Search
  • Search
  • My Storyboards

Animal Farm Storyboard

Create a Storyboard
Copy this Storyboard
Animal Farm Storyboard
Storyboard That

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!

Storyboard Text

  • Exposition
  • Man is our enemy. We must rebel!
  • Conflict
  • Get back (hic) to work (hic) you (hic) dumb animal! (hic)
  • Humans. They can't do anything for themselves.
  • Rising Action
  • Attack!
  • Mr. Jones is the farmer who overworks and mistreats the animals. Old major, the boar, gives a speech one night telling the animals they must work together against Mr. Jones.
  • Climax
  • Mr. Jones is consistently drunk and he because of this, he always forgets to feed the animals. The animals realize they must do something about and rebel against him.
  • Falling Action
  • Have the commandments been changed?
  • The animals have finally had enough of Mr. Jones and they kick him off. After he is gone, the animals start to run the farm by themselves with pigs in charge. Snowball, one of the pigs, suggests building a windmill to help out the animals. Later some other farmers try to take back the farm. This battle is called the "Battle of the Cowshed".
  • Resolution
  • To Manor Farm!
  • Get out right now you traitor!
  • During the "Battle of the Cowshed", the windmill had been destroyed by Jones. Snowball has been kicked off the farm because of being said to work with Jones from the start. Napoleon, the leader, starts to kill animals that had (or still are) working with Snowball.
  • Later on, though the other animals do not realize it, the commandments are being changed. Napoleon starts acting like a dictator and the pigs are overworking the animals.
  • No animal shall drink alcohol to excess.
  • The animals are still working long, hard hours and getting little rations, while the pigs are living a dream. The other animals are starting to wonder if days were better when Jones was there. And when they look a pigs and the humans, they couldn't tell the difference between them.
Over 30 Million Storyboards Created