Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘La La Land’ is light on its feet

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matters in a film that sweeps them up as if carried by a swirling force of nature: they have the unforced grace of natural performers, lending an offhand rakishness to every step they take. In addition to being fine actors in their own right, their gifts dovetail perfectly with composer Justin Hurwitz’s ingenious songs and have been lent even more sparkle by Tom Cross’s crisp editing – which stays gratifying­ly quiet during the gracefully filmed dance sequences.

One of the movie’s themes is the often absurd pursuit of stardom that defines Los Angeles at its most shallow and careerist. Chazelle lards his script with little digs at showbiz jargon. (A young screenwrit­er Mia meets proudly announces his “knack for world-building”.)

The film is literally inscribed with Hollywood’s mythic past, from such familiar backdrops as the Griffith Observator­y to the movie star murals on the city’s streets. The subtext is that it has two stars at its centre who can convey hunger and avidity at one moment and a shiny sense of preordaine­d fame and fortune the next.

But the real star in La La Land is the movie itself, which pulses and glows like a living thing in its own right, as if the MGM musicals of the Singin’ in the Rain era had a love child with the more abstract confection­s of Jacques Demy, creating a new kind of knowing, selfaware genre that rewards the audience with all the indulgence­s they crave – beautiful sets and costumes, fanciful staging and choreograp­hy, witty songs, escapist wish-fulfilment – while commenting on them from the sidelines.

In Chazelle’s case, that commentary isn’t ironic: it isn’t delivered with pompous eye-rolls or scare quotes. Instead, he harbours a genuine loving concern for a cinema that, in an age dominated by comic-book spectacles and stories dumbed down and miniaturiz­ed to fit an iPhone, is on the verge of losing the scale and sweep and narrative values that defined and distinguis­hed it in the first place.

Throughout La La Land, Gosling’s character bemoans the state of jazz as a bastardise­d art form, further sullied by an audience indifferen­t to quality, originalit­y and virtuosity. It’s difficult not to hear the film-maker himself in those words, anxiously observing how the art form he first fell in love with is undergoing existentia­l transforma­tion. In La La Land, his answer his clear: the best way to deal with something that is shifting and changing under your feet – whether it’s love, life or art – is to just keep dancing. – Washington Post

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