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Pusher (2012)
In London, a drug dealer grows increasingly desperate over the course of a week after a botched deal lands him in the merciless clutches of a ruthless crime lord. The more desperate his behavior, the more isolated he becomes until there is nothing left standing between him and the bullet his debtors intend to fire his way.
In London, a drug dealer grows increasingly desperate over the course of a week after a botched deal lands him in the merciless clutches of a ruthless crime lord. The more desperate his behavior, the more isolated he becomes until there is nothing left standing between him and the bullet his debtors intend to fire his way.
The film is a gritty crime thriller focused on a drug dealer's desperate struggle to repay a debt, portraying the brutal consequences of his actions without explicitly promoting or critiquing specific political ideologies or societal systems.
The film features a predominantly white British main cast, reflecting traditional casting without explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. Its narrative, typical of a crime thriller, does not explicitly critique traditional identities or center on DEI themes.
There is insufficient information available to assess the film's portrayal of transsexual characters or themes. The provided details do not include any plot or character specifics relevant to this evaluation, thus preventing a determination of whether such depictions exist or what their nature might be.
The film primarily focuses on male characters involved in the criminal underworld. Female characters, such as Flo, are present but do not engage in or win any direct physical combat against male opponents. Their roles do not involve action sequences of this nature.
The 2012 remake of Pusher maintains the original genders for its main characters, Frank, Tonny, and Milo. While some supporting roles differ, no character established as one gender in the 1996 original is portrayed as a different gender in the 2012 adaptation.
The 2012 film is a remake of a 1996 Danish film. Key characters like Frank, Tonny, and Milo, who were portrayed by white actors in the original, are also portrayed by white actors in the remake. There are no instances of a character's race being changed from the source material.
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