Written before the
Oscars nominations were announced. Not
that that matters. I am not one easily
swayed by the mob. Usually.
There was this studio executive, famous for habitually
raining on everyone’s imaginatorial parade.
I once described her darkening presence as being “like a spider on a
birthday cake.”
Having previewed my observations about La La Land in my head, I fear that in this context that might also
describe me.
Written and directed by Damien Chazelle, who performed similar
duties on the acclaimed 2014 movie Whiplash
– touting the value of sadism as an acceptable educational devise – La La Land is what I see as a
“participatory musical”, in which regular people – or at least more regular
than the consummate movie musical geniuses of yesteryear – dress up (in their
fashion) and put on a show, complete with singing and dancing, although
registering closer on the continuum to “I
could to that” than to “How do they do that?”
Let me be clear here.
This post is not about “They did it better before”, the “it” in this
case being movie musicals. Nothing
competes with the heart-lightening Singin’
in the Rain nor rivals the enchantment of The Wizard of Oz. Still, every
generation reinvents the movie musical to its cultural specifications. We are not inevitably frozen at the
formalized white tie and tails.
Check out YouTube. People do not want to be left out; they want
to do it themselves… minus the decades of grueling preparation and punishing sacrifice. Uh-oh, Grumpelskiltskin, rearing his
nostalgical head. Okay, I’ll be good.
I recall – wait, I have to look up the year… okay, 2001… Really? I thought it was older than that – a movie
called Moulin Rouge, which I loved
for the first forty-five minutes.
Unfortunately, Moulin Rouge
ran a hundred and twenty-eight minutes.
Moulin Rouge, at
the beginning, was a knowing parody of movie musicals. However, as the storyline played out, Moulin Rouge morphed into the type of
movie it originally satirized. And not a
great version of the type of movie it
originally satirized to boot.
I was heartily disappointed. I had considerably better times watching cinematic
adaptations of Cabaret and Chicago, both freshly imagined while
remaining true to their theatrical antecedents.
No parody. But no surrender.
La La Land… wait.
Here’s a question for you.
If you make a contemporary “gangbanger” movie, it is open to
criticism for being overly violent?
If you make Dumb and
Dumber, is it fair to complain, “That’s stupid”?
“Violent” and “stupid” are exactly what they were going
for. Yet, the better they did it, the
more vulnerable they were to rebuke. That
doesn’t seem right, does it? If Dumb and Dumber were inherently less dumb and dumber, it would not just
be Dumb and Dumber, it would be Dumb and Dumber and bad. The negative reaction suggests they did the
“dumbness” just right.
It’s the same thing – he submits in this venue – with
“superficial.”
La La Land is
about not particularly deep people with not particularly deep aspirations –
making their dreams of show biz triumphancy come true. If these not particularly earthshaking
aspirations are portrayed accurately, does that mean the filmmakers did a great job – presenting quintessentially
shallow characters following their dreams – or they did an inadequate job, for not exploring to the psychological
underpinnings of their characters?
Oh, and throw this
in. Maybe La La Land’s intentional “superficiality” was a Moulin Rouge-type parody, the filmmakers
mocking the superficiality of earlier musicals.
If it was, there were no identifying signals of that intention. And more importantly, they failed, La La Land, like Moulin Rouge, ultimately falling for its own magic trick.
Truth be told, although I cannot definitively put my finger
on it – though it’s in the area of “Who cares about show biz aspirations?” – though
I found it moderately appealing, I was not transported by La La Land.
But I’ll tell you something.
Sometimes, it’s not the movie.
When I saw it, I may have just been not in the appropriate mood. Particularly with delicate material, it is
necessary to meet the production half way; otherwise, the fluff is shruggingly unpersuasive,
the soufflé falling thuddingly flat. In
a more buoyant demeanor, I might have eaten it up. A lot of other folks did.
You know, when I’d attend network meetings after delivering
a draft of a pilot script, some presiding network executive would occasionally
say, “It looks like you had a lot of fun writing this.”
“Red Flag” – If they said that, they invariably never bought
the pilot.
The likable actors on La
La Land, free to sing and dance up a storm, looked like they had a blast
making the movie.
Like those network executives, however,
I simply wasn’t a buyer.
2 comments:
You have at least two supporters here, Earl. We both said, "Feh!"
It was a musical for people who've never seen a musical. Like everything else these days, the necessity to apologize for comparing it to the high standards set in the past is the only way it can succeed. You are right on when you talk about an audience reaction of "I could do that" rather than "how do they do that?" No tall poppies in our culture! (Not just in politics.)
On a positive note, perhaps the movie's success will mean that the scrawny, spaniel-eyed Miss Stone will be able to afford a decent meal!
I saw the trailer. I saw that the director made Whiplash, I saved my money.
I came across his blog looking up writers for the Mary Tyler Moore Show. Mr. Pomerantz is from Toronto to boot.
What a hoot
Gotta scoot.
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