After the dullest year for movies I can remember in four decades of professional reviewing, Ang Lee’s Life of Pi restores the thrill of filmgoing. Adapted by David Magee from the beloved novel by the writer Yann Martel, who was born in Spain to French-Canadian parents, it tells the story of an adolescent Indian boy (played by a talented young actor named Suraj Sharma) who survives the wreck of a Japanese cargo ship and sails the Pacific on a lifeboat with a fully grown Bengal tiger. Lee’s approach to the material is to treat it like a fable, with lush, hothouse colors – the magnificent cinematography is by Claudio Miranda – contained within precise, sharply defined lines, and oftentimes magically layered imagery that’s accentuated by the 3D process. (During one shot, of a sky pocked with stars reflected in the depths of the ocean so that they suggest exotic blossoms living beneath the water, I had to restrain myself from shouting out loud.) Lee and Miranda’s influences appear to have been Henri Rousseau, Odilon Redon and perhaps the American painter Morris Louis; the style veers between symbolism and surrealism. Pauline Kael cited Louis in her review of Carroll Ballard’s masterpiece The Black Stallion, another fantastical story about a boy and an animal who are castaways from a shipwreck, and The Black Stallion is certainly the movie I thought about most frequently during Life of Pi, especially in the shipboard scenes during the storm that is the occasion for the ship’s destruction. (We never find out the cause of the wreck, and neither, to their consternation, do the insurance investigators who interview Pi after he eventually reaches dry land, in Mexico.) Both stories involve the training of a wild animal – in this case a dangerous carnivore in a severely restricted space – but otherwise they’re quite different, since Life of Pi is primarily a tale about faith.
It’s not an exaggeration to say that I fell in love with this picture during the credits, a montage of images of animals belonging to the zoo run by Pi’s father (Adil Hussain) in a botanical gardens in Pondicherry, India. The animals appear, usually (but not exclusively) in twos and threes, whimsically framed, and the glimpses we get of them almost seem choreographed. (A shot of gazelles leaping so rapidly across the screen that we can’t be sure exactly what we just saw are reminiscent of the deer in the woodland ballet sequence of The Yearling.) Mychael Danna’s entrancing music sounds like Indian pop played at an indolent pace, and the credits themselves are playful: when Yann Martel’s name appears, the left arm of the “y” dangles, mimicking the image on the screen of an orangutan climbing a tree, and Lee’s name glistens in a stream that also reflects the tiger, known as Richard Parker.
Suraj Sharma in a scene from Life of Pi |
The novel is good, though occasionally the language becomes a trifle twee; the movie, I think, is better. In the process of whittling the story down, Magee’s screenplay makes it purer (the few additions, like Pi’s adolescent romance, feel organic rather than tacked on). And though the narrative is episodic in nature the movie doesn’t feel that way because the visuals give it a compulsive watchability – you get the sense you’re whipping through the pages of a great adventure storybook with illustrations so exquisite they make your eyes pop. Usually I find Ang Lee’s movies tediously literal-minded, but he can surprise you. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon had a sense of boyish wonder I hadn’t suspected he was capable of, and though I found his gay cowboy picture Brokeback Mountain bafflingly repressed, the sex scenes in Lust, Caution were amazing; you couldn’t believe the same man made both films. But this is the first time Lee has seemed to me to be a real filmmaker, someone who can think simultaneously in visual and emotional terms. The Pondicherry scenes are lovely, especially one where Pi accompanies a kathak dance class on a tabla drum (this is where he meets Anandi, played by Shravanthi Sainath – the stunningly beautiful girl whom he has to leave behind when his family gets on the cargo ship) and a brief interlude on a rainy afternoon where the rain simultaneously mutes the colors and makes them glisten, the way Jacques Demy does in The Umbrellas of Cherbourg. And the storm at sea, which draws Pi out of his cabin in the wee hours to marvel at the spectacle, laughing with delight as he slides across the deck, is certainly a beauty. It’s when he gets on the lifeboat, though, that the image-making becomes truly dazzling. A zebra crashes onto the boat, smashing one of its legs: the shot is simultaneously gorgeous and shocking. A hyena scuttles out from under the canvas, screeching and lunging madly; the zoo’s female orangutan, Orange Juice, with ancient, mournful eyes, floats over on a crate of bananas; and Pi, thinking he’s holding out an oar to help another human being into the boat, suddenly realizes he’s got hold of Richard Parker. The Darwinian interplay among these four animals is mostly terrifying (though never graphic), but it’s also stupefying – you can’t believe what you’re watching. (I think that’s literally true; the balance of live animal footage and CGI is like a running magician’s trick that you can’t for the life of you work out.) Eventually – naturally – the Bengal tiger is the only of the four left alive; like Pi, you root for Orange Juice against the hyena, but you know she doesn’t have a chance. Pi has to hang off a lifejacket attached to the mast – and then sail alone on a raft he’s constructed of oars and buoys – until he figures out how to teach Richard Parker to respect territorial boundaries between them the way an animal trainer in a circus might, using the fish he catches as a set of rewards.
Suraj Sharma, director Ang Lee and author Yann Martel |
It’s Pi’s belief that when he wakes up and finds the boat has run aground on an island overrun with seaweed and populated by thousands of meerkats, God has rescued him and Richard Parker at their moment of capitulation to death, and that when, revived by food and a swim in a tide pool, he makes the discovery that the island harbors a danger from which he and the tiger must flee, it’s a sign from God. (The meerkats, which look from a distance like stalks of grain swaying in the wind and, when Pi gets close enough, stretch themselves to their full height in what looks hilariously like astonishment, supply a marvelous, and much needed, tonal shift.) But the spiritual idea the movie sets out to explore is the link between the boy and the tiger – which stems from the boy’s insistence to his exasperated father that Richard Parker has a soul. Lee continually shoots them as doubles of each other. In one remarkable sequence, Pi looks over at the tiger, staring into the ocean, and wonders what he’s thinking. He tries to get into his mind what the tiger might see: zoo animals swimming underwater, and glorious and frightening sea monsters. Suddenly these images give way to Anandi’s face, made up of dots of light like a pointillist painting, and you realize with a start that Pi has bridged Richard Parker’s imagination with his own. At this point we may remember the scene in Pondicherry where Pi brings Anandi to the zoo to show her Richard Parker, resting, his body perfectly still except for his head, which probes the air gently like, it suddenly seems to Pi, a kathak dancer.
The movie makes one mistake, I’d say, and it’s imported from the novel. When the Japanese insurance investigators interview Pi in the Mexican hospital they don’t believe his fantastic story; they demand that he tell them another one that they can bring back to their employers, one that won’t make them look like fools. So he relates a story about winding up in a lifeboat after the shipwreck with his mother, a wounded sailor and the loathsome ship’s cook (whom we met earlier, in the person of Gerard Depardieu). Luckily the filmmakers don’t dramatize the story; the adult Pi simply repeats it to the writer. But this tale of how the impulse to survive brings out the worst in Pi, who finally behaves as evilly as the cook, undercuts the sorcery of what precedes it. I understand what Lee and Magee are up (and what Martel was up to): the discrepancy between Pi’s second story – which (as the writer, of course, immediately cottons onto) invents a base for which the interaction among the four animals in the boat at the outset of the voyage can be read as a metaphor – and his first is that Richard Parker brings out the best in Pi because God is there all along. But the movie doesn’t need the comparison between the stories to make that point. It’s clear throughout the movie, and the way in which Lee shifts the emotional meaning of the image of the tiger’s departure from the first time we see it (at the end of the first story) to the second (when it’s repeated at the very end of the movie), to convey a shift in Pi’s feelings about it, makes the point again in another way. In any case, we don’t have to debate over which version of the story we’re supposed to believe, or perhaps I should say believe in. Lee doesn’t show us the second story, after all. Besides, Life of Pi is a piece of movie magic, like The Black Stallion (or last year’s Hugo), and movie magic always makes us into believers.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes forThe Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
This is a great review and really makes the reader want to go out and see the film immediately. One correction, though: Yann Martel isn't Indian-Canadian. He was born in Spain, to French-Canadian parents.
ReplyDeleteFiona - Thank you for your kind remarks as well as your keen eye. We've made the correction.
ReplyDeleteWhat an incredible movie and spot on review. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteFantastic review: as I relive seeing the movie in your words while listening to Pi's Lullaby over and over...the entire package, was, as you say here, just one of the best things to have come along in well, perhaps ever (only slight exageration). Thanks for such a very real appraisal. One of the few movies I've ever wanted to rush out and see again (the immersion of Avatar was another).
ReplyDeleteVery good review. I would to point out a few things:
ReplyDelete1. In the "Tigers Vision" scene, the image that forms from those dots is that of Pi's mother (not Anandi)
2. The dance form is Bharatanatyam (not Kathak)