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Animal Farm (1954, US-UK)
In Halas and Batchelor's intelligent, British-American
adult-oriented production - it was the first feature-length animated
film (in general release) made in England; the animation was a visualization
of George Orwell's "memorable fable" - a political and allegorical
1945 novella about farm animals (all voiced in the film by Maurice
Denham), who suffered abuse and rebelled against their cruel and
sadistic human owner - but their new, victorious revolutionary socialistic
government led by a dictatorial, Stalinist leader became even more
tyrannical; the semi-propagandistic, politically-oriented film was
funded by the US' CIA to stir up anti-Communist fervor during the
Cold War; in the process, the book's original pessimistic ending
that equated the pigs with their human masters of old was modified
with an altered ending:
- at the previously-thriving Manor Farm in the
English countryside in the springtime, a farmyard's abused animals
(representing Bolshevik and liberal revolutionaries) were being
neglected and unfed by their mean and sadistic owner Mr. Jones
(representing Tsar Nicholas II of Russia); the dissolute and irresponsible
farmer had become depressed and miserable after a failed lawsuit,
and often turned to drink at the Red Lion pub in town, before returning
to the farm
- all of the disgruntled animals called for a secret
meeting in the barn led by wise old prized boar-hog Old Major (representing
Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin), to discuss the abusive, parasitical,
and exploitative conditions at the farm that they were receiving
from the farmer, his wife, and his lazy workers; the meeting was
attended by the strong, old and hard-working Boxer (a horse), his
young friend Benjamin (a donkey), two other pigs: Snowball and
Napoleon amongst other pigs, and many other animals
Boxer and Benjamin
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Old Major
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(l to r): Napoleon and Snowball, Amongst the Other Pigs
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- the aging Old Major (before his own
predicted death) encouraged the other animals to overthrow their
tyrant owner to gain their freedom, to restore prosperity and equality,
and have better living conditions; and although they would be taking
control and acquiring Manor Farm's wealth, he exhorted them to
refrain from adopting Jones' human vices, and to treat each other
as equals
- the animals all responded in solidarity with their
own supportive cheers via a new revolutionary song ("Beasts
of England") that they had been taught (composed of oinks,
clucks, barks, crows, moos, baas, brays, quacks, and whinnies),
as Old Major suffered a major heart attack, collapsed and died
- the next morning after realizing that the inebriated
Jones missed their feeding time, the infuriated animals determinedly
broke into the locked-up supplies of grain and feed in the barn's
storehouse; the noise alerted Jones who wielded a whip to stave
off the animals, but then he was charged at, chased and driven away;
he raced to the local pub to gather reinforcements from neighboring
farmers with pitchforks and other implements to recapture his farm;
the fighting was fierce, due to Snowball's organized offensive
tactics and strategies, and the humans were ultimately forced to flee
- the animals made a bonfire out of all the
weaponized implements that Jones had used to restrain, control
or kill them: a meat cleaver, reins, harnesses, shearing scissors,
yokes, an axe, chains, stirrups with spurs, and whips
- the devious, sly, and aspiring Napoleon, one of
the head pigs, led the victorious animals into Jones' abandoned
house to explore, and facetiously agreed that it was off-limits
and not suitable for animals, although he was definitely interested
in living there; he later returned and secretly adopted and raised
a large motherless litter of white puppies
- Snowball (representing Leon Trosky), the first leader
of the new society (dubbed "ANIMAL FARM" - MANOR was crossed
out), set up a new code of conduct (known as "Animalism")
in which the animals would all be equal, free, and happy; five established
Commandments or laws of the community were painted on the wall of
the barn, including:
- "No Animal Shall Sleep in a Bed"
- "No Animal Shall Drink Alcohol"
- "Four Legs Good Two Legs Bad"
- "No Animal Shall Kill Another Animal"
- "All Animals Are Equal"
- all of the animals cooperatively took over the management
and running of the farm; they all worked together and through the
summer months, the farm lands became very productive and successful,
especially due to the tireless efforts of workhorse Boxer and Benjamin
- the elite leadership class of pigs, including Snowball,
Napoleon and his aide Fat Pig Squealer, were pleased with the plentiful
harvest, and held a meeting to discuss the future;
a resolution was proposed by Snowball to have white doves spread
their victorious revolutionary message ("of peace and plenty")
to other farms, to encourage rising up against the oppression of
the masters; contented animals disregarded the idea of an uprising,
but downtrodden creatures who were being abused were eagerly interested
and receptive
- Snowball also attempted to educate the animals
through learning how to read and being taught basic mathematics; with
the approach of winter (with colder weather and food shortages),
Snowball also suggested
building a windmill as a way to generate and produce energy (electricity,
heat, and light) to improve the animals' living conditions; however,
Snowball's plan required that the animal's workload
increase while their food intake decreased
- the pigs Napoleon (with his second-in-command Fat
Pig Squealer) secretly plotted against Snowball, with the backing
of Napoleon's grown-up litter of powerful and obedient black guard
dogs that served as his powerful security force; Napoleon criticized,
heckled and voted down Snowball's plan as fanciful and nonsensical,
and then ordered his trained, vicious and snarling dogs to attack
and chase Snowball out into the snow and maul him to death
- afterwards, Napoleon stepped up to be the new controlling,
self-proclaimed leader of Animal Farm, with Fat Pig Squealer as
his mouthpiece and second-in-command; he denounced Snowball as
a traitor (by falsely claiming that he was planning to bring back
Mr. Jones), and declared that there would be no more collective
"useless meetings"; he ruled that with a committee composed of the privileged pigs (who
were leading a life of leisure), he would serve as the sole animal
to look after everyone and make all the decisions for the community
The New Pig Leadership Enforced with Napoleon's Guard Dogs
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Fat Pig Squealer and Napoleon
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Snowball's Co-Opted Plan for a Windmill
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- Napoleon co-opted Snowball's energy-producing
idea of a windmill as his own; the pigs would supervise the exhausting work to be conducted
by all the other lower animals from dawn to dusk; the pig leadership
also declared that they should be fed more to increase their brainpower,
while the work animals would receive fewer rations
- one of the laws were
altered to the pigs' benefit, and now had an addendum, after
Napoleon (and other pigs) were discovered sleeping in the beds in
the farmhouse by Boxer and Benjamin, a revised law appeared: "No
Animal Shall Sleep in a Bed With Sheets"
- in the town's pub, the sly Mr. Whymper, a local
town trader, heard about the possibility of difficult food shortages
at the farm, and decided to visit; he negotiated with the greedy
Napoleon to sell jellies and jams, in exchange for the farm's milk
and the hen-chickens' entire supply of eggs; the irate egg-layers
who felt they were being unfairly robbed, decided to initiate an
uprising; they rebelled by dropping their eggs from the rafters
onto the pigs; the enraged "beloved
leader" Napoleon summoned his pack of dogs to attack
- a 'show trial' (a Stalinist purge) was held for the alleged, convicted
traitors (the hens, plus a sheep and a duck), who were forced to
confess to their crimes (and charged with being "in league with
Jones and Snowball") before they were executed by his pack of dogs (off-screen)
- another commandment was amended (with the blood of the dead): "No
Animal Shall Kill Another Animal Without Cause"
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"Show Trial" Followed by Execution of the Guilty
by the Dogs
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- afterwards, the dictatorial Napoleon announced that
the revolution was over and complete, and should be forgotten -
and therefore the animals' revolutionary song was banned "under
penalty of death"
- as a result of Mr. Whymper's increased wealth due
to his "brisk" business with the animals, other farmers in the neighborhood
became envious of the trading; they marched on the farm to raid it and subjugate
the animals once again; the uninvited, shunned and drunken Jones
joined them and destroyed the windmill (and himself) with dynamite;
during the chaotic attack, the humans were finally repelled by
the pack of dogs, but many animals lay dead, and Boxer had been
shot in the right leg; it was a sad day for the animals
- over the next few years, the windmill was painstakingly
rebuilt by the work animals led by the exhausted Boxer and Benjamin,
as the gluttonous, autocratic Napoleon grew more and more obese
in the farmhouse; a new generation of pigs, Napoleon's offspring,
only knew how to play without any work ethic
The Lazy Obese Pigs
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The Gluttonous, Presiding Leader Napoleon With Medals
On His Chest
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- when the exhausted and elderly Boxer was seriously
wounded by a heavy block of rock that fell onto him during the
windmill's re-construction, Benjamin was seriously upset, but also
knew that Boxer was due for "a well-earned rest and retirement";
however, Napoleon and Squealer privately sold Boxer to Mr. Whymper's
glue factory; when Boxer was taken away in a strange truck (not
a veterinarian's vehicle or ambulance), the suspicious Benjamin
protested and raced after the "death wagon," but failed to stop
Boxer's slaughter
- Napoleon received a case
of whiskey as payment for Boxer; after drinking the whiskey, another
law had to be modified on the barn's wall: "No Animal
Shall Drink Alcohol to Excess"
- after Boxer disappeared forever, Fat Pig Squealer
delivered a dishonest speech and fake eulogy to Boxer, asserting
that he was at Boxer's bedside when he died naturally; he claimed
that Boxer praised and glorified Napoleon's dictatorial
leadership with his last words: ("Forward
comrades, long live Napoleon"), although the animals all
knew that the pigs had betrayed their revolution
- as the film was concluding, more years went by and the windmill was
completed, but the ascendant, thriving pigs still had unquestioned
power over all the other animals whose lives had
not improved; a barbed wire fence surrounded the farm's compound,
and the entrance gate was guarded by dogs: (Narrator: "The animals'
revolution was only dimly remembered. Outwardly Animal Farm appeared
prosperous, but the animals themselves were no better off, with
the exception of the pigs, and their supreme leader, Napoleon")
Guarded Farm Entrance with Barbed Wire Fence
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Portraits of Glorified Leader Everywhere
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Delegations of Pigs at the Farm to Celebrate "The New Era"
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- similar to their human counterparts
before them, the pigs began to walk upright, dress in human clothing,
drink whiskey, treat the lower animals as slaves, and spread their
prosperous pig-run and pig-owned 'enterprises' (with the motto
'more work and less food') throughout the country; 'Animal Farm'
became a showplace for delegations of pigs that arrived to celebrate
"the new era" and emulate its success
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Benjamin's Protest About the Only Commandment -
The Animals Across the Land Marched To Animal Farm to Unite, Protest, and Resist
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- the animal leader Benjamin protested loudly that
there was now only one law on the side of the barn, a modified
Commandment: "All
Animals Are Equal but Some Animals Are More Equal than Others";
Benjamin envisioned that the pigs had become like their original
human oppressor, Mr. Jones
- the indignant lower animals were again doing more
work and eating less; they knew that they must unite and gather
at Animal Farm from all directions, and must
rise up and revolt against their false utopian world - as
the narrator (Gordon Heath) summarized with the film's final narrated
words: "To the animals, it now seemed that their world, which
may or may not some day become a happy place to live in, was worse
than ever for ordinary creatures, and another moment had come when
they must do something about it..."
- the animals vindictively marched on the Jones' farmhouse,
broke through barriers, smashed Napoleon's portrait, and trampled
Napoleon and his pig cohorts to death before reclaiming the farm
and overthrowing the autocracy; Napoleon's drunken guard dogs couldn't
be summoned to rescue him; the animals optimistically hoped that
their counter-revolution would create a happier world
once again
The Film's Altered Ending From the
Book
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Counter-Revolution: The Storming of the Farm House,
Led by Benjamin
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The Overthrow of the Pigs
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Napoleon's Smashed Portrait as He Was Trampled
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The Victorious Animals
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Run-down Manor Farm
Drunken Mr. Jones
Old Major Addressing All the Other Animals at a Secret Meeting
Animals Singing A Revolution Song
Jones With a Whip, Fighting Off the Animals in the Feed Storeroom
Bonfire to Destroy Implements of Control
One of the Commandments Painted on the Side of the Barn
"ANIMAL FARM"
Increased Productivity of the Farm
Snowball's Plan to Produce Energy From a Windmill
Napoleon's Vicious Guard Dogs Chased and Killed Snowball
The Pigs Supervised the Hard Work of the Other Animals to Build a Windmill
Hard-Working Boxer and Benjamin
Napoleon (and the Other Pigs) Slept in the Farmhouse Beds - Napoleon Also
Wore Clothes
Rewritten Commandment
Mr. Whymper
Attack on the Farm by Envious Neighbors
The Dynamited Windmill
Boxer's Serious Accident, Upsetting Benjamin
Boxer Taken Away to Glue-Factory in "Death Wagon"
Fat Pig Squealer's Fake Eulogy for Boxer
The Pigs' Praise of Their Supreme Leader Napoleon
Benjamin's Hallucination - The Pigs Had Become Like their
Human Oppressor, Mr. Jones
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