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Trilogy of Terror (1975)
A horror anthology containing three stories: a female college professor is aggressively pursued by one of her students; a prudish brunette determines that her free-spirited blonde sister is evil; and a woman's night turns upside down after she purchases an ancient Zuni fetish doll.
A horror anthology containing three stories: a female college professor is aggressively pursued by one of her students; a prudish brunette determines that her free-spirited blonde sister is evil; and a woman's night turns upside down after she purchases an ancient Zuni fetish doll.
The film is an anthology horror that explores psychological and supernatural terrors through individual stories, without promoting or critiquing any specific political ideology. Its focus remains on suspense and genre-specific scares, making its core conflicts apolitical.
This 1975 horror anthology features a primarily traditional cast with no evident intentional race or gender swaps for diversity. The narrative focuses on horror elements and does not incorporate explicit critiques of traditional identities or central DEI themes.
Trilogy of Terror, 1975, does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes across its three horror segments. The narratives focus on psychological terror, blackmail, and supernatural threats without incorporating queer identities or experiences.
The film 'Trilogy of Terror, 1975' is a horror anthology consisting of three distinct segments. Based on available information, none of these segments feature identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Consequently, there is no portrayal of transsexual identity to evaluate within the film's narrative.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts three short stories by Richard Matheson. A review of the source material and film portrayals indicates that all major characters retain their canonical genders, with no instances of a character established as one gender being portrayed as another.
The film adapts three short stories by Richard Matheson. There is no widely established canon or historical record indicating that the characters portrayed by Karen Black were originally a different race in the source material.
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