Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
A happily married woman lets her catty friends talk her into divorce when her husband strays.
A happily married woman lets her catty friends talk her into divorce when her husband strays.
The film's narrative, despite its focus on female relationships and social critique, ultimately champions the restoration of traditional marriage and family values as its central resolution, aligning it with right-leaning themes.
The movie 'The Women' features an all-female, predominantly white cast, which aligns with traditional casting practices for its time and subject matter. The narrative explores the social lives and relationships of wealthy women, critiquing aspects of high society and male infidelity, but does not explicitly challenge or negatively portray traditional identities within a DEI framework.
The Women (1939) features an all-female cast but does not include any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on heterosexual relationships, marriage, and divorce within high society, offering no portrayal of queer identity or experience.
The film "The Women" (1939) features an all-female cast and focuses exclusively on the social lives and marital issues of cisgender women. There are no identifiable transsexual characters or themes present in the narrative, nor does it engage with transgender identity in any capacity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "The Women" (1939) is an adaptation of a play by the same name, both famously featuring an entirely female cast. All characters in the source material were female, and they remain female in the film adaptation. No male characters from the source were recast as female, nor were any female characters recast as male.
The 1939 film "The Women" is an adaptation of a 1936 play, featuring an all-female, all-white cast. All characters portrayed in the film align with the implicit racial depiction of the characters in the original source material, with no instances of a character established as one race being portrayed as another.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources