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The Baby (1915)

The Baby poster

The Baby (1915)

Overview

Billy is playing in his backyard with his dog and baby sister, Mary. A ball from the neighboring yard hits him on the head, leading to a fight with the ball's six-year-old owner, Jack. Billy loses the fight and sends his dog to avenge him, which scares Jack. Later on the beach, Jack leaves his four-year-old sweetheart, Olive, to buy ice cream. Billy approaches Olive and she leaves with him, his dog, and baby Mary. When Jack returns, Olive tells him she prefers Billy, making Jack angry and eager to get Billy "in wrong at home". Jack finds an opportunity when baby Mary crawls away near some rocks, and he hides her.


Starring Cast


Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Leans Traditional
Political: Center
Diversity: Low

Viewer Rating

Not Rated


Overview

Billy is playing in his backyard with his dog and baby sister, Mary. A ball from the neighboring yard hits him on the head, leading to a fight with the ball's six-year-old owner, Jack. Billy loses the fight and sends his dog to avenge him, which scares Jack. Later on the beach, Jack leaves his four-year-old sweetheart, Olive, to buy ice cream. Billy approaches Olive and she leaves with him, his dog, and baby Mary. When Jack returns, Olive tells him she prefers Billy, making Jack angry and eager to get Billy "in wrong at home". Jack finds an opportunity when baby Mary crawls away near some rocks, and he hides her.


Starring Cast

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Leans Traditional

Primary

The film's central focus on the universal human drama of a mother's struggle to reunite with her child, emphasizing maternal love and perseverance, positions it as neutral rather than promoting a specific political ideology.

The film features a predominantly traditional cast without explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. Its narrative focuses on psychological themes within a dysfunctional family, and it does not explicitly critique or frame traditional identities negatively.

Secondary

The 1921 silent film 'The Baby' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on a young woman's personal struggles, aligning with typical melodramas of its era without incorporating queer identities or experiences.

The film 'The Baby' (1921) does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on a different subject matter, leading to a determination of N/A for its portrayal of transsexual identity.

The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.

The film "The Baby" (1915) is an original silent comedy. Its characters were created for this specific film and are not adaptations of pre-existing figures with established genders, therefore no gender swap occurs.

The film "The Baby" (1915) is an original silent comedy. There is no prior source material, historical figures, or previous adaptations from which character races could be established. Therefore, no race swap can be identified.


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