Life of Pi

Posted on November 20, 2012 at 6:00 pm

B+
Lowest Recommended Age: Middle School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for emotional thematic content throughout and some scary action scenes and peril
Profanity: Mild language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Wine
Violence/ Scariness: Scary shipwreck, frequent peril, deaths of characters and animals, some scary images including dismembered animals
Diversity Issues: Diverse characters
Date Released to Theaters: November 22, 2012
Date Released to DVD: March 11, 2013
Amazon.com ASIN: B005LAIIHG

“Oh God, thy sea is so great and my boat is so small.”

This classic Breton fisherman’s prayer describes “Life of Pi,” Ang Lee’s exquisitely beautiful fairy tale story of an Indian boy shipwrecked with a Bengal tiger, and their journey home.

The book by Yann Martel is an award-winning national best-seller, filled with meditations on life, faith, and zoos.  Pi, played as an adult by Irrfan Kahn and as a teenager by newcomer Suraj Sharma, was named Piscine Molitor after a swimming pool in France.  He insisted on shortening it to Pi after the kids at school teased him, and showed off by memorizing pi to the hundreds of places.  Pi’s family owned a zoo in Pondicherry, India, or, rather, the community owned the zoo and his family owned the animals.  When they must leave India, his parents sell most of the animals and pack up the rest  with Pi and his older brother to travel to Canada by ship.  On a stormy night, the ship sinks and, according to the story the adult Pi tells to a visitor, the only survivors are Pi, a zebra with a broken leg, a hyena, an orangutang named Orange Juice, and a Bengal tiger improbably named Richard Parker thanks to a clerical error and always referred to by his full name.  Soon, it is just Pi and the tiger.

Pi is an unusually thoughtful boy who considers himself at the same time a Hindu, a Moslem, and a Christian.  (This is described in much more detail in the book, including an amusing encounter between two of his teachers.)  His parents are not religious and his father jokes that if he picks up a few more faiths every day will be a holiday.  He is a thoughtful, observant boy who considers matters deeply and wants to understand.  In the lifeboat, he considers his options carefully, making an inventory of the food and equipment and lashing together a small raft to protect himself from the hungry tiger.  As it becomes clear that they will have to sustain themselves for an indefinite time, Pi uses what he knows about animals to establish his territory and earn the tiger’s trust.  In a sense, his life has been simplified to its essence, as everything — home, family, plans, community, food, water, — is taken from him.  In another sense, these losses open him up to a depth and spiritual richness that would not be possible in a busy world of connections and obligations.

Pi and Richard Parker weather storms.  They share unexpected riches when flying fish literally jump into their laps, and soul-expanding beauty, especially a great luminous leap by a whale the size of a motor home.

When he was a young boy, Pi tried to feed a tiger.  His father arrived just in time to prevent him from being the tiger’s lunch and gave him an unforgettable lesson by making him watch as the tiger attacked a live goat.  Pi insists that he can see the tiger’s soul in his eyes.  His father insists that there is nothing behind his eyes but the law of the jungle.  Pi has a great heart and the gift of faith.  Both are tested.  And it is only when everything he thought he could not live without is taken from him that he realizes how much he has gained, and how it is the troubles he has faced that have kept him alive.

The rapturous visual beauty of the film is itself a spirit-expanding experience.  The lyrical poetry of the images and the skillfully immersive effects surround us with a powerful sense of connection to the divine.

Parents should know that the plot concerns a boy lost at sea with a Bengal tiger and it includes sad deaths of family members and animals, some graphic and disturbing images, and extended danger and peril.

Family discussion:  Why does a character say the story will make you believe in God?  Which story do you prefer?  How did Richard Parker keep Pi alive?  What do we learn about Pi from his questions about the dance?  From his reaction to the island?

If you like this, try: the book by Yann Martel

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3D Action/Adventure Based on a book Drama DVD/Blu-Ray Pick of the Week Spiritual films

Red Dawn

Posted on November 20, 2012 at 5:58 pm

There was much to improve in the original version of “Red Dawn,” a simple-minded fantasy film about a communist invasion of small town America: the plot, which asked us to believe that Cuban and Soviet invaders would focus their attention on subduing the teenage population of a town with no military significance; the dialogue, which was hilariously wooden; the special effects (the bad guys tracked our heroes using a locator that appears to have been borrowed from a 1930s Flash Gordon serial); the acting (despite a cast of future stars such as Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen, the original “Red Dawn” left the actors little to do except shoot guns and emote in their mountain hideouts); the production values (unseen artillery and aircraft shelled a lone tank in the middle of a vacant field with what appeared to be firecrackers). In fact, everything about the original “Red Dawn” had a childlike simplicity that made it endearing to audiences.

The plot of the new “Red Dawn” mimics the original in most respects.  Members of the Wolverines, a high school football team, refuse to surrender to or collaborate with the invaders (this time from Asia) the way many of their disappointing parents do. They take to the hills, learn to fight and inspire a resistance movement.  Along the way they learn lessons about loyalty, patriotism, and the price of the freedoms we all hold dear.  Older brother Jed Eckert is played by Chris Hemsworth (Thor from “The Avengers”) while younger brother Matty Eckert is played by Josh Peck. The obligatory girlfriend who looks hot in guerrilla garb is played by Adrianne Palicki.

MGM looked at the original formula and decided that if it was going to upgrade just one ingredient, it would be the quality of the explosions.  No firecrackers here, the new and improved “Red Dawn” has serious explosions and gunfire.  A residential neighborhood is blown up with high definition digital effects.  First time director Dan Bradley was previously a stunt coordinator and it shows.  We see house to house gunfights that look and sound authentic.  The new version uses realistic blood, rather than the Heinz ketchup favored by the producers of the original.

The problem is, this change in the formula disrupts the equilibrium that gave the original its charm.  Every element of the original was equally unpersuasive.  By making bullets more persuasive, Bradley only highlights the dumbnicity of the rest.

Worse, the new Red Dawn is a less kind movie.  Along with the more realistic violence, there is more drinking and profanity.  Unfortunately, the dialogue that is supposed to glue these elements together remains as insubstantial as the dialogue in the cartoonish original.  (Says the young guerrilla leader: “We have to make it too hard and too difficult for them.”)  One other change — the Soviet Union no longer being available as invaders, this film substituted the Chinese when it was shot a few years ago until the distributors who ended up with it after the first group ran out of money figured out that Chinese people constitute a very big audience for films, preferably ones that don’t make them the bad guys.  So, the Chinese invaders were digitally altered to make them North Korean.

The new “Red Dawn” is slicker than the original but it lacks the heart that was the only redeeming feature of the first version.  It is a meaner production, and probably not worth your time unless you go for the explosions, which are pretty good.

Parents should know that this film has extensive and sometimes graphic images of battle with guns and explosions, fighting, with characters injured and killed, and very strong language.

Family discussion: Why did some parents instruct their children to cooperate with the invaders? What made some people in the town choose to resist?  What would be the hardest thing for you about fighting the invaders?  How were the Wolverines like our founding fathers?

If you like this, try: the original 1984 version starring Patrick Swayze

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Action/Adventure Remake War

Inventing David Geffen — Tonight on PBS

Posted on November 20, 2012 at 11:57 am

Tonight on PBS, the “American Masters” series will show “Inventing David Geffen,” the story of the agent, manager, record industry mogul, Hollywood and Broadway producer, and philanthropist who has helped shape American popular culture for the past four decades. Notoriously press and camera-shy, Geffen reveals himself for the first time in the new two-hour documentary.  American Masters explores the highs and the lows in Geffen’s professional and personal life through more than 50 new interviews with his friends, colleagues and clients, including Irving Azoff, Jackson Browne, Cher, David Crosby, Clive Davis, Barry Diller, Maureen Dowd, Rahm Emanuel, Nora Ephron, Tom Hanks, Don Henley, Arianna Huffington, Jimmy Iovine, Elton John, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Calvin Klein, Steve Martin, Lorne Michaels, Mike Nichols, Yoko Ono, Frank Rich, Steven Spielberg, Jann Wenner, Neil Young, and many others. Geffen launched the early successes of Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Jackson Browne, the Eagles, Tom Cruise in Risky Business (1983), and Guns N’ Roses. In 1994 he co-founded DreamWorks SKG with Spielberg and Katzenberg, the first new Hollywood studio in more than 50 years, which went on to release Oscar®-winning Best Pictures American Beauty (1999), Gladiator (2000) and A Beautiful Mind (2001), as well as animated features, including the Shrek franchise. Geffen also produced the Broadway musicals Cats (1982) and Dreamgirls (1981), and helped realize the Golden Globe-winning 2006 film adaptation. Witty and self-aware, Geffen admits, “I have no talent except for being able to enjoy and recognize it in others.”

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Documentary Television

Interview: David Magee of “Life of Pi”

Posted on November 19, 2012 at 3:48 pm

Screenwriter David Magee met with a group of journalists to talk about “Life of Pi.”  He told us that as a not very successful actor, he enjoyed doing audio books.  One day he would do the full book and the next, the abridged version.  “I came in the next day and said, ‘This is terrible. I’m sorry, but it’s really terrible what you’re doing to this author’s book, I feel bad reading this. I mean, I could do better than this,’ and the producer said, ‘Well, would you like to try? I mean, we need abridgers all the time.’ I asked how much it paid, and it was not a lot but it was enough, and so I jumped at the chance to do it because I could abridge books anywhere, any time. I could be in a theater in Utah and abridging in my apartment while I did a show there.  Over the course of about five years I did over 80 novels in non-fiction and all sorts of books, and the process is taking a book that is anywhere from 105,000 to 200,000 words and cutting it down to 29,500 words.  By the time I was done I had gotten very good at selecting the essential things for this story, focusing on the dialogue and the action, pairing away the room description; you know, there are a lot of wonderful scenes in books that describe the paintings on the wall and the feeling when you look out the window—there’s no time for that in an abridgment, and in a film, that’s the set job, it’s not your job. So, it actually was very natural training for me to get into this.”

He spoke about the classical stories of survival at sea.  “I went back and read Moby Dick and I read back and I read the James Joyce’s Ulysses, which is very different, but I was looking for the spiritual journey. So I was trying to find, and in early version that no one saw, I was sticking in lines from Joyce’s stuff and trying them on Ang Lee…I really, very much took those to heart Moby Dick and Ulysses and Noah, obviously, that was very much apart of it. There’s also obviously Job in his trials and ordeals, and ‘God, why hast thou forsaken me’ and all of that, comes into that storm sequence.  When we first started working, we talked big picture. What were we trying to say, how were we trying to combine these characters? And so I spent a lot of the early days just typing up notes about different religious traditions.  We did some research, I tried to listen to some tapes on different religions…a lot of it was absorbing that world. And then when we actually went off and wrote it, you know, it was not so much about making sure that every reference was put in, it was trying to find ways to bring action and bring life to what was happening in the scenes.

I worked very closely with Ang. Once we decided we were going to do this, I would go away for a week or maybe two and I would type up notes on the project ideas, do some research, pull together different things, and then I’d send it over to him, he’d read it, we’d meet for lunch down in China town, I’d eat very well, and we’d start a discussion: ‘Yes, I like this one…but think more about this, David, think more about: what can we do in this scene? Maybe we should try this part of the structure idea that you had, but let’s keep this open for now.’  There was a lot of back and forth, so it became an extended conversation. I’d then go back home, I’d type more notes, I’d send them back, that would get us a little further down the field. So it was continued that way throughout the research period.”  He contacted Stephen Callahan who wrote The Book of Drift, which was about his true-life experience of being adrift at sea for 69 days. “It turned out he lived in Maine. Ang and I went up there and met with him and talked about how that changes the way you feel about life, how that affects you physically, all of those things. Stephen actually became our survival consultant for the film. He ended up being a major part of the film. He took us out on a boat, originally Ang wanted to have him leave us out on the ocean for ‘a few hours,’ he said, so we would experience what it was like–and I’d pull Stephen aside and thank him not to do that. So he went with us, but he did take the sail down and we bounced around in the water for quite a while, it was like being in a washing machine.”  Magee and Lee also went to India together “and at some point while I was on the journey with him in India he said something about this being an adult telling an adventure story that he would tell to kids. And I thought ‘that’s the right tone, that’s kind of what we’re looking for—it’s not a kid’s story, it’s not an adult’s story, but it’s an adult telling a story where he wants you to lean forward and go, And then this happened…’ and that clicked with me. I understood what he meant and I started writing that and went into a draft.”

I asked him about the island, which is one of my favorite scenes in the book and the movie.  “The way I saw the island…first of all, in the whole of the film, you could take things allegorically obviously, but you can also take them as ‘No, it really happened to me, why are you doubting me?’ which is what Pi essentially says at the end. ‘This is just what happened.’ And so I don’t want to take away from the possibility that this was ‘just what happened.’ Our goal in writing the film the way we did was to make sure that you could read the story or stories in any way you wanted to, and it would be more of a reflection on your own belief system at the end. But if you want to talk about the island allegorically, this is my interpretation of the island and I would say this is the film’s interpretation of the island —  it is a place that is nurturing and bountiful by day, it giveth, and at night it’s a place of devouring and consuming and danger, at night, taketh away. Sometimes we call it ‘the Godhead island’ because Pi’s journey, over the course of the film, is to have his presumptions stripped away, his comforts stripped away and ultimately to reach a point where he’s at death, and then he finds himself on that island and comes to know something about the nature of his relationship to God, and that island saves him, and as he says at the end, but that island also pushes him onward on his journey. Rather than resting, which would be essentially death, it forces him to return to society.

He also spoke about the challenge of adapting such an internal book to film.  “Sometimes I think when people talk about this book being difficult to film, they were referring just to the fact that it was tremendously difficult to put a boy and a tiger on a boat together without one of them eating the other, but sometimes I think it has as much to do with the structure of the book and the fact that it moves back and forth in time and that it involves several different Pis along the way.  We had to make a choice early on whether or not we were going to use the older Pi and the writer at all.  We could have framed the film using the story of Pi meeting the investigators in the hospital as the entire frame, and we considered that. Having tried a hundred different ways, because we really did, the reason we ultimately decided to have the writer and Pi as the framing device, this is a story, ultimately,  about story-telling, and we wanted the writer to take the story with him, and that passing on of the story was important to us thematically, not just from a framing-device sense.  Also if you just tell that third act from the boy’s point of few, it’s told in extremis, it’s told emotionally, not as a grand tale, not reflectively; which, we wanted this to be the kind of big story that, you know, I’m passing this onto you…it gives it a larger scope to say ‘I’m reflecting back now, and I’m telling you the way I felt when I was there. This was how I experienced it, this was the journey and then this is what happened.’ There are all sorts of rules for screenwriting, and they’re generally there for good reasons, and those reasons are that people who’ve tried something different and it falls on its face, and so you want to pay very close attention to those rules, but by the same token, the rules didn’t come before the screenplays were first written, the rules came in response to the fact that people had tried things and they hadn’t worked out, so…they’re not like building codes that you have to follow. They’re warnings, that if you don’t follow them, you have to really think hard about how to do it, and that was a choice that we had to make from the moment that we decided to use that as a framing device.”

And he spoke to us about moments of surrender.  “When Pi says, ‘I surrender to you, God, let me know what comes, I want to know what comes,’ he is surrendering on a very surface level but he’s not surrendering his beliefs, he’s not surrendering his belongings…he thinks he’s letting go and he is turning and saying, “What will come, will come,” which is, on a surface level.  If he had not made that, I don’t think he would ever have learned to train the tiger. But having mastered the tiger, he has to make a greater, a deeper kind of surrender, he has to essentially, be stripped of everything and find himself reaching that island. So I think that the ultimate moment of surrender is when just before he reaches that island, when he says, he comes to term with the tigers.”

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Interview Writers

Santa Paws 2: The Santa Pups

Posted on November 19, 2012 at 1:36 pm

B
Lowest Recommended Age: All Ages
MPAA Rating: G
Profanity: None
Alcohol/ Drugs: None
Violence/ Scariness: Mild peril
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to DVD: November 18, 2012
Amazon.com ASIN: B008C0C23I

If there’s anything cuter than the Santa Buddies, it is the sequel, the new DVD/Blu-Ray pick of the week, “Santa Paws 2: The Santa Pups.”  The puppies stow away on Mrs. Claus’ trip to a Christmas-loving town and have a lot of fun granting wishes until something goes wrong and Christmas itself starts to disappear.  Who can save the day?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rB8StgkqdQY

It was a lot of fun to catch up with Kaitlyn Maher, who returns for the sequel.  “Santa is at his workshop and he needs a new child ambassador and he sends Mrs. Claus to go and find one.  She meets the Reynolds family.  Their town used to have the best city with the most Christmas spirit but the Santa pups decided that they were going to come and they took something without asking.  Somebody wished for Christmas to go away and it happened.  Mrs. Claus and my character have to help save Christmas, but I’m not going to say the ending,” she told me.  The puppies were “so sweet and cuddly and cute,” she said, “and even sweeter when there was a dog treat around.”  She said the trainers used “lots and lots of treats” and little toys and breaks, too, “if a puppy was being finicky or something, they would always have a new dog waiting.  They were very professional.”  The biggest challenge was that “there was a train that would go by six times every single day.  We would have to stop recording, even if it was the best take we had done.  We would have to stop until the train circled around the whole track.”  She loved the set for Santa’s workshop.  “I asked the producer where all the toys were going to be going.”  When no one had an answer, Kaitlyn said, “Can I please donate them?  I’d love to pick a few charities in Vancouver.”  She became charity coordinator and the toys went to four different charities. “It was a great way to get the whole cast involved in sharing the joy of Christmas.”  Her favorite prop in the workshop was a big bell.  She thought it was funny when the elf fell off the bell in the first movie.  Kaitlyn is home schooled and “I love that my mom teaches me.”  She likes the American Girl books and Nancy Drew and loves to read about ancient history.  And she likes movies that have a message.  “The Sound of Music” is one of her favorites and she also likes mysteries.  She says the buddies movies are popular because “the movies are fun and have a good message.  The writers bring that message through magical and wonderful things that you could not imagine.  Everyone works together and they’re family-friendly.  People really feel blessed by them.”  She loves to sing and her favorite scene in the movie was when she got to sing “O Holy Night.”  She especially loves to write songs and will work on a new CD next year.  “I like to make songs that are inspiring and encouraging.  I like to make people smile.”  And she is looking forward to Christmas with her family and spreading the joy of Christmas to everyone.  “I think it is very, very important that people have the love they need on Christmas.”

 

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Actors DVD/Blu-Ray Pick of the Week For the Whole Family Interview Series/Sequel Talking animals
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