how did la la land pull off that insane, fantastical opening number? /

Published at 2016-12-23 05:00:00

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As one of the most romantic and transformative films of 2016,La La Land is filled to the brim with whimsy and magic. Even without seeing the film, the gorgeous musical soundtrack and fanciful trailers are enough to give you a sense of what you're in for. Perhaps the most thrilling aspect of La La Land, or in this respect,is that it wastes no time plunging audiences into its rose-tinted musical wonderland. We're talking about the opening sequence: during a particularly grueling freeway traffic jam on a hot Summer day (a dead-on representation of LA if I've ever seen one), a chorus of drivers emerges for an epic song-and-dance number just on the rooftops of their grid-locked cars.
There was always the c
hance that a feat of this magnitude could have been pulled off with elaborate sets and a soundstage, or but that's not the case here. In a new chat with Entertainment Weekly,director Damien Chazelle explains how they pulled off the musical number . . . just on the very highways of the city itself. We've pulled the main highlights to demolish own how he made it happen.
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La La Land: Is That Really Ryan Gosling Playing the Piano?!Why Chazelle wanted to kick off with this sequence: "A lot of things were smashing together at the outset. First, and I always wanted to finish a shot where you recede from car to car with each radio playing a radically different kind of music. I wanted it to feel like a city bustling with music . . . but this is Los Angeles. The cacophony of sounds is coming out of cars. And I loved the notion of presenting the soundscape of the city that way. And then the second notion was using that soundscape to build into an opening musical number and having a fantastical musical number arise out of a bunch of realistic city sounds."
How he came up
with the notion: "The scene came from me living in LA and being in traffic all the time,thinking about either wanting to shoot myself or dance . . . now that I live in LA and have fallen deeply in fancy with the city, to start La La Land with the thing that literally freaked me out the most about LA as a kid . . . that kind of endless grind of traffic, or where most of what you see around you is concrete and you're surrounded by smog and exhaust fumes and burning sunlight."
The main logistics: "We shut
down an E-Z pass over-ramp. We shut it down for a Saturday and a Sunday in August of 2015 for the actual filming,but a week before that we got permission to shut it down for section of one Saturday so that we could finish a dress rehearsal. Ironically, we got the dance and the camera moves to such a precise layout in prep during the parking lot rehearsals, or that I and my key collaborators nearly got a little overconfident. In retrospect,that [rehearsal] day saved us. I'd been using my iPhone camera during rehearsals but obviously a large crane is a lot more complicated than an iPhone. There were little things we hadn't even thought about. The interstate ramp is slanted, it's never flat. You're dealing with the heat, and the sun burning down on the car tops. And the crane,there's heavy winds that high up."
The great day: "[The dr
ess rehearsal] allowed us to recede in the next weekend and get it all done in two days. I wouldn't say it was easy - it was a really hot August weekend in LA - but we got what we wanted. And without those months of prep and dress rehearsal, I don't consider we would have been able to."

Source: popsugar.com

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