The Animals Film
The Animals Film | |
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Directed by | Victor Schonfeld & Myriam Alaux |
Written by | Victor Schonfeld |
Produced by | Victor Schonfeld & Myriam Alaux |
Narrated by | Julie Christie |
Cinematography | Kevin Keating |
Edited by | Victor Schonfeld |
Music by | Robert Wyatt |
Release date |
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Running time | 136 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Animals Film is a 1981 feature documentary film about the use of animals by human beings, directed by Victor Schonfeld and Myriam Alaux, and narrated by actress Julie Christie.
Synopsis[]
The Animals Film presents a survey of the uses of animals in factory farming, as pets, for entertainment, in scientific and military research, hunting, etc. The film also profiles the international animal rights movement. The film incorporates secret government footage, cartoons, newsreels, and excerpts from propaganda films.
Release[]
The Animals Film was distributed in cinemas in Britain, Australia, Germany, Austria, Canada and the United States, and was broadcast on numerous television networks. The British network, Channel Four, transmitted the film during the Channel's third night on air in November 1982. It generated front page news in Britain at the time because Channel 4 broadcast a two-hour version of the film shorn of seven minutes of its concluding sequence. The original 136 minute film released in cinemas had been approved with no cuts by the British Board of Film Censors, but the Independent Broadcasting Authority instructed Channel 4 that certain scenes in the film could 'incite crime or lead to civil disorder.'[1] Jonathon Porritt and David Winner write that, with over one million viewers, the screening is regarded as "an important moment in the growth of public awareness of animal exploitation."[2] Channel Four screened it again during its Banned series in 1991.
Reception[]
Alan Brien, film critic of the UK Sunday Times, wrote of the film: "The most impressive film maudit, possibly too hot to handle... stuffed with footage never before shown, and a wealth of newly-shot material often taken undercover, which documents... mankind's degradation, exploitation, and often pointless torture, of the creatures who share our planet. ...Proves, beyond contradiction, that this behaviour is not just random or personal but part of our organised society, with drug companies, government departments, scientists, military authorities, factory farmers, university research laboratories, for their own selfish ends, for profit in money or prestige. I do not know when I have come out of a screening so moved by the power of the cinema as a medium to transform the entire sensibility of an audience."[3]
British singer-songwriter Elvis Costello says he was moved to reject meat after seeing the film.[4]
Soundtrack[]
The Animals Film | ||||
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Soundtrack album by Robert Wyatt | ||||
Released | 1982 | |||
Length | 28:11 (original)
19:38 (edited version) | |||
Label | Rough Trade | |||
Robert Wyatt chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [5] |
Robert Wyatt composed an original soundtrack for the film, released in 1982 on Rough Trade Records. The film also features music from Talking Heads and ex-Audience frontman, Howard Werth. Critical reception of the soundtrack was mixed. Ted Mills of album database Allmusic described the soundtrack as "moody" and filled with "tasty-sounding analog synths from the late '70s", but ultimately it "disappoint[s] fans of Wyatt's vocals." It was later issued in a heavily edited form (losing more than 10 minutes, with no explanation given) as a Japanese CD, and all later CD reissues have been cloned from this master.[6]
Home media[]
In 2007 a DVD of The Animals Film was released with a new director's cut (running time 120 minutes[7]), via Beyond the Frame. In 2008 the British Film Institute released a remastered DVD in the UK, incorporating both the original uncensored cinema version and the director's cut.
In 2010 the BBC World Service broadcast One Planet: Animals & Us, a radio documentary series in which Victor Schonfeld investigates why little has changed since the making of The Animals Film.
See also[]
- List of vegan media
- Earthlings, 2006
- Behind the Mask, 2006
Notes[]
- ^ British Film Institute, The Animals Film booklet, 2008, p. 8-9
- ^ Porritt and Winner 1988, cited in Garner, Robert. Animals, Politics, and Morality. Manchester University Press, 2004, p. 80.
- ^ British Film Institute, The Animals Film booklet, 2008, p. 22
- ^ Paumgarten, Nick (8 November 2010). "Brilliant Mistakes: Elvis Costello's Boundless Career". The New Yorker. Condé Nast. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
- ^ Mills, Ted. The Animals Film at AllMusic
- ^ "The Animals Film overview". Allmusic. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
- ^ "The Animals Film". United Kingdom: Beyond The Frame.
THE ANIMALS FILM – Colour 120 mins
External links[]
- Beyond the Frame DVD
- British Film Institute DVD
- BBC World Service 'One Planet: Animals & Us'
- "Shock and Awe" by Victor Schonfeld – The Guardian, 5 July 2007
- "They Are What You Eat" by Julie Christie – The Guardian, 26 September 2008
- "Fancy a Roast this Sunday? First Watch The Animals Film" by Ken Russell – The Times, 30 September 2008
- The Animals Film at IMDb
- 1981 films
- English-language films
- Documentary films about animal rights
- 1981 documentary films
- British documentary films
- British films
- Documentary films about vegetarianism