
Too Much Business (1922)
Not Rated
Overview
Through sheer bluff Rodney Marvin ( Edward Everett Horton ) gets a job on a newspaper; becomes editor Matt Hayward's ( James Corrigan ) partner; and brings about a reconciliation between Hayward and his long time enemy, Mayor Gorham ( Lloyd Ingraham ).
Starring Cast
Bias Dimensions
Overview
Through sheer bluff Rodney Marvin ( Edward Everett Horton ) gets a job on a newspaper; becomes editor Matt Hayward's ( James Corrigan ) partner; and brings about a reconciliation between Hayward and his long time enemy, Mayor Gorham ( Lloyd Ingraham ).
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film is rated as neutral due to the complete absence of specific plot details, thematic content, or narrative elements required to assess any political bias.
Based on a neutral assessment due to the absence of specific details regarding casting, character diversity, and narrative framing, the movie is evaluated as exhibiting a general presence of DEI characteristics without explicit emphasis.
Secondary
The film 'Too Much Business' could not be evaluated for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ characters or themes due to a complete lack of descriptive content provided. Consequently, its net impact is rated as N/A, indicating no identifiable depiction based on the available information.
Based on the information available, the film 'Too Much Business' does not present identifiable transsexual characters or themes, resulting in an N/A assessment for its portrayal.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1922 film is an original production, not an adaptation of existing source material or a depiction of historical figures. All characters were created for this specific film, meaning there are no pre-established characters whose gender could have been altered.
As an original film from 1922, "Too Much Business" does not have prior source material, historical figures, or previous installments that establish character races. Therefore, no character could have been canonically, historically, or widely established as a different race.
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