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Time Masters (1982)
On planet Perdide, an attack of giant hornets leaves young Piel alone in a wrecked car with his dying father. A mayday message reaches their friend Jaffar, an adventurer travelling through space. Onboard Jaffar’s shuttle are the renegade Prince Matton, his fiancée, and Silbad, who knows Perdide well. Thus begins an incredible race across space to save Piel.
On planet Perdide, an attack of giant hornets leaves young Piel alone in a wrecked car with his dying father. A mayday message reaches their friend Jaffar, an adventurer travelling through space. Onboard Jaffar’s shuttle are the renegade Prince Matton, his fiancée, and Silbad, who knows Perdide well. Thus begins an incredible race across space to save Piel.
The film centers on a perilous space rescue mission, exploring themes of survival, destiny, and the intervention of ancient, benevolent cosmic entities. Its narrative focuses on universal adventure and personal courage rather than promoting specific political ideologies.
The film features traditional casting choices, aligning with its production era. The narrative does not present explicit critiques of traditional identities, nor does it center on themes of diversity, equity, or inclusion.
The film centers on a surrogate family unit formed to protect a child, emphasizing themes of responsibility and care. It depicts a functional, non-biological family structure without explicitly endorsing or critiquing traditional or progressive family norms.
There is not enough publicly available information for AI to assess this category for this movie.
Time Masters, 1982, does not include any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The animated science fiction adventure focuses on its core narrative without incorporating elements related to transsexual identity or experiences.
The film does not depict any scenes where a female character engages in and wins direct physical combat against one or more male opponents. Female characters present do not participate in close-quarters fights or achieve victory through skill, strength, or martial arts against men.
The animated film "Time Masters" (1982) is an adaptation of Stefan Wul's novel "L'Orphelin de Perdide." A review of the film and its source material reveals no instances where a character canonically established as one gender is portrayed as a different gender on screen. All significant characters maintain their original genders from the novel.
Time Masters is an original animated film. The characters were created specifically for this production and do not have pre-established racial identities from prior source material or historical records. Consequently, no race swaps are present.
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