Culture When Did ‘Chicken Run’ Radicalize You? - ‘Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget’ continues the revolutionary mission of the original ‘Chicken Run’: preaching the power of the collective.

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The Daily Beast (Archive) - December 9, 2023 (Updated Dec 10)
by, Laura Bradley

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Where were you when you first realized that Chicken Run was an allegory for the evils of capitalism?

The 2000 masterpiece from Aardman Animation might be a prison-break parody heavily inspired by John Sturges’ The Great Escape, but real fans know that Ginger and her fellow rabble-rousing hens also flocked into cinemas with a mission all their own—to teach children about the power of the collective over the myth of the rugged individual. That subtext borders so closely on becoming actual text that there’s at least one entire Reddit thread dedicated to whether or not calling the film a Marxist allegory qualifies as a fan theory or simple analysis.

On that note, longtime Chicken Run devotees will be pleased to know that, although Netflix’s newly streaming sequel, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, doesn’t quite live up to the mind-bending brilliance of the original (honestly, how could it?), the franchise’s revolutionary spirit remains intact.

In the first film, Ginger (Julia Sawalha) and her fellow egg-layers realized that they could make their own way together outside of the farm, where they were subject to constant inspections and had no control over their lives before they inevitably became dinner. With help from Rocky the Rhode Island Red (Mel Gibson), a “flying” rooster, the chickens decide to launch themselves beyond the walls that confined them both physically and mentally.

The sequel takes place one generation later, right after Ginger and Rocky welcome their first chick, Molly. (Thandiwe Newton and Zachary Levi now play Ginger and Rocky, while Bella Ramsey plays their daughter.) After breaking free from the farm that exploited them for their eggs in the original, our chicken friends are now living in their very own island utopia. Unfortunately, the scourge of humanity is never far away, and now, it seems humans are pressing in with new construction. Molly, who grew up safe and sheltered, has never seen a human before—and because she has no idea what they’re capable of, all she wants is to break free from her mother’s walled garden.

Tantalized by her dad’s self-mythologized “lone ranger” era, Molly does the inevitable and wanders off—and although she makes a new friend named Frizzle (Josie Sedgwick-Davies), the two soon find themselves kidnapped by a terrifying factory farm. This is where the original story gets a big update.

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This is not your average factory farm, where chickens sit in two-square-inch mesh cages and wait out the clock as it tick-“bock”s toward their final hour. In fact, the place looks so tantalizing that Molly and Frizzle mistake it for an amusement park at first. But much like the happy surroundings in Dawn of the Nugget’s fellow anti-capitalist Netflix text Squid Game, the cheerful blue skies and playground aesthetic belie a far bloodier mission: The powers that be have simply discovered that serene chickens make for tastier meat.

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Molly and Frizzle are soon horrified to realize that everyone around them seems to be in some kind of trance, tagged with electric collars and dead in the eyes as they smile and fall over each other, all the while insisting on their own elation. (If this thing weren’t streaming on Netflix, I’d swear it was a metaphor for the way that entertainment “content” lulls people into a false sense of satisfaction with the hellscape around them—but perhaps that’s stretching things a wingspan too far.) It’s up to Ginger and Rocky to once again defeat their human oppressors and save their daughter from getting battered and fried.

In the original Chicken Run, Mrs. Tweedy (Miranda Richardson) underestimates the chickens, insisting that they’re too dumb to seize the means of production—no matter how many times her husband tries to tell her otherwise. “They’re chickens, you dolt!” she screams. “Apart from you, they’re the most stupid creatures on this planet. They don’t plot, they don’t scheme, and they are not organized!” This time around, however, no one is making that mistake; those electric collars are as effective as union-busting tactics come.

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Just like in the first film, however, the chickens are devoted to one another’s liberation. Ginger insists in the beginning that their brood must remain isolated from the outside world—an understandable trauma response, given her experiences in the first film. But after the group successfully rescues Molly, she, in turn, insists that they must return to save the others. In other words, the young chicken understands that all of the birds’ liberation is inherently intertwined; as Ginger puts it once she sees the light, “No chicken is an island.”

Is this sequel’s story essentially a rehash of the original, with new visuals? Kind of—but if this sequel-reboot-whatever manages to radicalize a whole new generation of kids, it’ll have done its job just fine.
 
It radicalised me when Mel Gibson said that Jews were the cause of all the violence and death in the world, but he didn't say that in character as Rocky the Rooster, so it technically doesn't count

It was a cute film, though. I love Jane Horrocks. "I don't want to be a pie, I don't like graveh!"
 
So basically, they're done farming popular IPs for political and social messaging, so hack authors need to pick from scraps.

"Oh hey, new well-liked property is coming out with a sequel. How can I make it fit my extremely myopic view of the world for profit and ass-pats?"
 
Chicken Run retroactively raicalized me in my late 20s after I read a thing online and decided to pretend that is how my life was, too. I'm so quirky!

Just like that Rugrats stuff and the Beatles lore.

Seriously I think I saw that movie once on a Raymour and Flannigan display television when I was waiting for my girlfriend at the time to pick out some bedroom shit. Took a while. I remember that movie was brown. A lot of brown. No radicalization.

I think she got the warranty.
 
Chicken run - Down with the niggers.

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One day, a fuehrer chicken arises and decides the target audience of KFC has to be fried and eaten instead of their prey.

This leads to meals Like the Sheiiit burger, watermelon sheboon milkshake and most important, the dindu nuffin bucket with a chance of some fentanyl as a kid-friendly extra.
TOTAL. NUGGET. DEATH.
 
ofcourse people would deny the political undercurrent, cuz the acceptance would stand affront to their meat eating habits
 
Chicken Run retroactively raicalized me in my late 20s after I read a thing online and decided to pretend that is how my life was, too. I'm so quirky!

Just like that Rugrats stuff and the Beatles lore.

Seriously I think I saw that movie once on a Raymour and Flannigan display television when I was waiting for my girlfriend at the time to pick out some bedroom shit. Took a while. I remember that movie was brown. A lot of brown. No radicalization.

I think she got the warranty.
You. Never. Buy. The. Goddamn. Warranty.
 
I think, at most, Chicken Run was inspired by The Great Escape with Steve Mcqueen but while that setup involved escaping a prisioner camp from the nazis, Chicken Run clearly had no other ties besides the concept of making an unlikely escape from an oppressive foe. It was a timeless setup.

Stop inserting politics where its not needed, you dick sucking niggering cucking fucks.
 
I remember reading some retarded reddit theory on this but frankly the movie looked like dog shit when I was younger so I never even bothered watching it. Is it actually commie propaganda or is this just more retards on the left doing mental gymnastics to graft themselves onto some already existing thing?
It's retarded lefty mental gymnastics. The lesson I remember taking away from it as a kid was to never blindly trust authority figures because they are probably turning people into meat pies.
 
I think, at most, Chicken Run was inspired by The Great Escape with Steve Mcqueen but while that setup involved escaping a prisioner camp from the nazis, Chicken Run clearly had no other ties besides the concept of making an unlikely escape from an oppressive foe. It was a timeless setup.

Stop inserting politics where its not needed, you dick sucking niggering cucking fucks.
It's not new, either.

I saw the original in the theatre, and there were stories the next day in the paper op-eds from the envrio-ninnies about how kids should go see it because its a "powerful metaphor" against factory farming and that chickens are "just like us" and "yearn to be free!"

I remember it because it was just so darn over-the-top goofy in a world where goofiness wasn't fast-tracked to the front page.

So this is actually fairly predictable, commies aren't unique among the tireless failed activist class in their ability to instantly suck the fun out of everything they touch by turning it into propaganda, but, commies deserve a mention for being able to go the furthest over the top the quickest of any other group in search of hidden fellow comrades.

They're the only ones who can look at a children's book titled "Artie, the Little Red Car" and instantly think, without even reading it, that it's REALLY a subversive revolutionary treatise "Ivan, the Little Red Car Who Overcame the Fasco-Capitalistic Hegemony of Detroit" - because the car is red.
 
The 2000 masterpiece from Aardman Animation might be a prison-break parody heavily inspired by John Sturges’ The Great Escape, but real fans know that Ginger and her fellow rabble-rousing hens also flocked into cinemas with a mission all their own—to teach children about the power of the collective over the myth of the rugged individual.
It totally is about what the author intended, but communists are nothing but not excellent at using autism to see what's not there and apply untold levels of mental gymnastics to try and make their subversive framing work.
 
I loved the movie as a kid - somehow I never turned into a commie though. I just thought it was about chickens not wanting to die, silly me
 
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