DP Linus Sandgren offers an in-depth look inside the making of the musical and shooting it on film.
It looks like a bright, hot summer day on a Los Angeles highway, where scores of drivers are stuck in early morning traffic listening to various tunes on their radios. But as a hilarious title card would inform us in just a few moments, this is winter in LA. It’s “Another Day of Sun,” where people can drive with their windows rolled down year-around, perhaps exasperated in road rage but ultimately happy and hopeful enough to pop out of their vehicles and launch into an exuberant song and dance number. This is the start of writer-director Damien Chazelle’s exquisite La La Land in a nutshell; one of the best openings of 2016 that won’t be erased from memories any time soon.
This opening is also a stage where Mia (Emma Stone) and Sebastian (Ryan Gosling) would meet-cute in just a few moments. The former is a starlet and aspiring playwright. The latter is a jazz pianist who wants to open up his own club one day. They fall in love, creatively lift each other up and eventually realize their dreams are incompatible with their flourishing love. La La Land is happy and sad, joyous and tear-jerking, bright and moody: a package of emotional and visual contrasts as harmonious as Justin Hurwitz’ compositions. And it is vibrantly shot on film by renowned cinematographer Linus Sandgren, with whom we recently had an in-depth conversation, dissecting La La Land both visually and philosophically.