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The Night Eats the World (2018)
After waking up to find himself all alone in an apartment where a massive party was being held the night before, Sam is immediately forced to face a terrifying reality: the living dead have invaded the streets of Paris.
After waking up to find himself all alone in an apartment where a massive party was being held the night before, Sam is immediately forced to face a terrifying reality: the living dead have invaded the streets of Paris.
The film's central themes revolve around individual survival, isolation, and the psychological impact of a post-apocalyptic world, without engaging in explicit political commentary or promoting specific ideological viewpoints, thus rendering it neutral.
The movie features visible diversity in its casting, notably with an Iranian actress in a significant role. However, the narrative primarily focuses on themes of survival and isolation, without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering on DEI themes.
The film 'The Night Eats the World' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on a man's isolated struggle for survival during a zombie apocalypse, with no elements related to queer identity or experiences.
The film 'The Night Eats the World' does not depict any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on a man's solitary survival in a zombie-infested Paris, with no elements related to transgender identity present in the story or character arcs.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film 'The Night Eats the World' is an original story without prior source material or established characters. Therefore, no characters exist who were canonically established as one gender and then portrayed as another, precluding a gender swap.
The film is an adaptation of a French novel. There is no widely established canon or historical record indicating that the characters in the source material had a specific race that was then changed in the film adaptation. The characters' races were likely unspecified or implicitly white European in the original novel, making the casting of actors of different ethnicities not a race swap under the given definition.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























