Showing posts with label Damien Chazelle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Damien Chazelle. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 February 2017

La La Land

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Occasionally you get nervous of seeing a film, you get apprehensive that a film that has been universally lauded and hailed will not meet the expectations you place upon it. You also fear you might miss the boat and not appreciate it when seeing it some weeks after release.  These fears amount in this day and age when flavours and trends alter quicker over time. Long gone are the days when films can take residence in a cinema and grow through word of mouth and maintain a solid box office run such as what was achieved by My Big Fat Greek Wedding, a hit that ran for three months due to word of mouth.

La La Land has been praised since it premiered at Venice last autumn. The follow up film to his Oscar winning Whiplash, Damien Chazelle returns with the film he wrote before that jazz school, drill sergeant movie.
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This film is special from the outset when we witness gridlocked Los Angeles traffic being forgotten about when travellers start singing and dancing ending in a huge choreographed number on car bonnets to the tune 'Another Day of Sun' fitting for the setting of L.A. and the general disposition this film wants to shine forth.

We then meet our intrepid duo, Mia (Emma Stone) a young actress who dreams of making the big times but is struggling whilst locked in a barista job and insipid auditions. After her, we bump into Sebastian (Ryan Gosling), a jazz pianist who dreams of owning his own jazz club one day. Their paths collide one night when Mia hears Sebastian play at a restaurant over Christmas, he acts badly and then they bump into each other again at a pool party.  

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That night comes probably the best dance number of the film 'A Lovely Night' which recalls the sophistication of Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers films of the 1930s and the cheeky inventiveness of Gene Kelly with their scrapping shoe steps on tarmac. It also helps that it is probably the best song of the film to, a number that solidifies the partnership and also keenly makes the audience aware they are watching a musical, and the pair are in a musical.

Some critics have been critical of the singing voices by the lead pair, which is somewhat unnecessary and perhaps people just wanting to find fault, yes their voices are not the strongest but perhaps that helps in the emotional connection with the audience. These two are so in love that they feel like singing and dancing, its a cliche perhaps but this does happen to people when in love, they feel like singing at the top of their lungs or dancing on rooftops.

The film is a good musical yet I feel Chazelle has done a better job in celebrating the classic Golden Age of Hollywood movie-making from mid 1930s to the late 1950s when the Studio system was at its height with the names of MGM, Fox, Universal everywhere; he harks back to the chemistry between leading actors when the spark is there from the start. 

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Chazelle cleverly does this need of appreciation a by-gone age by having Sebastian be so enamoured with the glory days of jazz music.  His passion for jazz is something is used as a device in a film to make you remember to love classic movies calling upon romance, love and music.  Chazelle name drops Notorious, Casablanca and Rebel Without a Cause and it is the Humphrey Bogart/Ingrid Bergman film that this film closely resonates with.

Casablanca was about two people who knew each other in happier times and by the film's end they are not together, even though their love is so strong, for reasons they cannot be.  In this film by the end, Mia has taken an acting job in Paris and they wait to see what happens, this leads to a five-year skip when she is now the renowned movie actress, happily married and with a two year old daughter, whilst Sebastian has his jazz club with full houses listening to new modern jazz with a younger audience.

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Mia and her husband, drop by on a whim to a club, she sees the sign that she drew for Sebastian adorning the entrance and you feel the anticipation building up in her with the prospect of seeing him again.  Sebastian takes the stage, he sees Mia in the crowd (calling back to a previous song and shots in the movie) and he starts playing 'Epilogue' a composition to rival long narrative pieces from Singin' In The Rain ('Broadway Melody') or An American in Paris and whilst he plays, Mia is shot back to when she first saw Sebastian playing and their first contact is altered when he kisses her instead of brushing past her abruptly. 

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The abrupt kiss leads to a dream sequence as the couple walk through an alternative five year span with mistakes avoided or rectified, yet they are together.  However, like Casablanca, they remain apart only sharing a look across a crowded room, Sebastian knowing that his persistence for Mia to succeed and attend that vital audition led to him losing her, but loving her forever.

La La Land is the Best Film of the Oscar contenders and if you have not seen it yet, you have to before it is too late, specifically on the silver screen when the vibrancy of colour and the thrill of music pours off the screen.

Friday, 24 July 2015

Thoughts on Whiplash

Trying to catch up on the films you have missed can be stopped by many roadblocks. You may have work commitments, family problems, health issues. Or you might just not have enough hours in the day to watch everything you would like to. Or you might not have a DVD player. Thankfully I have an amazing girlfriend who purchased a new device and the first film she purchased was the Oscar winning film, Whiplash.

We proceeded to watch it late on a Tuesday night, knowing we wouldn't be up early and that the film was a tight 90 minute running time.

Whiplash tells the combative relationship between a young drum student, Andrew (Miles Teller) and his volatile teacher Fletcher (Oscar winner J. K. Simmons). Unlike other mentor and pupil films, the mentor and pupil meet from the outset, and the pupils aim to please he mentor is at the forefront throughout, even at the behest of the pupils writer father played by Paul Reiser.

Simmons' portrayal of Fletcher as this abrupt and bullying figure is the voice of the film, the way he bewitches his students into motivation for performance is paramount. Yet for all the grandiose of Simmons' role, a lot has to be said for Teller's role as Andrew.

Teller has a strange face, one that looks older than the age he is meant to be playing. Yet it looks like a face that has lived, one that can be calm and reflective in one scene, yet highly expressive and emotive in another such as when he gets passed up by another drummer; his impassioned face says it all. The strain he puts on himself to learn the pieces going to physical extremes is painful to watch.

You get the impression that Fletcher will never be pleased with any performance by his band, and the constant referrals to Charlie Parker and the legend of Bird is a little bit telegraphed somewhat by Damien Chazelle's screenplay. Yet in this day and age of seen it all before film, it is nice to see a film that is positive about the human spirit and capability it can achieve, and an alteration on a familiar movie sub-genre.

The ending has been much discussed as to what it means for both characters, is Fletcher pleased or not? For this reviewer it showed that anyone can wave their hand up there and conduct, it takes special musicians to play like Andrew does in the finale. In that sense, Andrew is reminiscent of Moira Shearer in The Red Shoes, sacrificing body and soul for the glory.