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Lady Bodyguard (1943)
A.C.Baker, advertising executive for an insurance company, approaches test pilot Terry Moore with a proposition that in return for using his picture and endorsement he will get a paid-for-a-year $1000 policy. High-risk Terry agrees. George MacAlister fires his secretary, Miss Tracy, just as she is typing up the policy and she, for spite, changes the amount from a thousand dollars to one million dollars. A.C. delivers the policy, without noticing the difference, to Terry at a party at the Frolics Club, a cheap joint wedged between a burlesque house and a flop house hotel. Three characters, an elderly hat-check "girl" known as Mother Hodges; Avery Jamieson, a broken-down actor; and bartender Harry Gargan are named beneficiaries. When the company discovers the error, A.C. is sent to get back the policy and, pending that, don't let Terry make any test flights.
A.C.Baker, advertising executive for an insurance company, approaches test pilot Terry Moore with a proposition that in return for using his picture and endorsement he will get a paid-for-a-year $1000 policy. High-risk Terry agrees. George MacAlister fires his secretary, Miss Tracy, just as she is typing up the policy and she, for spite, changes the amount from a thousand dollars to one million dollars. A.C. delivers the policy, without noticing the difference, to Terry at a party at the Frolics Club, a cheap joint wedged between a burlesque house and a flop house hotel. Three characters, an elderly hat-check "girl" known as Mother Hodges; Avery Jamieson, a broken-down actor; and bartender Harry Gargan are named beneficiaries. When the company discovers the error, A.C. is sent to get back the policy and, pending that, don't let Terry make any test flights.
The film's specific plot details and narrative focus are not available, precluding an objective assessment of any explicit political themes or ideological leanings. The title and release era suggest a romantic comedy or mystery without an obvious political agenda.
The film features traditional casting, showing no evidence of intentional race or gender swaps for established roles. The narrative maintains a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, without explicit critique.
The film 'Lady Bodyguard' does not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative contains no elements related to queer identity, resulting in no specific portrayal to evaluate.
The film 'Lady Bodyguard, 1943' does not feature identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative contains no elements depicting transgender identity, either centrally or incidentally, resulting in no overall portrayal to evaluate.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film does not feature characters with a previously established canonical or historical gender that differs from their on-screen portrayal.
The 1943 film "Lady Bodyguard" is an original production. There is no prior source material or established canon for its characters that would indicate a race swap from an original portrayal.
There is not enough publicly available information for AI to assess this category for this movie.
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