Life of Pi Review
Ang Lee's latest rounds up. Full, spoiler-free review by Isaac Handelman How do you make a movie about a teenage Indian boy stranded in a life raft on the Pacific Ocean with nothing but a Bengal tiger for company? Only one option presents itself: you make Life of Pi . This is, more so than any film released in recent memory, a one-of-a-kind experience. You’re unlikely to see anything that even vaguely resembles Pi for quite a while (maybe excluding the now-obligatory low budget cash-in ripoffs you can get at Redbox). It’s a movie about living and dying. It’s a movie about independence and growing up. It’s a movie about the validity of religion and choosing your faith. It’s also a movie about a teenaged Indian boy stranded on a lifeboat in the Pacific Ocean with a Bengal tiger for company. Amongst all these themes and underlying messages, it’d be easy for Pi to get bogged down in its own morals. It doesn’t. The story is told from the perspective of a grownup Pi as...