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Average teenager Corey Anders finds an unusual-looking bottle on the beach, when he opens it a beautiful genie named Jeannie emerges.
Average teenager Corey Anders finds an unusual-looking bottle on the beach, when he opens it a beautiful genie named Jeannie emerges.
The film's core conflict revolves around apolitical situational comedy, focusing on the humorous clash between magic and mundane life, rather than explicitly promoting any specific political ideology. While some themes could be interpreted through a political lens, the narrative primarily aims for entertainment and balances elements that could be seen as traditional with playful subversion.
The movie features traditional casting with a predominantly white ensemble, and its narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities without engaging in explicit critiques or centering DEI themes.
The 1960s sitcom 'Jeannie' (I Dream of Jeannie) does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. As a product of its era and genre, its narrative focuses on heterosexual relationships, fantasy, and comedy, with no elements related to queer identity present in its storylines.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The animated series "Jeannie" (1973) features the titular character, Jeannie, who remains female. The male lead from the original live-action series, Tony Nelson, is replaced by a new, original character named Corey Anders, not a gender-swapped version of Nelson. No established characters from the source material undergo a gender change.
The animated series "Jeannie" (1973) is a spin-off of the live-action "I Dream of Jeannie." The titular character, Jeannie, maintains her established race from the original series. Other main characters are new creations for the animated show and thus do not represent race swaps of existing characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources