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Super Crooks (2021)
Johnny Bolt recruits a group of ragtag supervillains for one last heist. Their target: A ruthless super-powered crime boss. What can go wrong?
Johnny Bolt recruits a group of ragtag supervillains for one last heist. Their target: A ruthless super-powered crime boss. What can go wrong?
The film's central subject matter of super-powered criminals performing heists is inherently apolitical, and its narrative focuses on individual ambition and a morally ambiguous world rather than promoting specific progressive or conservative ideologies.
The series features a visibly diverse ensemble cast, including characters of various races and genders, without explicitly recasting traditionally white roles. The narrative focuses on a supervillain heist and does not explicitly critique traditional identities or center strong DEI themes.
Super Crooks features a central and positively depicted same-sex relationship between Kasey and Sammy, portrayed with dignity and normalcy. Their queer identity is not a source of conflict or ridicule, contributing to an overall affirming representation of LGBTQ+ characters within the narrative.
The series features Praetorian and Gladiatrix, both female characters with superhuman strength, who repeatedly engage in and win direct physical confrontations against multiple male opponents, including guards and other super-powered individuals.
There is insufficient information available to evaluate the film's portrayal of transsexual characters or themes. The provided details do not include any plot points or character arcs that would allow for an assessment of positive, negative, or neutral depictions.
The 2021 anime 'Super Crooks' is an adaptation of the comic book series by Mark Millar and Leinil Francis Yu. A review of the main characters in both the source material and the adaptation reveals no instances where a character's established gender was changed for the screen.
The anime series "Super Crooks" adapts the comic book characters without altering their established racial depictions. No major character canonically established as one race in the source material is portrayed as a different race in the adaptation.
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