Movie · 2012 · Adventure, Drama · 2h 7m · PG · English
Curator score: 6.9/10 (1.7M ratings)
Take the journey of a lifetime.
Overview
The story of an Indian boy named Pi, a zookeeper's son who finds himself in the company of a hyena, zebra, orangutan, and a Bengal tiger after a shipwreck sets them adrift in the Pacific Ocean.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.9/10
IMDb: 7.9/10
Letterboxd: 3.75/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
Metacritic: 79
TMDB: 7.4/10
Director
Ang Lee
Production
Fox 2000 Pictures, Dune Entertainment, Ingenious Media, Haishang Films, Netter Productions, Big Screen Productions
Cast
Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Ayush Tandon, Gautam Belur, Adil Hussain, Tabu, Ayaan Khan, Mohd Abbas Khaleeli, Vibish Sivakumar, Rafe Spall, Gérard Depardieu, James Saito, Jun Naito, Andrea Di Stefano, Shravanthi Sainath, Elie Alouf, T.M. Karthik, Amarendran Ramanan, Hari Mina Bala, Edison Wang
Where to watch
Max
Curator Review
Verdict
A visually spectacular survival drama that blends adventure, spirituality, and ambiguity into a memorable cinematic experience. It’s especially rewarding if you respond to big-screen imagery, emotional resilience, and stories that invite both literal and symbolic readings.
Best for
viewers who love lush visual storytelling
fans of survival tales with philosophical depth
people open to spiritual or ambiguous endings
audiences seeking an emotional, contemplative adventure
Skip if
you want a strictly realistic survival story
you dislike overt symbolism or faith-adjacent themes
you prefer fast-paced action over reflective drama
you’re not in the mood for a film that asks you to interpret what’s real
Overview
Life of Pi is the kind of studio film that feels engineered to remind you what cinema can do. Ang Lee turns a survival premise into something expansive and dreamlike, using 3D, color, water, and light to create images that linger long after the plot details fade. It’s a rare blockbuster that is also patient, meditative, and emotionally sincere.
Worth noting
What makes it work is the tension between spectacle and belief. On one level, it’s a gripping ordeal story about endurance and fear; on another, it’s a fable about grief, faith, and the stories we tell to survive pain. The film never fully resolves that tension, and that ambiguity is part of its power.
Bottom line
The performances are understated but effective, and the animal effects remain impressive because they serve the emotional logic of the story rather than overwhelming it. If you’re open to a film that is both a visual showcase and a philosophical puzzle, this is well worth the trip.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Frandi Peralta (4.5★) · 4067 likes
Adult Pi Patel: "I suppose in the end, the whole of life becomes an act of letting go, but what always hurts the most is not taking a moment to say goodbye."
cinéfila... 🕯️ (4.5★) · 3450 likes
some shots in this movie are so beautiful i wanted to straight up die
Mary Conti (5★) · 2064 likes
Wow.
Every year cinephiles struggle to find a film that reminds them exactly why they love cinema. The exact type of film differs from person to person, and what you look for can constantly change from year to year. But you know those films when you find them, because there's that feeling you get. You sit there with your heart and mind open. Nothing else matters. You begin to reflect on yourself and your life, and how the film relates… more