La La Land

La La Land’s exhilarating and nearly unflagging energy strives to inspire in viewers an equally bold appreciation for all the things it celebrates: the thrill of romantic love, of dreams within reach, of what we call “movie magic.” In this, Damien Chazelle’s follow-up to Whiplash, an opening scene blooms into an ambitious song-and-dance number set in the midst of an Los Angeles traffic jam. It’s there our protagonists, Sebastian and Mia (Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone), will have a terse encounter foreshadowing their destiny as lovers, but not before a flurry of acrobatic dancing and joyful singing erupts around them, as if heralding their own flights of fancy to come. Cinematographer Linus Sandgren’s camera guides us through the excitement, weaving and spinning among drivers who’ve left their cars to execute a stunning sequence of choreography which appears to have been performed in a long, unbroken take.
At a glance, La La Land and Whiplash may seem poles apart—the latter a document of brutal artistic obsession, while this new film is a charming musical—but they share a sensibility and philosophy. In each, Chazelle has shown a predilection for the romance of self-realization and the power of shared ideals. Here, he seems to be further romanticizing Whiplash’s idea of the passionate artist as icon to be admired, one whose uncompromising vision makes the necessary sacrifices to realize one’s full potential. (The same could be said of Chazelle and the film itself.)
Chazelle does this with a simple story that follows Sebastian and Mia from meet-cute through love affair and beyond. In them he has created characters defined by their Big Dreams, who are sympathetic because of their insecurities and doubts. Sebastian is a serious musician and adherent to the tradition of jazz titans like Charlie Parker, Louis Armstrong and Thelonious Monk. Mia is an aspiring actress with an enormous poster of Ingrid Bergman over her bed (announcing the depth of her passion). Each has life goals they circle because they undervalue their ability to make them come true: Sebastian wants to open a jazz club but instead treads water as a sideman in other people’s bands; Mia serves coffee to the rising stars on the Warner Bros. lot, from where she occasionally breaks free to audition for roles in front of casting directors who barely notice her.