Yes the other songs were fine, the story was fine and it was fun but nothing special. The opening number was special. Other musicals are interspersed with great powerful songs throughout. La la land had one epic song at the start and multiple ok songs from then on. 1. The screenplay of the film was written in the year 2010. 2. The intention of Damien Chazelle’s was to make a more grounded musical while still paying homage to the classics. 3. The opening song was shot on the same freeway as the one featured in ‘Speed’. 4. Ryan Gosling turned down a role in ‘Beauty And The Beast’ to do ‘La La Despite the complexity involved in shooting the "Lovely Night" musical number when Sebastian ( Ryan Gosling) and Mia ( Emma Stone) walk together after hanging out at a party, the crew managed to Hollywood is singing the praises of Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling in the hit movie “La La Land,” which break into song,” Chazelle said. “La La Land” and to shoot the scene that Our respects and loves for LA LA LAND. This is a cover version of "Another Day of Sun", the opening song from the hit movie "La La Land". Directed by Rio Jia A teenager from Phoenix, Arizona put together the prom proposal of all prom proposals and remade the opening scene of “La La Land” to ask star Emma Stone to the dance. Jacob Staudenmaier is a A dance interpretation in Indian classical style to Justin Hurwitz's 'Epilogue - La La Land' in Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Ballet and Kuchipudi. Performed and ch One second, Sebastian is over in Mia’s neck of the woods, and the next, he’s by the beach. Instead, you either 1). Locate the nearest exit and make a B-line for it as quickly as humanly The scene: a freeway ramp on a blazingly sunny L.A. day. Cars glitter far into the horizon. Horns honk. And then the music picks up. That opening song-and-dance number, “Another Day of Sun,” is the film’s ode to the city of Los Angeles, a world of endless possibility, constant beauty—and repetitive disappointment. Perhaps the first sign of Method acting becoming a disruptive agent in the land of the Hollywood musical happened behind the scenes of Guys and Dolls, as Marlon Brando, not much of a song and dance man, would famously butt heads with co-star Frank Sinatra, who objected to the number of takes Brando needed to get it right—not to mention the mumbling line delivery he was often parodied for. U5WKuDm.