Ceremony (1975)
Ceremony (1975)
Overview
Nearly completing his painting, the artist takes a walk outside, where his creativity manifests itself in the life around him. This experimental work captures the ritualistic spirituality of art and the art in the everyday. Paintings in the film are by Paul Mason.
Starring Cast
Rating & Dimensions
Not Rated
Overview
Nearly completing his painting, the artist takes a walk outside, where his creativity manifests itself in the life around him. This experimental work captures the ritualistic spirituality of art and the art in the everyday. Paintings in the film are by Paul Mason.
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
Given the absence of specific plot details for 'Ceremony', the film's title suggests themes of ritual, tradition, and human connection that are inherently broad and do not align with a dominant political ideology, leading to a neutral assessment.
In the absence of specific details regarding the movie's cast and narrative, the evaluation assumes a traditional approach to both representation and thematic framing, indicating no explicit DEI elements are present.
Secondary
No identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes were found for a film matching the provided title 'Ceremony' and director 'David Greig'. David Greig is primarily recognized for his work in theatre, and no film under this title with him as director is widely documented as containing such content.
The film 'Ceremony' (2013) does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes within its narrative. Consequently, there is no portrayal to evaluate against the provided rubric.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Information regarding the film's source material, characters, or historical basis is unavailable. Without a pre-established canonical or historical gender for any character, a gender swap cannot be identified.
There is no widely established source material, prior canon, or historical figures associated with the 1975 film "Ceremony" by David Greig. Therefore, no characters exist who were canonically or historically established as one race and then portrayed as another.