Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Dolphin (1979)
A documentary about dolphins that cover the recent story of a Japanese massacre of dolphins as well as other footage of swimming with dolphins.
A documentary about dolphins that cover the recent story of a Japanese massacre of dolphins as well as other footage of swimming with dolphins.
The film's central focus on environmentalism and animal welfare, advocating for the conservation and ethical treatment of dolphins, aligns with progressive values.
This nature documentary primarily focuses on its marine subject matter, the dolphins. Human representation within the film is incidental and not driven by explicit diversity initiatives, nor does the narrative engage with themes of traditional identity critique or DEI.
This film is a nature documentary centered on dolphins and marine life. As such, it does not include human characters or storylines that would allow for the depiction or exploration of LGBTQ+ identities or themes. Therefore, the net impact is N/A due to no depiction.
The documentary film "Dolphin" (1979) primarily focuses on marine life, specifically dolphins, and their interactions. It does not feature human characters or narrative elements that involve transsexual identities or themes. Consequently, there is no portrayal to evaluate within the scope of this framework.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Dolphin (1979) is a documentary film about dolphins. Documentaries typically feature real-life subjects rather than fictional characters with established canonical genders from source material, making a 'gender swap' as defined inapplicable.
As a documentary film, "Dolphin" (1979) primarily features real animals and real people, not fictional characters with pre-established canonical races from source material. The concept of a race swap does not apply.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources




















