Animal Farm is a 1954 British-American adult animated drama and propaganda film commissioned by the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).[1][2][3] and directed by both John Halas and Joy Batchelor, and produced by Halas and Batchelor, based on the 1945 novel of the same name by George Orwell. It was the first British animated feature (Water for Firefighting and Handling Ships, two feature-length wartime training films, were produced earlier, but did not receive a formal cinema release). Although the film was a financial disaster, it quickly became a staple of classrooms in America and Britain.[4][5][6]
The film rights for a movie adaptation of Animal Farm were bought from Orwell's widow after she was approached by agents working for the Office of Policy Coordination (OPC), a branch of the CIA that dealt with the use of culture to combat communism.[7]There are many differences between the animated movie and the original book, changes which were made on request by the Americans to solidify the anti-socialist message of the film.
Maurice Denham provided the voice for all the animals in the film.[8]
Contents
- 1 Plot
- 2 Production
- 3 Release
- 4 Reception
- 5 Differences between the movie and the book
- 6 Comic strip adaptation
- 7 In popular culture
- 8 Home media
- 9 See also
- 10 References
- 11 External links
Plot[]
Manor Farm is a formerly prosperous farm that has fallen on hard times, while suffering under the now-ineffective leadership of its aggressive and drunken owner, Mr. Jones. One night, Old Major, the prize pig and the second-oldest animal on the farm, calls all of the animals on the farm together for a meeting, where he decries their abuse and unhappiness under Jones, encouraging the animals to oust him, while emphasizing that they must hold true to their convictions after they have gained freedom. With that, he teaches the animals a revolutionary song, "Beasts of England", before collapsing dead mid-song, much to their horror.
The next morning, Mr. Jones neglects to feed the animals for breakfast, and they decide to break into his storehouse to help themselves. When Mr. Jones wakes up, before threatening them with his whip, the animals revolt and drive him away from the farm, eventually renaming it "Animal Farm". Several of Jones' acquaintances in the surrounding village rally against them, but are beaten back after a fierce fight. The animals begin destroying every trace of the farmer's influence, starting with the weapons used against them. A subsequent investigation of the farmhouse leads them to decide against living there, though one of the head pigs, a greedy Saddleback boar named Napoleon, takes interest in the abandoned house. He finds a litter of puppies left motherless and begins to raise them in secret.
The Commandments of Animalism are written on a wall of the barn to illustrate their community's laws. The most important is the last, stating that: "All animals are equal." All the animals work, but the workhorse, Boxer, and his friend Benjamin the donkey, who is also the film's protagonist, put in extra work. Meanwhile, Snowball attempts to teach the animals about reading and writing. Food becomes plentiful and the farm runs smoothly. The pigs elevate themselves to positions of leadership, and set aside special food items "by virtue of their brainwork".
As winter sets in, Snowball announces his idea for a windmill, while Napoleon opposes it. As Snowball defiantly swears to lower the animals' workdays, Napoleon has his dogs hunt down and slaughter Snowball. Afterwards, Napoleon declares that Snowball is a traitor justify making himself the new leader, along with Squealer as his propagandist, and makes changes. Meetings will no longer be held, but instead, he will make the decisions. The animals eventually work harder because of the promise of an easier life, once the windmill is completed.
During this time, the pigs also decide to alter their own laws. "No animal shall sleep in beds", is changed to "No animal shall sleep in beds with sheets", when the pigs are discovered to have been sleeping in the old farmhouse. Before long, Napoleon's greed drives him to negotiate with a local trader named Mr. Whymper for a supply of both jellies and jams. The price is all of the hens' eggs. When the hens discover this, they attempt to revolt by throwing their eggs at the pigs during an attempted seizure by force. To instill fear, Napoleon holds a "trial" where a sheep and duck join the hens accused as traitors. They are taken outside and butchered by the dogs, with their blood used to add the words "without cause" to the end of the commandment "No animal shall kill another animal." Napoleon bans "Beasts of England", declaring that the revolution is complete and the dream of Animal Farm has finally been realized. He then threatens to execute any animal caught singing it.
Growing jealous of Whymper's financial success due to his trading with Animal Farm, a hostile group of pirate farmers attack the farm. Mr. Jones, shunned for his failure and drunkenness, uses dynamite to blow up the windmill with himself inside it. Though the animals win the battle, they do so at a great cost of lives and Boxer is wounded. Boxer continues working until he collapses one night while working on rebuilding the windmill. Napoleon sends for a van to take Boxer away, which Benjamin recognizes as the "death wagon" from Whymper's glue factory. Afterwards, a supply of alcohol is secretly delivered. At the same time, Squealer delivers a phony speech, claiming to have been near Boxer's side at his deathbed, and states that his last words were to glorify Napoleon. The upset animals see through the propaganda and recognize how oppressive Napoleon has become, but are driven away by the snarling dogs before anything can be done. That night, the pigs toast to Boxer's memory by consuming whiskey they bought with his life.
Years pass and Napoleon, through civilizing his fellow pigs, has expanded the neighboring farms into an enterprise. The pigs start to resemble humans, as they walk upright, carry whips, drink alcohol and wear clothes. The Commandments are reduced to a single phrase: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others". This change finally spurs the oppressed animals of the nearby farms to gather at Animal Farm to decide upon their future. Napoleon holds a dinner party for a delegation of outside pigs, who congratulate him on having the hardest-working and lowest-consuming animals in the country. Napoleon gives a toast to a future where pigs own and operate farms everywhere. Benjamin, overhearing the conversation, briefly imagines that all the pigs have taken on the likeness of Mr. Jones.
Realizing that their living situation is even worse than it was before the revolution, the animals storm the farmhouse to overthrow Napoleon and avenge the deaths of their comrades including Snowball and Boxer. Napoleon tries to summon his guard dogs, but they are too drunk to respond, while the pigs in attendance are too scared to face the invading horde. The animals trample Napoleon and the pigs to death before reclaiming the farm, with Benjamin standing in grim triumph at their head.
Production[]
The animation historian Brian Sibley doubts that the team responsible was aware of the source of the funding initiating the project, which came from the Central Intelligence Agency to further the creation of anti-communist art.[1][2]
Halas and Batchelor were awarded the contract to make the feature in November 1951 and it was completed in April 1954. The production employed a staff of about 80 animators.[9]
Release[]
Much of the pre-release promotion for the film in the UK focused on it being a British film instead of a product of the Hollywood studios.[10]
Scenes from Animal Farm, along with the 1954 TV program Nineteen Eighty-Four, were featured in "The Two Winstons", the final episode of Simon Schama's program A History of Britain broadcast June 18, 2002.
A year later on October 21, 2012, the Turner Classic Movies channel debuted the film, transferred from an original 35mm Technicolor release print owned by the Museum of Modern Art Department of Film, for the first time on television in a special hosted by Robert Osborne and Jerry Beck dedicated to rare animated films, including Fleischer Studios' Gulliver's Travels, Mr. Bug Goes to Town, Lotte Reiniger's The Adventures of Prince Achmed, the UPA cartoons and the silent cartoons of 1907 to 1932 of the New York Studios. and again on the channel in October 2014.
Reception[]
Film critic C. A. Lejeune wrote at the time: "I salute Animal Farm as a fine piece of work… [the production team] have made a film for the eye, ear, heart and mind".[11] Matyas Seiber's score and Maurice Denham's vocal talent have been praised specifically (Denham provided every voice and animal noise in the film). The animation style has been described as "Disney-turned-serious".[12] The movie holds a 69% score at Rotten Tomatoes based on 13 critic reviews.[13]
Some criticism was levelled at the altered ending, with one paper reporting, "Orwell would not have liked this one change, with its substitution of commonplace propaganda for his own reticent, melancholy satire".[12]
The film took 15 years to recover its budget but earned profits in the next 5 years.[14]
Differences between the movie and the book[]
- In the book, Jones is married and has helpers on his farm, while in the movie, Jones is not married and is the only human on the farm.
- In the book, Old Major teaches the animals the song 'Beasts of England,' which has lyrics. Even though the animals do sing in the movie, there are no lyrics and it is just animal noises.
- In the movie, Old Major dies in front of the animals while they were singing 'Beasts of England', while in the book, he dies a few days later and was buried.
- In the book, it was a cow who breaks open the door to the feed shed, while it was a number of animals in the movie.
- The animals' rebellion takes place in the morning in the movie, while it takes place in midday in the book.
- In the movie, after Snowball is banished, Napoleon states that he will make the farm's decisions from then on. In the book, it was a committee of pigs who decided them from then on.
- Jones tries to retake the farm, with the help of the other farmers, soon after being overthrown in the movie.
- Bluebell and Pincher were adapted out from the 1954 film. However, Jessie still remained in the film.
- Napoleon still finds the orphaned puppies in the house when the animals decide to look around, but it is unknown who their parents were. Though one scene shows a dog, that looked similar to Jessie, dead, implying that Jessie was the mother of the puppies. It is not known whether Bluebell was the father of the puppies as he was not shown or mentioned.
- When Snowball is chased out of the farm by Napoleon's dogs, it is implied that they killed him offscreen, while in the book, they just chase him away.
- While the other farmers try to retake the farm again in the movie, Jones takes some dynamite to the windmill and blows it up. In the book, the windmill gets destroyed twice: once by a storm, and once by the other farmers during the second attempt to retake the farm.
- In the movie, Jones is killed when he remains in the windmill when it gets blown up - possibly due to the fact that he was drunk. In the book, he dies in an alcoholics' home in another part of the country.
- At the end of the book, the pigs invite the other farmers for a party. In the movie, only pigs from neighbouring farms are invited.
- In the book, the animals realise that the pigs have become like the humans after a game of cards ends up in an argument. In the movie, it is Benjamin the donkey who realises this, when he witnesses Napoleon instructing the invited pigs on how to run their farms. He even briefly has a hallucination of them taking on the likeness of Mr. Jones.
- In the movie, Benjamin unites the animals and they storm the farmhouse, managing to kill Napoleon and overthrowing the pigs in the process. This never happens in the book.
Comic strip adaptation[]
In 1954 Harold Whitaker, one of the film's animators, adapted the film into a comic strip published in various British regional newspapers.[15]
In popular culture[]
The band The Clash used an image from the film on their 45-RPM single "English Civil War".[16] The virtual band Gorillaz used footage from the film behind Benjamin Clementine in an animated elevator in the 2017 music video single "Hallelujah Money".
Home media[]
Animal Farm was released on Super 8 film in the 1970s, and received several home video releases in the UK and in America. American VHS releases were produced by Media Home Entertainment, Vestron Video, Avid Video, Wham! USA Entertainment, and Burbank Video. Universal Pictures Home Entertainment released the film on DVD in the UK in 2003. In 2004, Home Vision Entertainment (HVE) released a 'Special Edition' DVD of the movie in the United States, including a documentary hosted by Tony Robinson.[17]
Coincidentally with HVE's release, Digiview Productions, which had assumed the movie was in the public domain, released it on DVD. However, the estate of Halas & Batchelor, who kept the copyright to the movie, ended up filing a lawsuit against Digiview Productions, and they won the lawsuit, resulting in Digiview filing for bankruptcy; it was later revived as Digiview Entertainment. In 2014 a 60th anniversary Blu-Ray was released in the UK by Network Distributing.[18] There are currently no plans to release a Blu-Ray of the film in the United States.
See also[]
Template:Portal
- List of British films of 1954
- Halas and Batchelor
- List of American films of 1954
- Office of Policy Coordination
- Information Research Department
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Orwell Subverted, Daniel Leab, p.11
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Sibley, Brian. Audio commentary on UK 2003 'Special Edition' DVD release of Animal Farm
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Maurice Denham - IMDb
- ↑ Karl Cohen (7 March 2003). "The cartoon that came in from the cold | Culture", The Guardian (London).
- ↑ "Animal Farm trailer".
- ↑ Lejeune, C. A. "At the films: Pig Business", The Observer, January 1955.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Author unknown, "Animal Farm on the screen", The Manchester Guardian, 1955.
- ↑ "Tomatometer on Animal Farm".
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedVariety
- ↑ "Harold Whitaker".
- ↑ "An Ezine for record collectors and enthusiasts". Endless Groove.The band Pink Floyd partially based their album animals off the book and used footage from the 1954 film for several music videos from the album.
- ↑ Amazon.com
- ↑ [1]
External links[]
Template:Wikiquote
- Animal Farm on IMDb
- Animal Farm at the TCM Movie Database
- Template:Bcdb title
- Animal Farm at Rotten Tomatoes
- Short British Pathe film on the making of the cartoon
- How the CIA brought Animal Farm to the screen
- Excerpt