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H Is for Hawk (2025)
After losing her beloved father, Helen finds herself saved by an unlikely friendship with a stubborn hawk named Mabel. Through the bond, Helen rediscovers the beauty of being alive.
After losing her beloved father, Helen finds herself saved by an unlikely friendship with a stubborn hawk named Mabel. Through the bond, Helen rediscovers the beauty of being alive.
The film centers on the deeply personal and apolitical themes of grief and healing through an individual's immersive journey with nature and a traditional practice, rather than engaging with political ideologies or societal critiques.
The film features a predominantly white European cast in its principal roles, consistent with traditional casting practices and the source material. The narrative focuses on personal themes of grief and nature, without incorporating explicit DEI themes or critiques of traditional identities.
Based on available information, 'H Is for Hawk' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The film's narrative centers on Helen's journey through grief, falconry, and healing, with no indication of LGBTQ+ representation in its plot, characters, or overarching messages.
H Is for Hawk (2025) does not feature any transsexual characters or themes. The narrative centers on a woman's journey of grief and healing through training a goshawk, with no elements related to transsexual identity or experiences present in the story.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts Helen Macdonald's memoir. Key characters, including Helen and her father Alisdair, are portrayed on screen with genders consistent with their established identities in the source material.
The film adapts a memoir where the main characters, Helen Macdonald and her father, are established as white British/Scottish. The actors cast, Claire Foy and Brendan Gleeson, are white English and Irish respectively, aligning with the characters' established racial backgrounds.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























