Animal Farm Review: Orwell’s Fable Gets a Corporate Makeover

Every generation seems to get the classic literature it deserves. Andy Serkis’s animated Animal Farm, a project that has been taking shape in his digital workshop for over a decade, is now here to speak to ours. The story’s skeleton is a familiar one.

The oppressed livestock of Manor Farm, tired of neglect and abuse, stage a coup. Their goal is nothing short of a new society, a barnyard republic founded on the axiom that all animals are equal. Utopias are fragile things, however. The initial revolutionary zeal soon sours as the simple desire for a full trough twists into a hunger for power. The cracks in their new society appear not from outside invasion, but from the ambitions growing within their own four-legged ranks.

This is not your high school English teacher’s Animal Farm. The film consciously re-routes Orwell’s pointed allegory. It presents a story with a different target, one less concerned with the historical Kremlin and more with the modern boardroom. The drama that ignites on this particular farm feels distinctly of this moment.

The New Gospel of Greed

Let’s be clear: the specific ghost of Joseph Stalin has been politely exorcised from this farm. The film sidesteps a direct history lesson on Soviet politics, aiming its satirical buckshot at a much broader, more immediate target.

Animal Farm Review

In place of a focused critique on the failure of a specific communist experiment, we are given a parable about the pathologies of late-stage capitalism. The new seven commandments are written in the ink of corporate malfeasance, rapacious consumerism, and the seductive emptiness of populism.

Napoleon is no longer a simple stand-in for a historical tyrant. He is a CEO-in-waiting, a gangster of capital whose ambition is measured less in political control and more in market share.

The story’s most significant narrative reconstruction is the introduction of Lucky, a young piglet whose conscience serves as the film’s central gear. He is our way in, a wide-eyed protagonist designed to hold the audience’s hand through the farm’s moral decay (a choice that softens the source material’s edges considerably).

Lucky’s journey is a coming-of-age story defined by a schism of allegiance. He is torn between two competing father figures: the gentle, progressive intellectualism of Snowball and the brutish, back-slapping populism of Napoleon, who offers not ideas, but a sense of belonging.

The allegory is updated with all the subtlety of a software update notification. A rival human industrialist, Freida Pilkington, appears in a Cybertruck-adjacent monstrosity and spies on the animals with high-tech drones. Napoleon’s rhetoric is a finely-tuned pastiche of modern strongman tactics, weaponizing anti-intellectualism and a dangerous “pigs first” tribalism to consolidate his power.

In its final and most dramatic departure, the film files down the sharp, bleak point of Orwell’s conclusion. The chilling final pages of the novella are conspicuously absent. Instead, we are offered a dose of generational optimism. The message here suggests that the cycle of corruption is not inevitable, and that the future rests with the young and clear-eyed, like Lucky, to build something better.

Casting the Coup

The casting of Seth Rogen as Napoleon is the film’s most brilliant, and perhaps most insidious, piece of psychological warfare. His entire public persona, that of the amiable, chuckling buddy, is weaponized here. Napoleon’s initial power grab doesn’t feel like a threat because it comes with a familiar, friendly laugh.

He is the fun uncle who just wants everyone to have a good time (and maybe also all of the apples). This disarming charm makes his descent into tyranny a masterclass in manipulative charisma. The very sound that once signaled harmless fun curdles, becoming a punctuation mark for his cruelty. It’s a funny performance, until it suddenly isn’t.

Serving as the farm’s moral barometer is the piglet Lucky, voiced by Gaten Matarazzo with a raw, unpolished innocence. He is the audience’s stand-in, and his journey is a sped-up education in disillusionment. We witness the revolution’s ideals decay through his wide, trusting eyes, a process by which a true believer learns the tenets of his faith were merely marketing copy.

If Lucky is the conscience, Boxer the horse is the soul. Woody Harrelson gives him a gentle, world-weary vocal texture that makes his unwavering belief in the cause all the more heartbreaking. He is the proletariat saint, the embodiment of pure, uncomplaining labor, and his exploitation is the clearest sign of the revolution’s damnation.

The supporting cast effectively fills out this menagerie of archetypes. Kieran Culkin’s Squealer is a perfectly sycophantic middle-manager of tyranny. Glenn Close provides a blast of pure, Cruella-grade avarice as the human industrialist Frieda Pilkington. Laverne Cox gives Snowball the voice of what-might-have-been, a fleeting vision of a better path. And Andy Serkis, never one to stay entirely behind the camera, appears in minor roles, leaving his director’s fingerprints on the farm itself.

The Beautiful Lie

Visually, the film is a confection. The world of Manor Farm is bathed in a perpetual, honeyed magic-hour light, as if the sun itself is a willing propagandist for the pigs’ new regime. The aesthetic is that of a classic storybook illustration brought to life, a deliberate and deeply ironic choice. It’s a beautiful place for terrible things to happen.

This visual anesthetic makes the political horror palatable, particularly for a younger audience. The character designs themselves follow this same philosophy of strategic cuteness. Yet, in close-up, the painterly illusion gives way to something more tangible. You can see the detailed, almost photorealistic textures—the scuffs on a snout, the individual hairs on a coat—a trick to make us see them as individuals just before the system crushes them.

The film operates on a kind of dual-track animation. The animals move with the weight and gait of real creatures; there is a grounded physics to their existence. Their faces, however, are canvases for surprisingly human-like emotion. This careful balance is what allows the allegory to function on screen. We accept them as animals, which makes their very human sins of greed, pride, and betrayal all the more stark.

The Ringmaster’s Hand

Andy Serkis, a pioneer of performance capture, directs here with a tangible sense of physical space. Instead of sending the virtual camera soaring through the air with the untethered freedom animation allows, he often chains it to the ground. The camera moves as if a cinematographer in muddy boots were actually tracking the action. This choice gives the CG world a sense of gravity, both literal and thematic, grounding the fable in a recognizable reality. The film’s tone, however, is a precarious balancing act.

On one side, a dark political allegory about the death of an ideal. On the other, a family-friendly adventure complete with pratfalls and the occasional fart joke. The result is sometimes jarring; a moment of genuine political dread can be immediately followed by a bit of slapstick. It is a spoonful of sugar to help the cyanide go down, a choice that makes the material accessible while risking a dilution of its power.

The approach to music follows a similar path. While Hector Pereira’s score capably underlines the emotional beats, the film’s most self-aware flourish is its use of the Propellerheads and Shirley Bassey track “History Repeating.” It’s a musical sledgehammer, a direct nod to the audience that this story of ideals curdling into tyranny is a tale on a loop.

A Kinder, Gentler Apocalypse

So what is the takeaway from this modernized farm? That power corrupts is a given. That greed is a rot at the foundation of any society is made plain. The film suggests our only antidote is a renewed faith in the collective and a stubborn belief in equality.

This is, without question, a simplified Orwell. The sharp, surgical precision of the novella has been exchanged for the broader brush of an animated adventure. It sacrifices a specific, bleak historical warning. In its place, it offers a more generalized, and certainly more optimistic, call to vigilance for a generation that will inherit the farm, for better or worse.

Full Credits

Director: Andy Serkis

Writers: Nicholas Stoller, Rupert Wyatt, Andy Serkis

Producers and Executive Producers: Andy Serkis, Adam Nagle, Dave Rosenbaum, Jonathan Cavendish (producers); Rupert Wyatt, Nick Stoller, Matt Reeves, Woody Harrelson (executive producers)

Cast: Seth Rogen, Gaten Matarazzo, Kieran Culkin, Glenn Close, Laverne Cox, Steve Buscemi, Woody Harrelson, Jim Parsons, Kathleen Turner, Iman Vellani, Andy Serkis

Editors: Kevin Pavlovic

Composer: Heitor Pereira

The Review

Animal Farm

6 Score

Andy Serkis's Animal Farm is a visual confection and a thoughtfully cast adaptation that bravely re-routes Orwell’s fable for the corporate age. Its painterly beauty and clever performances, however, serve a story that has been significantly defanged. In its effort to be a more hopeful, accessible family adventure, the film trades the novella's chilling, surgical precision for a broader, less impactful critique. It is an intelligent remix, but one whose admirable parts do not quite cohere into a powerful new whole.

PROS

  • Clever vocal performances that weaponize familiar personas, particularly Seth Rogen's Napoleon.
  • A beautiful, painterly animation style that creates a potent ironic contrast with the dark subject matter.
  • A bold and relevant thematic shift from specific historical allegory to a critique of modern corporate greed.

CONS

  • A significant simplification of Orwell's bleak and complex political arguments.
  • Jarring tonal shifts between serious allegorical moments and kid-friendly slapstick.
  • A softened, optimistic ending that lessens the original's harsh and enduring warning.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 6
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