Author Topic: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan  (Read 42997 times)

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens the 50th New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center
« Reply #20 on: September 30, 2012, 03:53:35 pm »



[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ozsIuSk6Cl8[/youtube]
Streamed live on Sep 28, 2012 by filmlincdotcom




Academy Award-winning director Ang Lee and author Yann Martel will sit down with Film Society of Lincoln Center Program Director Richard Peña for a discussion of the film adaptation of Martell's Man Booker Prize-winning book LIFE OF PI  on Friday, September 28 at 12:00pm (ET). Watch live video of the press conference right here!

LIFE OF PI is the Opening Night film of the 50th New York Film Festival. The film hits theaters November 21, 2012 via 20th Century Fox.

LIFE OF PI at NYFF: http://filmlinc.com/lifeofpi
LIFE OF PI official site: http://www.lifeofpimovie.com/
LIFE OF PI on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/LifeofPi
LIFE OF PI on Twitter: http://twitter.com/lifeofpimovie
NYFF on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NYFilmFest
NYFF on Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheNYFF


« Last Edit: September 30, 2012, 06:41:47 pm by Aloysius J. Gleek »
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Offline Front-Ranger

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens the 50th New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center
« Reply #21 on: September 30, 2012, 07:45:54 pm »
Thanks, John. That was great!
"chewing gum and duct tape"

Offline Meryl

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens the 50th New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center
« Reply #22 on: September 30, 2012, 11:45:47 pm »
Thanks, John!  Looks very cool!  8)
Ich bin ein Brokie...

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #23 on: November 19, 2012, 08:14:35 am »
http://nymag.com/movies/reviews/edelstein-life-of-pi-2012-11/


The Movie Review
Easy Tiger
The pantheistic pleasures of Ang Lee’s
Life of Pi
By David Edelstein
Published Nov 18, 2012





For Life of Pi,  the overcontrolled director Ang Lee has gone with his strengths and made a movie that’s passionately overcontrolled. It takes place largely on a lifeboat adrift in the South Pacific that carries radically mismatched buddies: a skinny 16-year-old Indian vegetarian with the odd name “Pi” (Suraj Sharma) and a man-eating Bengal tiger with the even odder name “Richard Parker.” The lifeboat isn’t entirely lifelike, mind you. The water’s aquamarine is more like ultra-ultramarine, the sea a mirror in which clouds above seem to mingle with sharks, dorados, luminous jellyfish, even whales below. Later, on an island that’s mysteriously alive, the orange of the tiger burns especially bright in the chlorophyll-green forest of the ebony-black night. Life of Pi  looks neither natural nor egregiously fake but vivid, as if a knob had been turned way up on the color of each object’s spirit and the real world into a sort of pantheistic storybook. And that’s exactly the right look for what it is: a tale told by the older Pi (Irrfan Khan) to a writer (Rafe Spall) who has sought him out after hearing that Pi had a story to make him “believe in God.” I’m not sure how I felt about God at the end of Life of Pi,  but I fervently believed in the magic of movies.

Some of that magic comes from the 3-D, which Lee shows off in the first seconds of the credit sequence. In an Indian zoo owned by Pi’s parents, the camera lingers on paintings of animals on walls that bear a striking resemblance to cave paintings—and then look out, the animals’ 3-D counterparts are suddenly comin’ at ya. Those cave painters would freak out. But there’s also something old-fashioned about Lee’s frames. He holds the shots for a long time, longer than any major American studio head would let him if not for that marvelously immersive technology. Armed with 3-D, Lee can slow the storytelling down without worrying about modern audiences getting antsy. And he has Mychael Danna’s score, one of Danna’s East-West hybrids (Persian flutes and gamelan weaving in and out of Romantic orchestrations), providing a sense of flux when the images are static. That lifeboat goes nowhere fast.

Pi’s god (God, gods) is (are) also in flux: He’s a polymath, a Hindu who thanks Lord Vishnu for introducing him to Christ while rolling out his prayer mat to honor Allah. This kid subscribes to everything—and this in the face of his father’s blunt reliance on reason and insistence that creatures like the tiger (which gazes into Pi’s eyes and sees only lunch) have no souls. Pi’s own faith in the Higher Power(s) gets the test of his or anyone’s life when the ship bound for North America bearing his family and their animals (they’re emigrating) goes down along with most of the living things onboard. The audience, meanwhile, witnesses the uplifting arrival of the god of cinema.

In one fluid motion, a zebra (it must be CGI, but who can tell?) leaps crazily into the lifeboat and lands with a terrible, backbreaking thud. There’s an orangutan grieving for a lost child, and hiding under a tarpaulin is the piece’s real villain, a madly carnivorous hyena. Richard Parker swims aboard and carnage ensues—though far less explicit than the corresponding passages of Yann Martel’s novel. Left alone with each other and their dwindling supplies of food, Pi and Parker achieve a tense détente, though let it be said that Lee, like Martel, goes all out to avoid even a whiff of family-friendly anthropomorphosizing. Despite that name, Richard Parker remains an animal in circumstances known to turn the most civilized human into a beast. Dread forestalls dearness. Life of Pi evokes Melville’s mordant answer to the Transcendentalists in Moby-Dick : You might sit astride a mast and feel a oneness with nature, but fall into the sea and you’ll be quickly digested. Even those clunky interludes with the grown-up Pi and the interviewer (poor Spall, with so little to play) end up paying off. The movie has a sting in its tail that puts what you’ve seen in a startlingly harsh context.

It turns out Lee has more affinity for Pi the yarn-spinner than for any of his other heroes. His movies (Lust, Caution; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon; Hulk; Brokeback Mountain; Taking Woodstock ) center on emotions that can’t be suppressed and finally burst forth—but the meticulousness of his framing and color-coordination (or that mythical cowboy iconography in Brokeback Mountain ) make his work seem one step removed, as if in a terrarium. In Life of Pi,  he finally has a story in which that very distance is the source of the emotion. Pi has designed his own terrarium to keep from staring directly into the abyss. It’s not denial. It’s faith in something else: the transformative power of storytelling. The film is transcendent.



Life of Pi
Directed by Ang Lee.
Twentieth Century Fox. PG.


E-mail: [email protected].


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Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
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Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #24 on: November 19, 2012, 08:50:01 am »

    Release dates for
Life of Pi    (2012)
 
Country          Date

USA    28 September 2012 (New York Film Festival)
USA    14 October 2012 (Mill Valley Film Festival)
Taiwan    10 November 2012 (Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival)

Canada    21 November 2012  
Puerto Rico    21 November 2012  
Taiwan    21 November 2012  
USA 21    November 2012  

Hong Kong    22 November 2012
 
Cambodia    29 November 2012  
Singapore    29 November 2012  
Spain    30 November 2012  

Vietnam    14 December 2012  

Belgium    19 December 2012  
France    19 December 2012  
Belarus    20 December 2012  
Czech Republic    20 December 2012  
Greece    20 December 2012  
Hungary    20 December 2012  
Ireland    20 December 2012  
Italy    20 December 2012  
Kazakhstan    20 December 2012  
Netherlands    20 December 2012  
Portugal    20 December 2012  
Serbia    20 December 2012 (Belgrade)
Slovenia    20 December 2012  
UK    20 December 2012  

Brazil    21 December 2012  
Bulgaria    21 December 2012  
Colombia    21 December 2012  
Ecuador    21 December 2012  
Estonia    21 December 2012  
Finland    21 December 2012  
Iceland    21 December 2012  
Lithuania    21 December 2012  
Mexico    21 December 2012  
Sweden    21 December 2012  
Venezuela    21 December 2012  

Denmark    25 December 2012  
Norway    25 December 2012  
Germany    26 December 2012  

Dominican Republic    27 December 2012  
Peru    27 December 2012  
Poland    28 December 2012  
Turkey    28 December 2012
 
Australia    1 January 2013  
Costa Rica    1 January 2013  
El Salvador    1 January 2013  
New Zealand    1 January 2013  
Nicaragua    1 January 2013  
Panama    1 January 2013  
Russia    1 January 2013  

Bolivia    3 January 2013  
Chile    3 January 2013  
Guatemala    4 January 2013  
Honduras    4 January 2013  

Argentina    10 January 2013  

Japan    25 January 2013  


Also Known As

Животът на Пи    Bulgaria

A Vida de Pi    Portugal  
As Aventuras de Pi    Brazil  
  
Berättelsen om Pi    Sweden

L'odyssée de Pi    France
La vida de Pi    Spain
Life of Pi: Schiffbruch mit Tiger    Germany

Pi élete    Hungary
Pi gyvenimas    Lithuania
Pi'nin Yasami    Turkey
Piin elämä    Finland  
Pijev život    Serbia

Vita di Pi    Italy

Zycie Pi    Poland



"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #25 on: November 19, 2012, 09:23:26 am »



They [Pi and 'Richard Parker', a man-eating tiger] are soon pacing around one other with the same mixture of wariness and hungriness last seen on the faces of Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger in Lee's 2005 Brokeback Mountain.



http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/sep/30/life-of-pi-review-film


first look review
Life of Pi
Ang Lee's adaptation of Yann Martel's novel,
which opened the New York film festival,
is the summation of the principle powering his
career: still waters run deep


By Tom Shone
The Guardian
Sunday 30 September 2012 09.19 EDT



Suraj Sharma and tiger in Life of Pi. Ang Lee's adaptation of Yann Martel's
novel has opened the 50th annual New York film festival.




In his gently astonishing new film, Life of Pi,  adapted from Yann Martel's 2001 bestseller, director Ang Lee melds so many disparate elements – Aesopian fable and cutting-edge 3D technology, east and west, young and old – that he may have just succeeded in rebranding himself as the Obama of world cinema. The fiercely urgent candidate of 2008, of course, not the stealth version currently working the stump.

The sheer number of world religions given a shout-out in the film – Hindu, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist – is enough to send Donald Trump's comb-over scampering up the nearest tree trunk, looking for cover.

The film takes a while to get going, like someone roused from their morning meditation, with lots of flowers and candles and people wearing kindly, fixed smiles suggesting enlightenment, or as if they had been hit around the head with a brass pot.

In French India, the young son of a zoo owner collects world religions the way other kids collect stamps. "They were my superheroes," he says, checking off a list of deities. Such good karma, sad to say, doesn't necessarily make for good drama. You're almost grateful for the arrival of the storm that sinks the boat bearing Pi, his family and their animal entourage to the new world, leaving the boy alone on a boat with one of his father's tigers. They are soon pacing around one other with the same mixture of wariness and hungriness last seen on the faces of Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger in Lee's 2005 Brokeback Mountain.

One of the things that tells you the director is in his prime – a model of creative evolution – is that his films feel like total surprises when first announced but fit snugly into his oeuvre once you've seen them. Immersing himself in the latest technology — 3D, digital paintboxes, motion capture and control – as Martin Scorsese did in last year's Hugo,  Lee summons delights with his fingertips. But where Hugo was cold to the touch, Life of Pi  feels warm-blooded, the perfect summation of the principle powering Lee's entire career: still waters run deep. You see it both in the Zen minimalism of his compositions – check out the shots of sky reflected in a glassy ocean, the boat suspended in the middle as if hanging in thin air – and the sonar-like skill with which he sounds out the emotional depths of Martel's tale. Lee's pixels are animated by empathy.

Life of Pi  feels so simple, yet knotted with resonance, that you wonder why Lee bothered with the framing narrative in which a grown-up Pi chews over the spiritual implications of his tale with a writer in Toronto. For one thing, the argument they come up with for the existence of God turns out to bear a suspicious similarity to an argument for the all-round grooviness of magic realism. For another: Toronto. A nice city, but its neat patches of parkland and grey high-rises are no match for breaching whales, phosphorescent fish and crouching tigers, or the sight if Pi, howling like Job into stormy skies.

Hollywood has been waiting for this movie. Get ready for the year of the Tiger.

The New York film festival runs until 14 October
"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #26 on: November 19, 2012, 09:41:13 am »



[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=m7WBfntqUoA[/youtube]
Published on Sep 25, 2012 by ClevverMovies


"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
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Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #27 on: November 19, 2012, 09:53:25 am »



And just because:


[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1G4isv_Fylg[/youtube]
Published on Oct 18, 2011 by ColdplayVEVO | #20 on the YouTube 100



"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
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Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"

Offline TOoP/Bruce

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #28 on: November 19, 2012, 11:44:36 am »
"Life of Pi" is my most anticipated film of the year.  I was absolutely obsessional about both CTHD and BbM, and PI looks absolutely awesome!
Former IMDb Name: True Oracle of Phoenix / TOoP (I pronounce it "too - op") / " in fire forged,  from ash reborn" / Currently: GeorgeObliqueStrokeXR40

Offline Aloysius J. Gleek

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Re: Ang Lee's Life of Pi opens 21 November 2012: USA, Canada, and--Taiwan
« Reply #29 on: November 19, 2012, 11:53:47 am »


http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Review-Lee-s-Life-of-Pi-is-inspiring-3-D-art-4049957.php



Review: Lee's
Life of Pi
is inspiring 3-D art

by DAVID GERMAIN
AP Movie Writer
Updated 7:16 a.m., Monday, November 19, 2012



Suraj Sharma as Pi Patel in a scene from Life of Pi.


Life of Pi  is one of those lyrical, internalized novels that should have no business working on the screen. Quite possibly, it wouldn't have worked if anyone but Ang Lee had adapted it.

The filmmaker who turned martial arts into a poetic blockbuster for Western audiences with Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon  and made gay cowboys mainstream fare with Brokeback Mountain  has crafted one of the finest entries in his eclectic resume in Life of Pi,  a gorgeous, ruminative film that is soulfully, provocatively entertaining.

Lee combines a lifetime of storytelling finesse with arguably the most artful use of digital 3-D technology yet seen to bring to life Yann Martel's saga of an Indian youth lost at sea with a ravenous Bengal tiger aboard his small lifeboat. It's a delicate narrative with visceral impact, told with an innovative style that's beguiling to watch and a philosophical voice that compassionately explores how and why we tell stories.

Our playful, not-always-reliable narrator here is Pi Patel, played by newcomer Suraj Sharma as a teen and as a grown man reflecting back on his adventure by Irrfan Khan. As a youth, Pi, his parents and brother set out from India, where the family runs a zoo in a botanical garden, to Canada. Pi's father brings along some of his menagerie on their voyage, including a tiger named Richard Parker with which Pi had a terrifying encounter as a boy.

Their ship sinks in a storm, with Pi the only human survivor aboard a lifeboat with an orangutan, a hyena, a zebra with a broken leg and Richard Parker. Survival of the fittest thins their numbers into a life-and-death duel, and eventually an uneasy truce of companionship, between Richard Parker and Pi.

This could be a one-note story — please Mister Tiger, don't eat me. Yet Lee and screenwriter David Magee find rich and clever ways to translate even Pi's stillest moments, the film unfolding through intricate flashbacks, whimsical voice-overs, harrowing sea hazards and exquisite flashes of fantasy and hallucination.

Lee used real tigers for a handful of scenes, but Richard Parker mostly is a digital creation, a remarkably realistic piece of computer animation seamlessly blended into the live action. The digital detail may be responsible for most of Richard Parker's fearful presence, though no small part of the tiger's impact is due to the nimble engagement of Sharma with a predator that wasn't actually there during production, a task hard enough for experienced performers, let alone a youth with no acting experience.

Digital 3-D usually is an unnecessary distraction not worth the extra admission price. In Life of Pi,  like Martin Scorsese's Hugo,  the 3-D images are tantalizing and immersive, pulling viewers deeper into Pi's world so that the illusion of depth becomes essential to the story.

Not all of the images live up to Lee's digital tiger or 3-D wizardry. Water is notoriously hard to simulate through computer animation, and the waves crashing down around the sinking ship or tossing Pi's lifeboat about have an unfinished, cartoony look. Still, Lee more than compensates with a world of visual wonders, from the simple image of a swimmer framed from below as though he's stroking his way across the sky to a mysterious island populated by a seemingly infinite number of meerkats.

The rest of the cast is mostly inconsequential, including Gerard Depardieu in a fleeting role as a cruel ship's cook. The other people in Pi's life are filtered through this unusual youth's eyes, each of them catalysts in the development of his deep spirituality, which blends Hinduism, Christianity, Islam and other contradictory influences into a weirdly cohesive form of humanism.

Like Martel's novel, the film disdains our inclination to anthropomorphize wild animals by ascribing human traits to them, and then turns around and subtly does just that. Friendship cannot possibly exist between a hungry tiger and a scrawny kid alone on the open water, yet for that boy, if not the cat, the need for togetherness, some commune of spirits, is almost as strong as the need for food and water. The ways in which Lee examines the strange bond between Pi and Richard Parker are wondrous, hilarious, unnerving, sometimes joyous, often melancholy.

Pi's story may not, as one character states, make you believe in God. But you may leave the theater more open to the possibilities of higher things in the life of Pi, and in your own.


"Life of Pi," a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG for emotional thematic content throughout, and some scary action sequences and peril. Running time: 126 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.


The same review is also published here:

http://www.salon.com/2012/11/19/review_lees_life_of_pi_is_inspiring_3_d_art/singleton/


"Tu doives entendre je t'aime."
(and you know who I am...)


Cowboy Curtis (Laurence Fishburne)
and Pee-wee in the 1990 episode
"Camping Out"