Animal Farm

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From EW Jul 6 2011:
'Apes' director Rupert Wyatt and Andy Serkis to collaborate on motion-capture 'Animal Farm' adaptation


Kate Ward said:
Here’s some (Old) Major news for you: Rupert Wyatt, the director of Aug. 5′s Rise of the Planet of the Apes, confirmed to EW that he and Apes star Andy Serkis are working on a big-screen performance-capture adaptation of George Orwell’s Stalin-inspired Animal Farm. Though the project is in its early stages, the duo will collaborate on the script, and use Serkis’ motion-capture studio, The Imaginarium, for the project. Seeing as how blown away we were by Wyatt’s use of the technology in clips for Apes, it’s easy to get excited about the prospect of Farm, which would feature a diverse group of human-like barn animals leading a rebellion. “With performance capture, you can really perform this story in such a way that it’s sort of seamless in terms of human performers playing animals,” Wyatt tells EW. “It’s very much like theater. Especially with something like this that is about phsyical movement, nuance through gesture.”


So, if the film will be all about performance, who can we expect to fill the hooves of Old Major, Napoleon, and the like? Obviously, Serkis will be portraying one of the characters, according to Wyatt. As for which one, he’s keeping mum — “I don’t want to give too much away,” he says. (Let’s just be glad that, for once, Apes and King Kong star will be able to branch outside primate parts.) But in order to make the best use of motion-capture, Wyatt is hoping to snag some of the industry’s most talented players. “We want to get the best actors for the role,” he says. “It would be the same as if we were doing a stage production. [And] with Andy as our lead-in, I feel that’s good enough for me right now.”


Of course, Farm is still far from reaching the big screen. First, Wyatt has to see the release of Apes, a film that could turn into a franchise (and push Farm to the back-burner) should it prove to be a box office success. And Wyatt, for one, is certainly open to an Apes sequel. “It’s definitely the desire of everyone involved, to continue telling the story,” he says. “There’s a question mark at the end of the film. All the best stories for me don’t tie up every single loose end. We end with certain questions, and certainly the scenario of what’s next.” (Don’t, however, expect to see star James Franco cursing the film’s apes in front of a buried Statue of Liberty — Wyatt says his Apes deviates from the original film’s ending. “It’s a totally different film in many ways,” he says. “To emulate that or to kind of try to pull the rug from the audience — an audience these days are savvy enough to know what you’re doing to them. We would have suffered for the comparison. So we looked to be more original than that.”)


Audiences who are enraptured with the performance-capture quality of Apes may certainly hope for a sequel — Wyatt says some who have screened footage of the film couldn’t tell that they weren’t looking at real apes. “We created the skin and the hair and the anatomy of the ape on top of a human performance,” he says. “That’s a first. That’s an absolute first. It’s never really been done before, and this is the first photo-realistic film dealing with animals that are not fantastical in any way. They are very much grounded in reality. That’s never been able to be achieved up until now.”
 
This could actually be really good. There was a live-action version using puppets made in the 90s which was really good. Except the ending...(A happy ending for Animal Farm? Really?) They even had a perfect ending point before then, with this propaganda film made by Napoleon. Made me feel that same punch in the gut feeling I had the first time I finished the book. But then they had to tack on a lazy, lame happy ending....

/Rant over
 
Wow. I'll definitely be keeping my eye on this. Great book :up:.
 
I still need to finish this book,but I loved the 1954 animated version.So I'm sorta interested.
 
This could actually be really good. There was a live-action version using puppets made in the 90s which was really good. Except the ending...(A happy ending for Animal Farm? Really?) They even had a perfect ending point before then, with this propaganda film made by Napoleon. Made me feel that same punch in the gut feeling I had the first time I finished the book. But then they had to tack on a lazy, lame happy ending....

/Rant over

Is this the same one? http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0204824/
 
Was I the only one that thought of another film, when the title was read? :P
 
How much motion capture would they need? I'm assuming they will be making the animals anthropomorphic? Otherwise they could pretty much use babe cg.


edit-Actually its been a few years since i've read the book and theres a part where the animals start to walk upright correct?
 
Been waiting for a good Animal Farm adaptation for a while... even though I really liked the 1954 cartoon, despite the effed up ending.
 
I've read the novella but never watched the adaptations, another team-up for Wyatt and Serkis for this wouldn't be something I'll say no to.
 
This could actually be really good. There was a live-action version using puppets made in the 90s which was really good. Except the ending...(A happy ending for Animal Farm? Really?) They even had a perfect ending point before then, with this propaganda film made by Napoleon. Made me feel that same punch in the gut feeling I had the first time I finished the book. But then they had to tack on a lazy, lame happy ending....

/Rant over

I saw this one too. We watched it in English class after reading the book in high school.

The ending annoyed me too. It was so obviously just lazily tacked on.
 
I'm assuming Serkis will be providing the voice for one or more of the animals.
 
This news is a year old. Anything recent?
 
Serkis' "Animal Farm" To Shoot Next Year

By Garth Franklin Friday December 6th 2013 10:51AM
"Gollum" actor and budding filmmaker Andy Serkis has confirmed that he plans to shoot his $50 million mo-cap feature adaptation of George Orwell's "Animal Farm" in the second half of 2014.
Announced over a year ago by his Imaginarium performance capture studio, Serkis makes his directorial debut on the project. Orwell's classic tale follows a group of revolutionary animals on an English farm is a thinly veiled allegory about how the rise of Stalinism in the Soviet Union over the preceding two decades.
Appearing at the Cinematic Innovation Summit (CIS) in Dubai on Thursday, Serkis says: "We’ve started pre-vis which in the virtual world in many instances means you’ve already started shooting the film. Principal photography will take place in the middle to third quarter of next year."
German concept artist Michael Kutsche ("Thor," "Maleficent," "The Amazing Spider-Man 2") has been employed on the project to create a "heightened design aesthetic". Explaining that last line, Serkis says:
"What we’re trying to do is fairly unique. It’s going to be entirely performance captured, so rather than photographing real animals and showing them with talking mouths, it will all be generated by the interaction between the actors playing those roles…the physicality and facial expressions of all the animals will come directly from actors’ performances.
The design for those has to work in a particular way and it’s a particular heightened design look we’re going for. We also have to find a balancing aesthetic for the environment in which we situate the characters. We’re experimenting shooting with live action plates but with a heightened design…it’s not just shooting in a field."
A cast won't be announced until financing is completed in 2014. A studio isn't expected to be involved until much further down the line.
Source: Screen
 
Oh my stars... I do declare.
 
Will they make this classic in to a mo cap feature? :(
Doesn't it deserve to be live action?
 
It's no surprise they had to make this outside the studio system.

They're in no rush to make movies about political allegories based on classical literature.

I admire Serkis' devotion, though.
 
Hmmm, I'd be interested to see how this is done. Amazing book.
 
Ze pigs...Zey look like humans! Aaaah!

pig-faces.jpg
 
^^^God I love the Twilight Zone. As for Animal Farm, it's not really something I'd ever like to watch in movie form, lol. Despite the allegory, all I'll see are the poor animals. :(

1984 is my Orwellian dystopia of choice.
 
I think with flicks like 9 and the more recent Legend of the Guardians that Snyder directed, a studio would more than likely take it on, but it'd probably be PG-13 due to the subject matter. There won't be any fast food tie ins for obvious reasons.
 

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