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

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The line stated several times is that Pi’s story of the tiger and the lifeboat “will make you believe in God.” For a movie with overt religious themes, though, the ultimate religious moral in “Life of Pi” is ambivalent.
Pi’s carefree childhood comes to an end when his father (Adil Hussain), worried about India’s changing political climate in the mid 1970s, announces he will sell the zoo and transplant his family to Canada. As already noted, they don’t get far.

The shipwreck sequence, which lasts about 10 minutes, is more wrenching than the whole of James Cameron’s “Titanic.”

A few other zoo animals share the lifeboat with Pi after the ship sinks, but they don’t last long. The meat of the film is the relationship that forms between the boy and the tiger. After attempts to tame Richard Parker fail, Pi resorts to trying to train the beast like a circus animal.

If the idea of a movie that takes place aboard a lifeboat suggests the claustrophobia of Alfred Hitchcock’s “Lifeboat,” forget that notion. Lee opens up the screen to reveal the vastness of the sea (and here we are reminded that Pi’s name is a mathematic symbol of the infinite).

Lee’s imagination never ceases to seize upon new ways to depict the sea. This portion of the film becomes a museum gallery unto itself, with a series of paintings represent new aspects of the sea, its calm, its beauty, it ferocity, but above all, its limitlessness. Twice during the film, once at day and once at night, the sea becomes indistinguishable from the sky, and the lifeboat seems to float eerily in space.

Amazingly, little of this is real. Actor Sharma was never in the lifeboat with an actual tiger. Most of the time we are seeing an utterly convincing computer-animated tiger, and the few times a real tiger appears, it has been composited into the scene through another form of computer magic.

Even with its religious and philosophical overtones, “Life of Pi” is a classic survival and adventure story with strains of Robert Louis Stephenson and Ernest Hemingway. Pi’s brief landfall on an uninhabited island has clear references to Homer’s “The Odyssey.”


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