Culture Why Andy Serkis Turned ‘Animal Farm’ Into a Family Film—and What It Teaches Kids

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Why Andy Serkis Turned ‘Animal Farm’ Into a Family Film—and What It Teaches Kids​

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Yes, Andy Serkis has heard the controversy about his film Animal Farm, out in theaters on May 1, 2026. Why would he create a family-friendly adaptation of George Orwell’s famously dark 1945 book which uses farm animals to critique totalitarianism? For the beloved director, actor, and dad of three, the answer is simple: He wants to get young minds thinking.

“We wanted to aim it at young inquiring minds so that parents could ask them what they thought about things,” says Serkis, who fell in love with the book as a kid and wanted to make this film for about 15 years. “That was one of the objectives of it—placing them in the driving seat.”

It’s what inspired the creation of the character Lucky, a piglet who does not appear in the book, battling between his own morals and tyranny. Serkis envisioned children exploring their own ideas about what's right and wrong through the likable (and adorable) main character, who is perfectly voiced by Strangers Things star Gaten Matarazzo.

“You go on this journey with him being sucked into this more glamorous world of everything that the greed of the pigs brings them,” says the director, who also voices original Manor Farm owner Mr. Jones in the film. “We just thought that'd be good for kids to experience.”

But readers of the book will recognize other characters, including main antagonist Napoleon, brilliantly voiced by Seth Rogen, and the dedicated Boxer, beautifully brought to life by Woody Harrelson, among others. And even if they notice other changes, such as Freida Pilkington, the reimagined farm owner Mr. Pilkington memorably voiced by Glenn Close, the themes are pretty much in line with Orwell’s book.

“We’ve not drifted that far from his intention,” says the Planet of the Apes star. “It’s just making it more applicable to the world that we're living in now, rather than totalitarian Russia of the 1940s…And we worked very closely with the Orwell estate to establish that if we were going to tell the story, they believed that it was the right thing to do to make it a more contemporary version.”

What Kids Can Learn From the 'Animal Farm' Movie​

In the PG-rated film, kids will see how being power-hungry can corrupt a family or a society and how inequality is normalized when the animals in the story aren't treated fairly. They'll hear the famous phrase, "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others." And especially through the friendship of Lucky and Boxer, they'll grasp why that phrase is so problematic.

But this film isn't without humor. Kids will get a laugh along the way with fart jokes, a slaughterhouse misunderstanding, and more lighthearted scenes. Don't worry about a bleak conclusion, either. This film offers families a much happier ending, another change from the book.

“As an eternally kind of relevant book, we know that history repeats itself. It goes around in cycles but genuinely, we have to ask ourselves, why is it that we always end up in the same position where nothing really moves forward that much?” explains Serkis. "You have to keep trying."

That's the message he hopes kids will understand through the altered ending.

“We’re not tying it up in a nice, shiny bow and saying that we all live happily ever after—far from it," he says. "We're saying it's up to the next generation to at least try. You have to engage and you have to keep questioning the leadership that stopped listening to you and telling you lies because we're living in a world where nobody knows what truth is anymore.”

Is the ‘Animal Farm’ Film Too Dark for Kids?​

Serkis, who also released an Animal Farmaudiobook, acknowledges that the violence in the book can be graphic and upsetting. He made it a point to tone that down in the film, even when portraying the characters.

“We wanted to keep the sinister nature of Napoleon as a charismatic kind of guy you fall for, rather than being a brutal dictator, even though he's malicious and malign underneath it,” he gives as an example. “He's just manages to do it all with a smile in this version.”

Some scenes may still be inappropriate for much younger kids, such as moments of the pigs drinking “naughty juice,” Boxer getting injured, fight scenes, and Napoleon’s eventual takedown and defeat. But overall, children may walk away feeling they can make change, even in their small friend groups, by leading with kindness and compassion, and be empowered to ask questions about politics and social justice—no matter where their families lean politically.

“I don't mind if people like it or dislike it,” says Serkis, “but as long as there's some discourse and everyone engages in conversation about it, that’s the intention of it.”
 
Although George Orwell was a socialist himself, he became disillusioned with communism when he saw what was happening under Stalin
Moreso disillusioned after what he saw happen in the Spanish Civil War. Guy was such a believer in socialism he went to Spain to fight with the socialists. He quickly saw the reality of what communist are and left, writing Animal Farm in short order.
 
“We’ve not drifted that far from his intention,” says the Planet of the Apes star. “It’s just making it more applicable to the world that we're living in now, rather than totalitarian Russia of the 1940s…And we worked very closely with the Orwell estate to establish that if we were going to tell the story, they believed that it was the right thing to do to make it a more contemporary version.”
His intention was to write an allegory for the Bolshevik Revolution, thereby exposing how men like Stalin can co-opt a movement and create one of the most oppressive regimes on Earth. If your movie isn't doing that, then it isn't following Orwell's intentions. There's a reason why we have the term "Orwellian" and we don't use it as a euphemism for "late-stage capitalism" or whatever newspeak your friends on Reddit invented this month.

On that note, I'd say that our contemporary problems are far Orwellian than Serkis realizes. Read Animal Farm and tell me that liberals and progressives don't use the same rhetoric and tactics as the pigs, Serkis!
 
It just baffles the mind. If you want to make a children propaganda slop film, you really don't need to literally rewrite Orwell to force him to fit your "modern sensabilities". This could have been Netflix slop if it weren't labeled Animal Farm, but it was so radioactive only the Mormons would touch it.

Imagine thinking that the book isn't timeless as is, or any of Orwells books? Only a special sort of retard says, "Yeah I can make this better, let's add a downy kid piglet and make Snowball a tranny." I could find fanfiction FOR Animal Farm written better than this insult to literature.

I hope this ruins Serkis because it'd be what he deserves for this shit lol.
 
Who's the target audience for this?
Is it meant as a bait and switch for people who have never heard of the story and thought they're taking their children to an animated movie about animals?
 
Who's the target audience for this?
Is it meant as a bait and switch for people who have never heard of the story and thought they're taking their children to an animated movie about animals?
Would be hilarious if it was. I heard when Watership Down was released in theaters, parents took their kids to it, then the kids would leave crying
 
Who's the target audience for this?
Is it meant as a bait and switch for people who have never heard of the story and thought they're taking their children to an animated movie about animals?
That’s almost precisely the point, it’s for people who know the story but not about the movie. That’s why they have Tucker Carlson and a bunch of (((right-wing twitter influencers))) making sponsored posts about how it’s the perfect movie to take your kids to and start a conversation with them.

ETA:

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Get your tickets at Angel.com/Tucker now!!!1!11!1
 
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That’s why they have Tucker Carlson and a bunch of (((right-wing twitter influencers))) making sponsored posts about how it’s the perfect movie to take your kids to and start a conversation with them.
I heard Tucker shill it today, and I saw the DSA girls/troons all revel in how it desecrates Orwell, whom they regard as essentially a mafia informant (against them).

Everything gotta be the worst possible crap now.
 
The annoying part about leftists infesting everything is that their bullshit winds up polluting fucking everything. This movie did not need to exist.

Who's the target audience for this?
Is it meant as a bait and switch for people who have never heard of the story and thought they're taking their children to an animated movie about animals?
Kids of course. Same MO as the Disney remakes. Make the younger audience forget that an original version exists. Even if they were to read the actual book, the taint of this shitty copy will mar the experience.

Of course, this can easily backfire and make anyone looking for either the old live action movie or read the book can find themselves loathing the cruddy copy after experiencing what the author intended.
 
Turning Animal Farm into a "family friendly" kiddie film about capitalism bad was also...not really expected. This will bomb and bomb hard.
It already bombed and articles like this are a desperate attempt to stoke interest, and deflect from the fact that the movie is a complete betrayal of Orwell’s intent and legacy.
 
Moreso disillusioned after what he saw happen in the Spanish Civil War. Guy was such a believer in socialism he went to Spain to fight with the socialists. He quickly saw the reality of what communist are and left, writing Animal Farm in short order.
Both can be contributing factors. At least in his day they weren't all obese neon haired buttfucking degenerates who begged the police to arrest people for using the wrong pronouns.
 
That’s almost precisely the point, it’s for people who know the story but not about the movie. That’s why they have Tucker Carlson and a bunch of (((right-wing twitter influencers))) making sponsored posts about how it’s the perfect movie to take your kids to and start a conversation with them.

ETA:
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Get your tickets at Angel.com/Tucker now!!!1!11!1
It's quite a curious situation here where this conservative Mormon movie studio bought the rights to this movie, and then seems to be promoting it like it's true to the original book. Even seemingly paying large right wing influencers huge amounts of money to promote it that way. It's bizarre. It's like the people at Angel Studios are completely living in their own reality. Except it's getting harder and harder to believe that when they seem to be paying influencers to lie.
 
It's quite a curious situation here where this conservative Mormon movie studio bought the rights to this movie, and then seems to be promoting it like it's true to the original book. Even seemingly paying large right wing influencers huge amounts of money to promote it that way. It's bizarre. It's like the people at Angel Studios are completely living in their own reality. Except it's getting harder and harder to believe that when they seem to be paying influencers to lie.
I'd like to say that they're in on the fact that it's a shit movie but acting like it's actually great as if Napoleon is advertising it. As they are doing that, they got Andy on board to do Young Washington.

As for these right-wing influencers, they're just grifting– being retarded at best and amoral at worst.

id have thought those retards would have loved it.

Like they would go for rapping pigs and fart jokes.
 
kids will see how being power-hungry can corrupt a family or a society and how inequality is normalized when the animals in the story aren't treated fairly
It's like taking a piece of art and taking out all the colour, as if the modern left "prosecution pyramid" isn't a literal "some groups are more equal than others.

A modern variation of Animal Farm would have Napoleon glue on pig tits.
 
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