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Ang Lee’s ‘Life of Pi’ a work of cinematic art

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Based on the novel, “Life of Pi” is both a classic survival and adventure tale, as well as a parable brimming with overt religious and philosophical themes. (Courtesy photo)

Let’s get it out of the way: If you’re going to see “Life of Pi,” you must see it in 3-D.

If you saw “Avatar” or “Hugo” in 2-D, you saw flatter versions of those movies. But if you see “Life of Pi” in 2-D, you will not be seeing “Life of Pi.” It would be like a comic book with words but no pictures. Ang Lee, in his best work since “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” makes 3-D integral to the storytelling in this miracle of a film.

Lee’s film is based on the bestselling 2002 novel by Yann Martel often called unfilmable. Lee answers that challenge by turning “Life of Pi” into one of the most “filmic” works of art ever made. By coincidence, “Life of Pi” arrives a few weeks after another visionary adaptation of an “unfilmable” novel, “Cloud Atlas,” but where “Cloud Atlas” is a complex anthology, “Life of Pi” tells a very simple story.

The bulk of the film, as in the novel, is set on a lifeboat adrift in the Pacific. The lifeboats only passengers are a 16-year-old boy and a 450-pound Bengal tiger. They are the only survivors after a cargo ship carrying zoo animals from India to America sinks in a storm.

The boy’s family owned the zoo. The tiger, nicknamed Richard Parker, is the one zoo animal the boy’s father taught him to fear. Only a flimsy tarpaulin separates them on the high seas.

We are introduced to the boy as a middle-aged man, played by the familiar Irrfan Khan (“Slumdog Millionaire”) living in Canada. He shares his extraordinary story of survival with a writer (Rafe Spall) who is interviewing him for a book. The writer is an invisible presence in Martel’s novel, and the interview format is an unfortunately pedestrian framing device for an otherwise wondrous films and it has damaging consequences later on.

The boy’s name is Pi Patel. The older Pi being interviewed flashes back to his boyhood in southern India, where the family zoo places the Garden of Eden on his doorstep. Young Pi, played by Suraj Sharma, happily worships three religions, Hinduism, Catholicism and Islam. He is attracted not so much to their tenets as their stories. He learned of Hinduism through comic books. “The gods were my superheroes growing up,” he said.

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