
Bonsoir (1910)

Bonsoir (1910)
Overview
A short film that concluded the film programs. On a stage with a black background, a fairy whose long dress is colored pink, greets the spectators. She holds a magic wand at the end of which is attached a white ribbon. With a blow of this baguette, it makes appear behind it in height a large B composed of flowers and colored in pink. Then a blue O, a yellow N, a green S, a blue O, a pink I and the green final R. She then picks up a pink flower at her feet and throws it above the I: the flower remains fixed there and forms the point on the i. She finally salutes and disappears. The word BONSOIR remains in the image.
Starring Cast
Rating & Dimensions
Not Rated
Overview
A short film that concluded the film programs. On a stage with a black background, a fairy whose long dress is colored pink, greets the spectators. She holds a magic wand at the end of which is attached a white ribbon. With a blow of this baguette, it makes appear behind it in height a large B composed of flowers and colored in pink. Then a blue O, a yellow N, a green S, a blue O, a pink I and the green final R. She then picks up a pink flower at her feet and throws it above the I: the flower remains fixed there and forms the point on the i. She finally salutes and disappears. The word BONSOIR remains in the image.
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
This film is historical documentary footage that objectively records an event without presenting a narrative, a problem, or a solution, thus lacking any discernible political bias.
This historical newsreel from 1906 documents Theodore Roosevelt's arrival in Panama. As a factual record, it features traditional identities without intentional recasting or critique, and its narrative does not incorporate explicit DEI themes.
Secondary
Given the title's historical and documentary nature, and the complete absence of any plot details or character information, it is not possible to evaluate LGBTQ+ representation. The film is presumed to not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, resulting in an N/A rating for its portrayal.
The film "Barnens dag 1905" is a historical short from 1905 depicting children's day activities. There are no identifiable transsexual characters or themes present within the narrative, making an evaluation of portrayal inapplicable.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1906 film documents the historical arrival of Theodore Roosevelt in Panama. As a direct depiction of a real historical event and figure, there is no indication that any historically established character's gender was altered for the screen.
This 1906 film documents a real historical event involving Theodore Roosevelt. As a direct historical record, it does not adapt a character from prior source material or history with a different race.
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