The Borneo Post

Damien Chazelle – the shy musician turned Hollywood darling

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Damien Chazelle is a young version of Quentin Tarantino or Martin Scorsese – a gifted film nerd, super smart, who knows the classics well enough to deconstruc­t them and put them back together again in fresh new ways. Anne Thompson, Veteran film critic

LOS ANGELES: For a man whose movies burst with bravado and swagger, Damien Chazelle is disarmingl­y shy, but the fi lmmaker is fi nding himself increasing­ly in the spotlight as the awards pile up.

The 31-year- old director’s latest movie “La La Land,” a sumptuous musical throwback to the halcyon days of Old Hollywood, came away with seven statuettes at Sunday’s Golden Globes, more than any other fi lm in the show’s history.

Veteran fi lm critic Anne Thompson, awards editor for movie blog IndieWire, describes the youngest ever recipient of the best director award as the kind of fi lmmaker who is respected not just by reviewers but also by his peers in the industry.

“Damien Chazelle is a young version of Quentin Tarantino or Martin Scorsese – a gifted fi lm nerd, super smart, who knows the classics well enough to deconstruc­t them and put them back together again in fresh new ways,” Thompson told AFP.

“He’s not pretentiou­s. He’s had to struggle to get where he is.”

It is likely to be a memorable year for Chazelle, as every Golden Globes best director over the last decade – with the lone exception of Ben Affleck in 2013 – has gone on to win the Oscar.

“It took six years to get the movie going. All of this is just so surreal. The dream come true was literally the fi rst day of shooting. All of this is even more surreal,” he told journalist­s backstage at the Globes.

A native of Rhode Island, Chazelle was born to Celia Martin, a writer, and French-American Bernard Chazelle, a pioneering computer scientist and a huge jazz and blues fan.

Inspired at a very young age by Edward Zwick’s epic civil war fi lm “Glory” (1989), Chazelle had always planned to become a fi lmmaker but took up jazz drumming in high school, becoming obsessed and practising up to eight hours a day.

It wasn’t until he started reading visual studies at Harvard that he realised his true calling was fi lmmaking.

Chazelle wrote, produced, co- shot and directed the lion’s share of his fi rst feature, jazz musical “Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench,” while he was still an undergradu­ate.

He continued playing the drums at Harvard, where he was in a band with Justin Hurwitz, who would eventually join the crew of “La La Land,” winning the best original song Golden Globe for penning the infectious “City of Stars.”

But Chazelle had always suffered from crippling stage fright before performanc­es and came to accept that his nerves would continue to be an obstacle to a career in music.

“I couldn’t handle the particular kind of terror that came from performing on a stage, or performing in front of people, or performing period,” he said at a recent roundtable discussion for directors the Hollywood Reporter.

Chazelle said he still gets nervous directing, or even watching screenings, and is “in awe of actors” who are “better at handling it than I am.”

Neverthele­ss, his experience­s as an aspiring drummer were the inspiratio­n for his darkly comic second feature “Whiplash” ( 2014) – the intense story of the stormy relationsh­ip between a bullying teacher and his jazz drumming student.

The movie swept up trophies on the fi lm festival circuit and won three Oscars, including for best supporting actor for J. K. Simmons, and nomination­s for best picture and for Chazelle’s screenplay.

All the while Chazelle, who has writing credits for “The Last Exorcism Part II,” “Grand Piano” ( both 2013) and last year’s hit sci- fi thriller “10 Cloverfiel­d Lane,” harbored the ambition to make a musical.

He told AFP in an interview in 2014 of his nostalgia for the golden age of cinema and musical comedies, performed by the likes of Jacques Demy, Ginger Rogers, Fred Astaire, and Gene Kelly.

“It was the last generation who danced to jazz, just before rock. The 1930s to the 1960s is an era which means a lot to me, not only cinematica­lly but musically,” he said.

Next up for Chazelle is “First Man,” a biopic on Neil Armstrong, with shooting expected to begin early this year and “La La Land” star Ryan Gosling due to play the iconic astronaut. — AFP

 ??  ?? Director Damien Chazelle (left) holds the award for Best Director - Motion Picture for ‘La La Land’ during the 74th Annual Golden Globe Awards show in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday.
Director Damien Chazelle (left) holds the award for Best Director - Motion Picture for ‘La La Land’ during the 74th Annual Golden Globe Awards show in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday.
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