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That's It

That's It

2008

Director

Matheus Souza

Runtime

80 minutes

Average Rating

No ratings yet

Synopsis

Girl is decided to leave her boyfriend and to runaway to an unknown place. Before she leaves, she decides to meet up with him, but they have only one hour to make a very funny balance of their lives.

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Diversity & Representation

Overall Score

5.3/10

Fair


Category Breakdown

LGBTQ+ Representation

Fair

The narrative centers on a heterosexual romantic dissolution. There is no explicit evidence of queer identities or non-cisnormative narratives within the central conflict.

Gender Representation

Fair

The film highlights female agency by making the protagonist the primary driver of the plot. She dictates the terms of her separation rather than remaining a passive participant.

Racial & Ethnic Diversity

Fair

As a Brazilian production, the film exists within a multi-ethnic context. However, the narrative focuses more on generational issues than explicit racial intersectionality.

Religious & Cultural Diversity

Good

The story prioritizes individualistic liberation over traditional social stability. It deconstructs contemporary norms through a protagonist who rejects established familial and social structures.

Disability Representation

Minimal

There is no evidence of disability, neurodivergence, or chronic illness being central to the character development or the narrative arc.

Strengths

  • The film centers on female agency, allowing the protagonist to drive the plot through her own decisive choices.
  • It offers a deconstruction of traditional social and familial norms through a lens of individualistic liberation.

Areas for Improvement

  • The narrative lacks explicit engagement with LGBTQ+ themes or non-cisnormative identities.
  • There is a lack of visible racial intersectionality or specific focus on diverse demographic representation.

AI Analysis

That's It functions as a character-driven study of individual agency and generational transition. It avoids large-scale systemic commentary in favor of a localized, personal dialogue between two people. The film's strength lies in its subversion of romantic tropes. By centering the plot on a woman's decisive choice to abandon her life, it grants her a level of autonomy often missing in traditional rom-coms. However, the film lacks visible engagement with diverse identities. The focus remains narrow, prioritizing the specific fears and issues of a single generation rather than a broader demographic spectrum.

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