MovieBias

See all results for ""
BrowseAnalyticsAbout

Rope (1947)

Rope poster

Rope (1947)

Overview

Two young men strangle their "inferior" classmate, hide his body in their apartment, and invite his friends and family to a dinner party as a means to challenge the "perfection" of their crime.


Starring Cast


Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Traditional

Political: Center
Diversity: Low
LGBTQ: Negative

Viewer Rating
7.5

Overview

Two young men strangle their "inferior" classmate, hide his body in their apartment, and invite his friends and family to a dinner party as a means to challenge the "perfection" of their crime.


Starring Cast

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Traditional

Primary

The film critiques the dangerous consequences of intellectual arrogance and a nihilistic 'superman' philosophy, championing universal moral principles and individual accountability rather than a specific political ideology, thus maintaining a neutral stance.

Based on the provided title and director, and without specific details on casting or narrative changes for this particular version, the film is assessed as featuring traditional casting. The narrative is understood to focus on individual moral and philosophical themes rather than explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering on modern DEI themes.

Secondary

The film 'Rope' implicitly links the queer-coded relationship between its two murderous protagonists to their intellectual arrogance and cold-blooded villainy. This portrayal associates non-normative identity with pathology and results in a punitive outcome, offering no positive counter-balance or critique within the narrative.

The film "Rope" (2012) does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Its plot focuses on a young man discovering a secret about his girlfriend, unrelated to transgender identity. Therefore, the film has no net impact on the portrayal of transsexual individuals.

The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.

The film "Rope" (1947) is an adaptation of Patrick Hamilton's 1929 play. All significant characters in the film maintain the same gender as established in the original source material. No characters were portrayed as a different gender than their canonical or historically established gender.

The 1947 film "Rope" is an adaptation of Patrick Hamilton's 1929 play, which features characters who were canonically and historically white. The film portrays these characters with white actors, consistent with the source material and historical context. No instances of a race swap are present.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

7.5

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
7.5
The Movie Database logo
N/A

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

More Like This

MovieBias

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceCookies PolicyAI Policy

Copyright 2025 © moviebias.com