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Housesitter (1992)
Con artist Gwen moves into Newton's empty home without his knowledge and begins setting up house, posing as his new wife.
Con artist Gwen moves into Newton's empty home without his knowledge and begins setting up house, posing as his new wife.
The film is a romantic comedy focused on personal relationships, deception, and the establishment of a traditional family unit. Its narrative is largely apolitical, balancing unconventional means with a conventional resolution without explicitly promoting any specific ideology.
The movie features a primarily traditional cast with no apparent intentional race or gender swaps of established roles. Its narrative focuses on comedic situations and relationships without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or incorporating central DEI themes.
Housesitter, 1992, is a romantic comedy that does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses exclusively on heterosexual relationships and comedic situations arising from them, resulting in no depiction of queer identity within the film's scope.
The film 'Housesitter' does not feature any identifiable transgender characters or themes within its narrative. The story primarily focuses on a romantic comedy plot involving a man, his ex-girlfriend, and a woman who fabricates a relationship with him, with no elements related to transsexual identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Housesitter (1992) is an original film, not an adaptation or reboot. All characters were created for this specific movie, meaning there are no pre-existing canonical or historical characters whose gender could have been changed.
Housesitter (1992) is an original film, not an adaptation, biopic, or reboot. All its characters are new creations, meaning there is no prior established race for any character to be 'swapped' from.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources






















