Damien Chazelle (birthname: Damien Sayre Chazelle) is an ambitious writer-producer-director of mostly music-themed and dominated movies that mix romance with the outrageous excesses of show business. The Harvard graduate debuted with a charming indie musical shot in black-and-white, and a favorite of many film festivals including the Tribeca film festival and AFI Festival Los Angeles,
Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench (2009), marking his first of several collaborations with composer (and Chazelle’s Harvard roommate and bandmate, Justin Hurwitz).
It took Chazelle another five years to make his second feature—the acclaimed
Whiplash (2014). In between, he wrote or co-wrote two screenplays, one the horror entry,
The Last Exorcism Part II (2013), and the classical music drama,
Grand Piano (2013), starring Elijah Wood and John Cusack, and released by Paramount.
Whiplash marked Damien Chazelle’s breakthrough for those who hadn’t seen
Guy and Madeline—first as a short film, winning top prizes at the Sundance film festival which helped seed funding for the feature, starring
Miles Teller, J.K. Simmons (Oscar winner for Best Supporting Actor), and Paul Reiser; the movie earned Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize and Audience award, picked up three Oscars, (including Film Editing and Sound Mixing), and grossed $49 million worldwide on a $3.3 million budget. A J. J. Abrams-produced remake of
10 Cloverfield Lane (2016), was co-written by Chazelle (with Josh Campbell and Matt Stuecken) and starred Mary Elizabeth Winstead and John Goodman.
The same year marked Chazelle’s first big-budget Hollywood epic,
La La Land (2016), starring Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, John Legend, Rosemarie DeWitt, and J.K. Simmons, with a Hurwitz song score (for which Chazelle contributed lyrics), earning a remarkable 14 Oscar nominations (with Chazelle winning Best Director), and grossing a robust $447-plus million on a $30 million budget. Chazelle reunited with Gosling for the Neil Armstrong Apollo 11 adventure—marking quite a departure for the young filmmaker—
First Man (2018), co-starring Claire Foy, Jason Clarke, Kyle Chandler, Corey Stoll, Christopher Abbott, and Ciarán Hinds, and earning an unimpressive $105.7 million gross on a $70 million budget.
For his fifth feature, Damien Chazelle returned to Los Angeles-based showbiz for his sprawling and raucous saga of Hollywood during the silent era,
Babylon (2022), starring
Brad Pitt,
Margot Robbie, Diego Calva, Jean Smart, Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li, and Tobey Maguire, but even with five Golden Globe nominations (including Best Picture—Musical or Comedy), the movie marked Chazelle’s first commercial bomb, earning a mere $15 million on a $78 million budget.