January 18, 2014 | | R | 1h 46min Tibetan monks go on searches for reincarnated lamas. They have a method. They track them via word of mouth, cosmic hints, visions, and dreams, to remote villages, hauling lama accouterments of previous incarnations. They then display said accouterments before the suspected reincarnated infant lama, inquiring, “Which was your rattle? Which was your drum? Was this your feather?” When they find a child who is able to correctly point out all his previously-owned artifacts, the Dalai Lama is notified, who then travels there, inspects and interviews the boy, and tells the parents, “Keep him clean!” Meaning they should shelter the boy from the big dye vat of corrupting modern influences. That’s not the story of “I Origins.” That’s 2008’s “Unmistaken Child,” where monk Tenzin Zopa of Nepal goes in search of the reincarnation of Geshe Lama Konchog, his former master. A secularized telling of …