Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

Red Heat (1985)
East Germans abduct a U.S. coed (Linda Blair) and throw her in a women's prison run by a brutal inmate (Sylvia Kristel).
East Germans abduct a U.S. coed (Linda Blair) and throw her in a women's prison run by a brutal inmate (Sylvia Kristel).
The film's central conflict explicitly critiques a brutal communist prison system, portraying it as inherently oppressive and unjust, which aligns with conservative skepticism of totalitarian governments and emphasizes individual freedom.
The movie features a primarily traditional cast with no apparent intentional race or gender swaps of roles. Its narrative does not appear to critique traditional identities or center explicit DEI themes, aligning with typical filmmaking practices of its era and genre.
The film, a women-in-prison exploitation feature, includes depictions of same-sex sexual assault among inmates as a form of abuse. This portrayal aligns with problematic tropes of the genre, presenting same-sex interactions as coercive and a source of misery, lacking any positive or affirming elements for LGBTQ+ identity.
There is not enough publicly available information for AI to assess this category for this movie.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
There is not enough publicly available information for AI to assess this category for this movie.
There is no information provided or widely known indicating that "Red Heat, 1985" is an adaptation of source material or based on historical figures with pre-established character races. Therefore, no race swap can be identified.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























