AKA π; π: Faith in Chaos
“Very much like the universe itself, the more technologically advanced we become and as out picture of π grows larger, the more its mysteries grow.”—From “Notes on π” on the Lions Gate Pi DVD
DIRECTED BY: Darren Aronofsky
FEATURING: Sean Gullette, Mark Margolis
PLOT: Max, a reclusive mathematics genius, searches for a pattern that will help him predict the stock market with the assistance of a supercomputer he has built in his apartment. He also suffers from terrible migraines which cause him to hallucinate, and believes (sometimes correctly) that people are stalking him. As he gets closer to locating a certain 216 digit number that may have mystical predictive qualities, he finds himself caught between the machinations of a large corporation and a mystical sect, both of whom want the knowledge inside his head and will stop at nothing to get it.
BACKGROUND:
- Pi was made for a mere $60,000, financed largely by $100 contributions from friends and family. Each of the cast and crew worked for an identical salary and a share of the film. Pi eventually grossed over $3 million domestically.
- The movie was shot in high contrast black and white reversal film stock (usually used for still photography). In his DVD commentary Sean Gullette says that Pi was the first feature length fiction film shot this way.
- Pi won the Directing Award at the 1998 Sundance festival and was nominated for the Grand Jury prize (losing to the now largely forgotten Slam). It won the main prize at several smaller film festivals.
- Aronofsky also created a graphic novel called “The Book of Ants” that presents a slightly different take on the story of Pi.
- This was the first soundtrack scored by former Pop Will Eat Itself frontman Clint Mansell, who has now become an in-demand Hollywood composer.
- Aronofsky went on to further critical success with the bleak addiction parable Requiem for a Dream (2000); the weirdish science fiction/romance The Fountain (2006); the straightforward drama The Wrestler (2008), which earned Oscar nominations for stars Mickey Rourke and Marisa Tomei; and five more Oscar nominations (with a statuette for Natalie Portman) for Black Swan.
INDELIBLE IMAGE: A brain crawling with ants that shows up in the strangest places, including on a subway staircase and in a sink.
WHAT MAKES IT WEIRD: Math wiz Max’s frequent migraine induced hallucinations give Pi all the weird cachet it needs, but even without them, the hermetic world created by the mix of grainy high-contrast monochrome photography, rapid-fire montage editing, a pulsing electronic soundtrack, and ideas too grandiose and metaphysical to be completely described would have created a movie seething with weirdness. It also features a tough, streetwise gang of devout Hasidic Jews, which by itself gives it an extra weird point.
Original trailer for Pi
COMMENTS: “When I was a little kid, my mother told me not to stare into the sun. So Continue reading 36. PI (1998)