Monday, January 23, 2017

La La Land

DIRECTOR: DAMIEN CHAZELLE  LEAD CAST: RYAN GOSLING, EMMA STONE  SCREENWRITER:     DAMIEN CHAZELLE  PRODUCER:  FRED BERGER, GARY GILBERT, JORDAN HOROWITZ, MARC PLAT  EDITOR:  TOM CROSS  MUSICAL DIRECTOR:  JUSTIN HURWITZ  GENRE: ROMANTIC MUSICAL COMEDY  CINEMATOGRAPHER:  LINUS SANDGREN  DISTRIBUTOR: SUMMIT ENTERTAINMENT  LOCATION:  LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES  RUNNING TIME: 128 MINUTES
Technical assessment:  3.5
Moral assessment:  3
CINEMA rating:  V 13
Jazz enthusiast and down and out pianist Sebastian (Ryan Gosling) and Mia (Emma Stone), a barista with dreams of becoming an actress, first meet in an awkward road rage situation while stuck in Los Angeles’ highway traffic jam.  Their paths cross again when Mia’s car is towed: walking home she drops by a bar and finds Sebastian playing Christmas carols on the piano.  Their third meeting is at a party Mia attends, where Sebastian is on the keyboard of the live band.  It seems like destiny after three encounters.  Sebastian then takes Mia to a jazz bar where he discloses his ambition to have his own jazz bar; Mia reciprocates by sharing her dreams of becoming an actress.
Because La La Land is supposedly a musical rom-com drama, the boy-meets-girl plot flows into a boy-dances-with-girl number on the moonlit night they meet.  First they fight, then they flirt, then they fall in love.  Then they live together.  But will the director pursue the affair to its logical and box-office friendly conclusion?  The chemistry between Gosling and Stone is obvious—this being their third pairing (after Crazy, Stupid Love and Gangster Squad)—and the story of love and ambition in Hollywood is deftly presented, and yet…there is something amiss, something artificial about the movie that stands in the way of total enjoyment.  Maybe what’s distracting is the fact that Stone and Gosling are neither singers nor dancers—they were just trained for their roles for a few months, and it shows.  (Stone nailed it, though, in the emotional audition scene towards the end).  
Families would benefit from discussions with the young on how love impacts one’s ambitions, and how ambition challenges one’s commitment to permanence in relationships.  The situation is universal although the setting is glittery Los Angeles (LA, thus La La Land), something relatable to Filipinos familiar with the socio-emotional costs of working overseas away from loved ones.  Young people with hopes of entering showbiz will also learn a thing or two here about the industry behind the scenes and the realities of sacrificing one’s passion and art on the altar of expediency.