand) and Blandine Piancet (Audrey Tautou). This multi-layered story continually unveils new twists and turns.


Starring Cast

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Leans Traditional

Primary

The film is rated as neutral due to the complete lack of information regarding its plot, themes, and director's intent, preventing any assessment of political bias.

The movie features primarily traditional casting without explicit DEI-driven race or gender swaps. Its narrative focuses on personal struggles, framing traditional identities neutrally or positively without explicit critique or central DEI themes.

Secondary

The film 'Baby Blues' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative centers on a woman's experience with postpartum depression and her relationships within her heterosexual family unit, thus rendering the LGBTQ+ portrayal as N/A.

The film 'Baby Blues' does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Its narrative primarily explores a young woman's pregnancy, her complex relationship with her mother, and her personal search for identity within a family context.

The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.

Baby Blues (1999) is an original film, not an adaptation or reboot. Its characters were created for this specific production, meaning there are no prior canonical or historical versions to establish a baseline gender for comparison. Therefore, no gender swaps occurred.

Baby Blues (1999) is an original French drama film, not an adaptation of existing source material, a biopic, or a reboot of legacy characters. Therefore, there are no pre-established characters whose race could have been altered.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

3.9

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
5.8
The Movie Database logo
2.0

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

More Like This

MovieBias

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceCookies PolicyAI Policy

Copyright 2025 © moviebias.com