Product Information
Product Details: Animal Farm (1954)
- Edition:
- DVD . See other editions
- MPAA Rating:
- Unrated
- Release Date:
- 11/02/2004
- UPC:
- 037429197424
- Directed by:
- John Halas
Synopsis: Animal Farm (1954)
Synopis: Adapted from George Orwell's satire, this full-length animated film uses animals to depict the flaws in political systems, as the animals of Manor Farm rebel against their cruel master and try to establish a prosperous new regime, only to learn that power will always corrupt.Features: Animal Farm (1954)
Features: DVD Features:Region 1
Keep Case
Full Frame - 1.33
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - 1. Brian Sibley - Film Historian
Featurette - 1. DOWN ON THE FARM
Text/Photo Galleries:
Liner Notes - 1. By Author And Art Historian Karl Cohen
Scenes as told through original storyboards
Yahoo! Shoppers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed:
-
33% also viewed
Ferngully: the Last Rainforest (1992)
When Chrysta the magical tree fairy comes across the terrible monster machines that are eating the forest, she accidentally shrinks a construction worker to fairy size. Once s... more
$15 - $16
User Reviews: Animal Farm
-
Political correctness
, November 13, 2004Reviewer: Marc - See all Marc's reviews -
Very Good Movie
, February 15, 2001Reviewer: panther122289 - See all panther122289's reviewsThis Movie is Mainly about the uprising and downfall of a Dictatorship and how to give power to some one can only be very bad and take him to his own downfall
Compare New Prices: Animal Farm
| Store | Price / Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| $12.99 |
Calculate Total Price
Price
+ Tax + Shipping
= Total Price
|
Go to Store
|
|
| $4.99 |
Go to Store
|
||
| ModernRock.com | $17.03 |
Go to Store
|
|
Compare Used and Refurb Prices: Animal Farm
| Store | Price / Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| $19.99 |
Calculate Total Price
Price
+ Tax + Shipping
= Total Price
|
Go to Store
|
|




Pros: First British Cartoon
Cons: Stifled by politics
George Orwell wrote a child's allegorical tale about a worthy revolution that was betrayed. It was a warning about the dangers that the Russian Revolution faced and when it was published, it was picked up by the world as THE warning of the impending doom that the Soviet Union faced.
Attempts were made to make the movie in the USA, but at the time of McCarthy and his witch hunts, it was seen as too hot a potato. So it fell to the British to make it and while much of the warnings contained in the book are still visible, it was given a very typically British perspective and at the time was heavily criticised because it failed to take a strong stand which people in the USA (whipped up by the "Reds under the bed" scares) demanded.
Now its 50+ years on, and whether you know ANYTHING about the Revolution in Russia, or what went on in the former Soviet Union, this is a film which has stood the test of time and, given there are two new generations since this was made, reveals not only a strong story which new viewers should find absorbing, even terrifying, but now serves as a warning not just about the dangers of revolution, but the dangers of giving ANYONE absolute power in the name of fear.
As for the movie, it begins with Old Major proclaiming before he dies that there has to be a revolution on the Jones Farm because the farmer is destroying it.
But despite the proclamation, nothing happens, in fact things get worse.
Farmer Jones gets drunk, the animals don't get fed (In Russia this happened too, as it did in France, both events sparking revolutions).
But the Russian allegories continue after the revolution when counter-revolutionary farmers attacked the farm and failed (for those who did not know, capitalist states like the USA and Britain invaded Russia in 1919 to support the White Russian forces who were fighting against the revolution and which was one of the main reasons why the Soviets never trusted the West).
One pig, Snowball (obviously a reference to Leon Trotsky), makes a futile attempt to spread the revolution to other farms, but is murdered by Napoleon (Josef Stalin), who prefers to consolidate his power at home.
There's a lot more, much more. But to simply dismiss this movie as a bad cartoon or a bad adaptation is to miss the history. This movie was made at a time when Communism was seen as the same evil that Muslim fundamentalists are seen today. The world was held in the grip of nuclear terror, fuelled by governments who sought to suppress their populations by using Communism in the same way that governments use Al Quida today.
Quite simply: The movie could not have been made any other way because had it stuck too faithfully to the book, it would never have been released in the USA (a country which once banned Errol Flynn's Robin Hood because it was seen as a pro-communist movie).
So, given the political -- and financial -- restraints the producers and directora were under, this is a worthy adaptation and a worthy addition to any DVD collection. ...