
Klong Chang (1938)
Not Rated

Overview
A documentary film by a Japanese crew who traveled to Siam in 1938 to capture footage of the elephant round-up festival in Lopburi Province, as well as scenes of everyday life and cityscapes in Bangkok. The film also includes behind-the-scenes footage from the Sri Krung Sound Film Studio, featuring Manee Sumonnat, one of the first leading actresses of Thai cinema, whose work has otherwise been entirely lost.
Starring Cast
Bias Dimensions
Overview
A documentary film by a Japanese crew who traveled to Siam in 1938 to capture footage of the elephant round-up festival in Lopburi Province, as well as scenes of everyday life and cityscapes in Bangkok. The film also includes behind-the-scenes footage from the Sri Krung Sound Film Studio, featuring Manee Sumonnat, one of the first leading actresses of Thai cinema, whose work has otherwise been entirely lost.
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
Due to the complete absence of specific plot details, character arcs, or thematic content, the film cannot be assessed for any discernible political bias and is therefore rated as neutral.
Based on the information provided, the movie does not present explicit indicators of diversity in casting or narrative framing related to DEI themes. The evaluation reflects a traditional approach in both representation and narrative focus, as no specific details suggesting otherwise were available.
Secondary
This 1933 animated short film, part of the Merrie Melodies series, focuses on a mouse manipulating puppets in a musical performance. There are no discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in the narrative, resulting in a determination of N/A for its portrayal.
The film "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: Planet of the Slave Girls" does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on science fiction adventure without engaging with transgender identity or experiences, resulting in no depiction to evaluate.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film features original characters, Tom and Jerry, who are consistently portrayed as male. There is no evidence of any character being established as one gender in prior canon and then portrayed as a different gender.
The film "Jerry Pulls the Strings" features anthropomorphic animal characters (a cat and a mouse). These characters do not have a human race, and thus the concept of a "race swap" as defined does not apply.
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