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The new animal farm movie focuses on the dangers of capitalism, not totalitarian USSR
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:20 pm
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:20 pm
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quote:
The final image in George Orwell’s novella Animal Farm is bleak and unforgettable: as the pigs and farmers drunkenly play cards around the dining-room table, the watching animals realise their porcine liberators have become indistinguishable from the human oppressors they replaced.
The moment exposes the lie at the heart of the Marxist promise of utopian equality. Yet a new animated adaptation of Animal Farm, directed by Andy Serkis, offers a strikingly different take.
The film, which spent 14 years in development and struggled to secure a distributor, retells Orwell’s 1945 dystopian classic through the eyes of Lucky, a plucky piglet whose character is invented for the adaptation and voiced by Gaten Matarazzo, the Stranger Things actor.
In this CGI retelling, Serkis, who rose to prominence as Gollum in The Lord of the Rings before turning to directing, has said he wanted to make Orwell’s work “accessible”, not “overtly political”, and suitable for a modern audience.
Corporate corruption
Rather than serving as a critique of totalitarian Soviet Russia, the film shifts its focus towards the dangers of capitalism and corporate corruption.
Serkis has also sought to give the story a more optimistic ending. Explaining why at a round-table discussion at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival last July, he said: “We wanted some hope.”
In the final scenes, Lucky confronts Napoleon, Orwell’s Joseph Stalin figure, voiced incongruously by Seth Rogen, before the animals overthrow their pig leaders and plan for a better future.
When a trailer for Serkis’s Animal Farm was released on Friday night ahead of its cinema release on May 1 next year, it prompted outrage and confusion online, with critics accusing it of abandoning Orwell’s central warning about the impossibility of a Marxist utopia.
Napoleon’s despotic traits appear muted when set against a new billionaire villain, Frieda Pilkington, voiced by Glenn Close, another invention for the film. She spends much of the story plotting to take control of Animal Farm.
The promotional clip shows stylised cartoon animals briefly living in apparent utopia before the pigs’ ideals are corrupted by Frieda, who is depicted driving a high-tech vehicle, which resembles Elon Musk’s Tesla Cybertruck. The producers said any resemblance to Mr Musk’s electric vehicles was accidental.
One user shared the trailer on X, writing: “It’s 2025. And Animal Farm is a movie about communism working, and being ruined by capitalism.” Another remarked: “Hollywood is incapable of critiquing anything other than capitalism, exhibit #13890471.”
Online commentary and reviews from journalists who saw the film at festivals last year prior to its official release have been critical of the tonal shift from Orwell’s bleak satire to what they describe as scatological, family-friendly humour.
Reviewers were particularly scathing about Serkis’s decision to play Napoleon’s power hunger for laughs. In the book, his walking on two legs is sinister. In the film, it is accompanied by flatulence. Peter Debruge, Variety’s critic, wrote that the moment focuses on “amusing the kids and reminding adults how low Serkis will go to get a laugh”.
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:26 pm to hawgfaninc
quote:
: “Hollywood is incapable of critiquing anything other than capitalism,

Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:35 pm to hawgfaninc
I guess Angel Studios is all-in on Marxist propaganda now
This post was edited on 12/14/25 at 5:09 pm
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:36 pm to hawgfaninc
To be clear, if you think animal farm, or anything Orwell ever wrote, is pro-capitalism, you are an idiot.
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:36 pm to Esquire
quote:
Angel Studios
The hero we don’t deserve
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:39 pm to hawgfaninc
It sort of makes sense now that Seth Rogen decided to join this film.
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:39 pm to Jay Are
quote:
To be clear, if you think animal farm, or anything Orwell ever wrote, is pro-capitalism, you are an idiot.
It’s sad that’s your perspective on this
Posted on 12/14/25 at 2:55 pm to hawgfaninc
Idk
Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a take down of Stalin and the Russian Revolution and while yea, this wasn't the intention of his book, id doubt someone as committed to the cause as him would have any issue with someone using any of his works as a critique of capitalism
Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a take down of Stalin and the Russian Revolution and while yea, this wasn't the intention of his book, id doubt someone as committed to the cause as him would have any issue with someone using any of his works as a critique of capitalism
This post was edited on 12/14/25 at 3:04 pm
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:02 pm to WestCoastAg
quote:yes
He was a socialist who HATED Stalin and the cronies of the Russian revolution and wrote this book about them and stated multiple times that he hated how he felt they hurt the socialist cause
animal farm illustrates the perversion of the socialist ideal by the oligarchy
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:05 pm to cgrand
Fwiw I edited my post to more succinctly get at the point that Orwell was no capitalist 
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:12 pm to WestCoastAg
It was a book about the realities of utopianism
It always ends in varying degrees of authoritarianism, up to and including totalitarianism
Socialist utopianism = USSR/North Korea
Crony Capitalist Utopianism = Industrial Revolution US and UK
Mixed Economy Utopianism = China/Nazi Germany (State Capitalist/Corporatist)
The more deeply the culture change required by the "Utopian Vision", the more severe the authority of those enforcing the vision
It always ends in varying degrees of authoritarianism, up to and including totalitarianism
Socialist utopianism = USSR/North Korea
Crony Capitalist Utopianism = Industrial Revolution US and UK
Mixed Economy Utopianism = China/Nazi Germany (State Capitalist/Corporatist)
The more deeply the culture change required by the "Utopian Vision", the more severe the authority of those enforcing the vision
This post was edited on 12/14/25 at 3:14 pm
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:12 pm to WestCoastAg
its a common misinterpretation of animal farm, predominately held by those who havent actually read the book 
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:15 pm to hawgfaninc
Something broke in this country in the 90s though throughout history we have implemented both socialist and communist ideas at the federal and state level state level. Still bugs me when i see stuff like this or the amanda seyfeild comments.
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:21 pm to cgrand
Orwell was a euro socialist, to be sure, but he was no purist
But the running theme in his works was the inevitable horrors of Utopia
He once called 1984 "Utopia as a novel".
But the running theme in his works was the inevitable horrors of Utopia
He once called 1984 "Utopia as a novel".
This post was edited on 12/14/25 at 3:23 pm
Posted on 12/14/25 at 3:56 pm to hawgfaninc
One of the biggest bad effects of capitalism is it creates such a successful and comfortable society that ungrateful ingrates think a system like communism would actually work
Posted on 12/14/25 at 4:34 pm to Jay Are
quote:
To be clear, if you think animal farm, or anything Orwell ever wrote, is pro-capitalism, you are an idiot.

Posted on 12/14/25 at 4:52 pm to H-Town Tiger
Capitalism ends up with a lot of losers
Posted on 12/14/25 at 5:05 pm to NIH
The alternative ends up with all losers
Posted on 12/14/25 at 5:55 pm to hawgfaninc
What was the line in Antman Quantumania about socialism being a 'charged word'?
"You'd know if you watched the movie!"
Eff off, I can look it up on the internet, you muppets. My POINT is that it's baked in with how the entire industry views the world.
Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a WARNING, not a 'how-to' manual.
"You'd know if you watched the movie!"
Eff off, I can look it up on the internet, you muppets. My POINT is that it's baked in with how the entire industry views the world.
Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a WARNING, not a 'how-to' manual.
Posted on 12/14/25 at 6:03 pm to cgrand
quote:This is bullshite. Orwell was a socialist when he was younger but gradually rejected it as he grew older.
He was a socialist who HATED Stalin and the cronies of the Russian revolution and wrote this book about them and stated multiple times that he hated how he felt they hurt the socialist cause
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