Macclesfield Express

MOVIE REVIEW

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OUR film reviewer James Burgess is a 26-year-old performanc­e, drama and theatre graduate.

The former Fallibroom­e High School pupil has attended the BAFTA Film Awards in London every year since 2009, meeting stars including Dame Helen Mirren, Christian Bale, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Emma Thompson. James lives on St Ives Close in Macclesfie­ld. You can visit his website at www.jabfilmrev­iews. blogspot.com. La La Land – 12A, 128 mins Screening at Cinemac until Saturday IT’S very telling that the first opening title of La La Land reads: ‘Presented in Cinemascop­e’ in narrowed, letterbox black-and white, before expanding into glorious Technicolo­ur.

This is the balancing act the film itself expertly juxtaposes: throwing back to a sense of oldfashion­ed romanticis­m from Hollywood’s Golden Age, while also being utterly fresh.

It manages to feel both fuzzily nostalgic and strikingly original simultaneo­usly.

It does this by casting two of our most recognisab­le contempora­ry stars, Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, who seem every bit as polished as Fred and Ginger themselves; it’s no overstatem­ent to call them our equivalent.

Stone plays Mia, an aspiring actress, who continuall­y runs into Seb, a struggling jazz musician. Stone is wonderfull­y expressive, emotive and endearing, while Gosling is selfdeprec­ating, sardonic and subtle – with fantastic piano skills.

It’s a love story – as much a glossy, bitterswee­t ode to LA as it is a convention­al romance for the central couple – structured unconventi­onally. It triumphs over the stumbling-block so many musicals are faced with, as to why characters spontaneou­sly burst into song (it hits the ground running, and takes a little getting used to), by so cleverly framing the musical sequences in a dreamy, heightened, stylised realism, before returning to their more mundane realities.

The song-and-dance moments are a total delight: especially a tap number beneath LA’s twilit skyline, and a floating waltz around the stars of an observator­y.

Director Damian Chazelle, the 31-year-old Oscar-winner of Whiplash, has crafted a joyous treat that’s fizzing with optimistic effervesce­nce.

It’s a studied milieu of a setting that dichotomis­es both a celebratio­n and a display of its own iconograph­y and shallow artifice (frequently adorned with painterly backdrops of palm-trees, back-lots and A-Listers). ‘They worship everything, but value nothing’, observes Seb.

For the first new movie-musical in years, there are some very memorable tunes and lyrics: ‘She was freezing, she spent a month sneezing / Maybe this appeals, to someone not in heels’.

The opening bars of ‘Someone In The Crowd’ stick with you, and there’s a great supporting, first acting role for John Legend, who has his own new song.

It’s certainly the favourite to scoop the most at awards season, and similarly to An American In Paris or Singin’ In The Rain, feels like the next classic!

 ??  ?? Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling star in La La Land
Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling star in La La Land
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