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La La Land (2016)
4/10
Wanted to love it, came out depressed (spoilers)
10 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This movie begins with great promise and for the first thirty minutes or so I thought this could be a really great movie; an homage to Old Hollywood, a whimsical old-fashioned musical set in contemporary LA. Some of the musical sequences during the first half of the movie are truly wonderful.

But it feels like this movie is in two halves – the second half of the movie is sad, depressing, unengaging and devoid of any of the lustre or magic of the first half. The story becomes clunky, the characters are not interesting anymore. It was turning into 'Blue Valentine-The Musical' - I started to question the motives of the filmmakers, what exactly are they trying to achieve here? Get people to see a modern movie musical and then turn it into a slow, protracted break up movie?

The icing on the cake was the end musical sequence, showing what 'could have been' if the two main characters had stayed together. I was thinking, 'what's the point of this' – it doesn't matter that they didn't stay together. They both attain great success, they both followed their dreams – why then show an extended sequence which comes across as 'if only they had stayed together look what would have happened'? It seemed pointless and really unmoving considering what I think the filmmakers were trying to do.

But in the end, it doesn't matter what the director was hoping to achieve. It's already a huge success. It's a star vehicle with A-list actors and it will win all the awards because it's an "oscar winning movie". But I know I'm not alone in my opinion of this film as an audience member, and that really is all that matters to me.
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8/10
Hitting a nerve
8 March 2015
This is truly a great Australian film, and still holds up after all these years. The film has always hit a nerve with me in terms of the Heslop's family dynamics (Mum, make Dad a cup of tea!). I can only speak for myself but I grew up in Queensland around the same time (I am aware this was made in New South Wales) and my experience with my family definitely resonates with that of Muriel's with her family. I really thought at the time this came out that this type of family dysfunction was 'an Aussie thing', but I know better than that now that I am older and wiser.

I've never thought of this as a comedy although it has some very funny moments. Even now, I have to be in the mood for Muriel's Wedding due to it's brutally harsh treatment of it's characters. The film is vicious and unrelenting and has made me cry more than once. But it's also a cathartic experience, about a person with flaws like all of us, who is trying to find her own identity, and, despite what she has been conditioned to believe, that she is worthy.
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