Director Andy Serkis’ animated Animal Farm adaptation features several key differences from George Orwell’s classic anti-authoritarian satire. For starters, there are far more fart jokes. There’s also a brand new main character: a piglet named Lucky (voiced by Gaten Matarazzo).
In a Say More interview with Mashable Entertainment Reporter Belen Edwards, Serkis explained that the character of Lucky was created as part of the film’s bigger project: to bring Orwell’s work to younger audiences.
“One thing about the book is that it’s very objective. There is no protagonist,” Serkis said. “In a movie, on the whole, you need to see the movie through a set of eyes. I just thought it would be really interesting if we see this world of Animal Farm through a young piglet’s eyes, because the piglets obviously become the elite.”
Lucky becomes the audience’s entry point into Animal Farm, acting as an innocent character caught between the two pigs jockeying for control of the farm: intellectual Snowball (voiced by Laverne Cox) and brash Napoleon (voiced by Seth Rogen). Serkis likened Lucky’s dilemma to Robert De Niro’s A Bronx Tale, which sees a young man similarly torn between his hard-working father and a flashy gangster.
“We really wanted to put young kids in that position in this story, and let them be the ones who are accountable,” Serkis explained.
Check out the full video above to hear Serkis discuss his 15-year journey of bringing Animal Farm to the screen, the enduring quality of Orwell’s work, and the perils and potential of AI in Hollywood. Plus, stay tuned for the second part of the interview, coming May 3, where Serkis breaks down his upcoming Lord of the Rings prequel, Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.
Animal Farm is now in theaters.


