New Animated Version of Animal Farm?
Hmm, I really don’t know about this one: an animated adaptation of George Orwell’s Animal Farm as a sort of Ice Age-ish comedy adventure? One commenter on YouTube says, “This movie is 100% gonna end with a random dance party scene with the pigs and humans dancing to something like Uptown Funk” and another suggests that “this is like a bad Family Guy joke from 2007 escaped into the real world”.
From a review in IGN:
Gone are the specific allusions to the Russian Revolution and the stinging critique of Stalinism laced into Orwell’s “all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others” allegory. Instead, Serkis paints the terrifying rise of porcine dictator Napoleon (Seth Rogen, playing brilliantly to and against type) in a broader brush for a modern era of big business run amok. In toning down the more graphic elements of its descent into totalitarianism and simplifying the depths of its commentary, the director and performance-capture pioneer trades a dystopian tone for something a little more uplifting. It’s a fun movie with some creative visual choices and a great cast, but it’s also hard not to feel like it lost some teeth on its journey from the page to the screen.
This Variety review isn’t much more encouraging:
Serkis’ 21st-century update dilutes Orwell’s political allegory in favor of what passes for something more “audience friendly”: His approach adopts the celebrity voices, cutesy character designs and antic, mile-a-minute energy of big-studio American toons. The result isn’t nearly as polished as Illumination or DreamWorks movies, but “good enough for government work,” as the saying goes.




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Making humans the corrupting force is so lame. The whole point is that the willingness is oppress one another is in all of us, and we have to fight against it. Being seduced into it by the already corrupt humans seems like it will remove a lot of the culpability for the betrayal from the pigs.
This looks so so atrociously bad. Serkis is on record saying he didn’t want to make it too political. That’s like DeMille saying he wanted to keep religion out of the Ten Comandments or
That Angel logo in the thumbnail is for Angel Studios, a conservative Christian movie studio. From Wikipedia:
I hadn't heard about Sound of Freedom; um, yikes? "...the disappointingly un-juicy Sound of Freedom pretends to be a real movie, like a 'pregnancy crisis center' masquerading as a bona fide health clinic."
And just checking the timeline, it seems as though the film premiered in June and Angel bought the distribution rights to it just this month. So unless they've made changes, they didn't have any influence on the film itself.
Who was asking for this? Why is this IP that someone thought would have a built-in audience if you stripped it of its animating force? Why even make this?!? I'm far too worked up about this, but dumbing down Animal Farm when we're literally living through Animal Farm seems like a bad, dumb omen.
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