Is the tiger in Life of Pi real?
Is the tiger in Life of Pi real? Four real tigers were used in the production, for reference and motion capture, as well as for actual pivotal scenes. Including footage of actual tigers forced the effects team to make their digital tigers look realistic enough so as to be indistinguishable from the actual tigers.
Was the tiger in Life of Pi his imagination? In reality, the human characters in Pi’s story are his mother, a young sailor, the ship’s cook, and Pi himself. The orangutan represents Pi’s mother, the wild hyena is the cook, and the zebra represents the sailor. Finally, Pi’s imagination creates an alter ego for himself as the Bengal tiger.
What actually happened in Life of Pi? The movie closely follows the book—a young Indian boy and his family travel across the Pacific on a giant shipping vessel, when unexpectedly the ship sinks in a horrific storm, killing nearly everyone onboard. The only survivors are Pi, a tiger, a hyena, a zebra, and an orangutan.
Why did Richard Parker not look back? The tiger did not look back because although in that form his job was finished, he would always be in Pi’s life in whatever form of life he took. (So in a figurative sense, Richard Parker represented God.)