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All Her Fault (2025)
In Chicago, Marissa Irvine arrives at 14 Arthur Avenue, expecting to pick up her young son Milo from his first playdate with a boy at his new school. But the woman who answers the door isn't a mother she recognizes. She isn't the nanny. She doesn't have Milo. And so begins every parent's worst nightmare.
In Chicago, Marissa Irvine arrives at 14 Arthur Avenue, expecting to pick up her young son Milo from his first playdate with a boy at his new school. But the woman who answers the door isn't a mother she recognizes. She isn't the nanny. She doesn't have Milo. And so begins every parent's worst nightmare.
The film is a mystery thriller focused on a child's disappearance, exploring the personal and social pressures on working mothers within an affluent suburban setting, without explicitly promoting any specific political ideology or offering an ideological solution.
The movie features visible diversity in its cast and characters, including racial diversity and portrayals of disability and recovery, which are presented as integral character traits within the mystery-thriller plot. The narrative itself does not explicitly center on DEI themes or critique traditional identities.
Based on available information, 'All Her Fault' does not feature any explicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The main and recurring cast do not include queer individuals, and no plot elements or relationships involving the LGBTQ+ community are described. All identified relationships are heterosexual.
The film 'All Her Fault' does not include any transsexual characters or themes. The story centers on a suburban mystery thriller involving a child's disappearance and the unraveling of family secrets, with no narrative elements or character arcs related to transsexual identities or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The miniseries 'All Her Fault' adapts the 2021 novel by Andrea Mara. All named characters, including Marissa Irvine, Peter Irvine, and Detective Alcaras, maintain the same gender on screen as established in the source material, with no discrepancies noted.
The film adapts an Irish novel, shifting the setting to suburban Chicago. While some characters' nationalities or specific ethnicities change, no character canonically established as one race in the source material is portrayed as a different race in the film. New characters introduced in the adaptation are not considered race swaps.
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