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Green Fire (1954)

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Traditional
Viewer Rating
Rating: 6.0
Green Fire poster

Overview

In Colombia, mining engineer Rian Mitchell discovers Carrero, the lost emerald mine of the Conquistadors, but has to contend with notorious local bandit El Moro's gang and with coffee planter Catherine Knowland's love.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Apple TV logoApple TV
Prime Video logoPrime Video
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Bias Dimensions

Political: Leans Right
Diversity: Low

Overview

In Colombia, mining engineer Rian Mitchell discovers Carrero, the lost emerald mine of the Conquistadors, but has to contend with notorious local bandit El Moro's gang and with coffee planter Catherine Knowland's love.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Apple TV logoApple TV
Prime Video logoPrime Video
Powered byJustWatch

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Traditional

Primary

The film implicitly champions individual enterprise and the exploitation of natural resources for economic gain, with an American protagonist driving the solution to local challenges, aligning with right-leaning economic values.

The film features a primarily traditional cast, consistent with its production era, without explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. Its narrative maintains a neutral or positive portrayal of traditional identities, without significant critique or central DEI themes.

Secondary

Green Fire (1954) is an adventure film primarily focused on a heterosexual romance and the pursuit of emeralds. The narrative does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes, resulting in no specific portrayal to evaluate.

Green Fire (1954) is an adventure-romance film centered on emerald mining in Colombia. The story and characters do not include any identifiable transsexual individuals or explore related themes. Therefore, the film has no depiction of transsexual characters or themes.

The film features Catherine Knowland, who is involved in dangerous situations with bandits. However, she is not depicted engaging in or winning close-quarters physical combat against male opponents. The action sequences primarily involve male characters.

Green Fire (1954) is an original film with characters created specifically for its screenplay. There is no prior source material, historical record, or previous adaptation from which character genders could have been established and subsequently altered.

The film "Green Fire" (1954) is an adaptation of a novel by Peter Rainier. There is no evidence that any character, as established in the source material or historical context, was portrayed by an actor of a different race.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

6.0

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
5.9
The Movie Database logo
6.2

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

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