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Blind Date (1987)
When bachelor Walter Davis is set up with his sister-in-law's pretty cousin, Nadia Gates, a seemingly average blind date turns into a chaotic night on the town. Walter's brother, Ted, tells him not to let Nadia drink alcohol, but he dismisses the warning and her behaviour gets increasingly wild. Walter and Nadia's numerous incidents are made even worse as her former lover David relentlessly follows them around town.
When bachelor Walter Davis is set up with his sister-in-law's pretty cousin, Nadia Gates, a seemingly average blind date turns into a chaotic night on the town. Walter's brother, Ted, tells him not to let Nadia drink alcohol, but he dismisses the warning and her behaviour gets increasingly wild. Walter and Nadia's numerous incidents are made even worse as her former lover David relentlessly follows them around town.
The film is a romantic comedy centered on personal mishaps and relationships, which are inherently apolitical. It does not promote or critique any specific political ideology, resulting in a neutral stance.
The movie features a primarily traditional cast without explicit race or gender swaps for established roles. Its narrative, typical of a romantic comedy from its era, does not critically portray traditional identities or center on explicit DEI themes.
Blind Date (1987) is a romantic comedy centered on a heterosexual couple's disastrous first date. The film does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, resulting in no portrayal to evaluate within the narrative.
The film 'Blind Date, 1987' does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative is a straightforward romantic comedy centered on a heterosexual couple and their misadventures, with no elements pertaining to transgender identity. For instance, the main plot revolves around a disastrous blind date between Bruce Willis's and Kim Basinger's characters.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Blind Date (1987) is an original film and not an adaptation, reboot, or biopic. All characters were created for this specific movie, meaning there are no pre-existing canonical or historical characters whose gender could have been swapped.
Blind Date (1987) is an original film featuring characters created specifically for this production. There is no prior source material, historical basis, or legacy characters from which a race swap could occur.
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