Howard Hunt, the CIA man,
bought the film rights to Animal Farm
and helped set up the first film production
of Nineteen Eighty-Four.1984 A BAD MOVIE
"On the list of the ten worst movies I've ever seen (and I can't remember the names of the other nine) "1984" is near the top.
It so misrepresents Orwell's masterpiece that I tell people not to watch it.
It is so monosyllabic and boring and grey that I've only ever watched it myself using the fast forward button. Julia and Winston are not portrayed accurately and the sex scenes gross people out.
It was Richard Burton's last movie and it's too bad he didn't die sooner.
And John Hurt looked better as Elephant Man than he does in portraying Winston Smith.
The movie is actually so lame it gives Orwell a bad name, which is exactly what its producers intended."
In his recent biography, INSIDE GEORGE ORWELL, Gordon Bowker says that after Orwell's death the CIA got control of the film rights for Animal Farm and 1984:excerpts from pages 421 to 423:
"... The fate of these two books at the hands of CIA-backed Hollywood production companies, which Frances Stonar Saunders exposed in her book Who Paid the Piper?, has been blamed on Sonia.
She had been charged with allowing his works to be misrepresented in the service of the right-wing Cold War cause, while all the time it appears that Warburg and others were guiding her in that direction. Orwell himself had been alive to these dangers and would have avoided them, as he had in standing up to the Book-of-the-Month Committee and complaining about the misrepresentation of Nineteen Eighty-Four in Life magazine. But Sonia was politically naive and, once film rights were sold, control of any resulting script and film would have been out of her hands."
"In her book Stonar Saunders notes that Warburg took a close interest in the screenplays of both Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four.
This seems to point to his hand being somewhere in the deal with Howard Hunt*, the CIA man who bought the film rights to the former from Sonia shortly after Orwell's death, and helped set up the first film production of the latter....
Warburg's main purpose would have been the effect of the huge film publicity on his sales (in 1954 he published an edition of Animal Farm with illustrations from the CIA-backed Halas and Bachelor cartoon), though he had also come to commit himself to the Cold War offensive, and was fully aware of the true funding behind Encounter. Later Sonia quarelled with Warburg, but at the outset of her literary executorship (from which Rees seems to have been simply excluded either by the 'bustling' Sonia or the calculating Warburg) she must have put her trust in the publisher's judgement and that of advisers such as Fyvel and Muggeridge."
"Inevitably, the takeover of the film rights of Orwell's last two books produced movies tailored to ideological ends.
In the cartoon version of Animal Farm the banquet at which the pigs become indistinguishable from their human oppressors was changed. Orwell's pessimistic intention was thereby obscured and the messge that the tyrannical Stalinist pigs are no different from the cruel capitalist farmers was lost. In the Hollywood Nineteen Eighty-Four the pessimistic conclusion - that Winston, the spark of individualism snuffed out, is reduced to loving Big Brother and awaiting the bullet in the back of the neck - was again replaced by the optimistic message that the individual is uncrushable, and Winston dies with the cry of 'Down with Big Brother!' on his lips. Among the critics who damned the cartoon Animal Farm when it appeared was David Sylvester, Orwell's old Tribune contributor, who called it 'a failure aesthetically, imaginatively and intellectually...The essential weakness of the film lies, not in the realisation of detail...but in its willful misinterpretation of Orwell's central intention.' The right-wing press, on the other hand, was mostly encomiastic
. To her credit, when Sonia saw the Animal Farm film at a Hollywood preview, she hated it and blocked an attempt later to make it available to schools and colleges. Francis Wyndham remembers her being very bitter about it and feeling that once again she had let George down."
Regrettably it seems to be the case these days that when it comes to studying 1984 in school, teachers are using the movie version.
They plug the video into the machine and thus the students receive "prolefeed" created by the CIA instead of being taught the message of the book by a teacher who understands its importance. Unless students do independent learning they won't realize that there is a lot more to the book than Winston and Julia having sex and O'Brien upping the dial on the torture machine. ~ Jackie Jura
http://www.orwelltoday.com/movie1984.shtml