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Fitzwilly (1967)
When Miss Vicki's father dies, she becomes the world's greatest philanthropist. Unfortunately, she is flat broke! Her loyal butler, Claude Fitzwilliam, leads the household staff to rob from various businesses by charging goods to various wealthy people and misdirecting the shipments, all to keep Miss Vicki's standard of living.
When Miss Vicki's father dies, she becomes the world's greatest philanthropist. Unfortunately, she is flat broke! Her loyal butler, Claude Fitzwilliam, leads the household staff to rob from various businesses by charging goods to various wealthy people and misdirecting the shipments, all to keep Miss Vicki's standard of living.
The film subtly aligns with conservative values by championing loyalty, individual ingenuity, and the preservation of a benevolent, traditional social order through private means, culminating in a solution that reinforces existing structures rather than challenging them.
This 1967 film features a primarily traditional cast with no apparent intentional race or gender swaps of roles. The narrative does not appear to critically portray traditional identities or center on explicit DEI themes.
Due to the absence of specific plot details or character information related to LGBTQ+ themes, a comprehensive assessment of the film's portrayal cannot be made. There is insufficient data to determine if LGBTQ+ elements are present or how they might be depicted.
The film 'Fitzwilly, 1967' does not feature any identifiable transgender characters or themes. The narrative centers on a butler's comedic schemes to manage his employer's finances, with no elements related to transsexual identity or experiences present in the plot.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 1967 film "Fitzwilly" is an adaptation of the 1960 novel "A Garden of Cucumbers." There is no evidence that any canonically established characters from the source material had their gender changed in the film adaptation.
Fitzwilly (1967) is an adaptation of the novel "A Garden of Cucumbers." There is no evidence that any character, canonically established as one race in the source material, was portrayed by an actor of a different race in this film.
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