La La Land’s Iconic Poster Gets Its Own LEGO Recreation With Minifigure Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone

Damien Chazelle made La La Land as a love letter to a Los Angeles that barely exists anymore, and to a style of filmmaking that Hollywood had largely abandoned. The big-studio musical, with its choreographed sidewalks and color-saturated dreamscapes, had been gathering dust since the golden age of MGM. Chazelle dusted it off, handed it to two impossibly charming leads, and aimed it squarely at the part of your chest that still believes in chasing something impossible. The result was fourteen Oscar nominations, six wins, and one of the most recognizable movie posters of the decade.

The scene that lives on that poster, Mia and Sebastian dancing above the lights of Los Angeles on a clear, impossible evening, is the film distilled to its purest emotional frame. TesrYer, a LEGO Ideas builder, had the good sense to freeze it in plastic. The resulting diorama layers a deep gradient night sky in dark navy and purple, studded with circular brick elements that somehow read as stars and rolling hills simultaneously, with two minifigures caught mid-step below a glowing streetlamp. The city of stars shimmers behind them in stacked dark tiles, each lit window implied rather than stated.

Designer: TesrYer

The building technique behind that night sky is a bit of LEGO ingenuity. TesrYer has used round plates and dish elements of varying diameters, packed together in overlapping clusters across multiple shades of dark blue, dark purple, and near-black, to create a backdrop that feels organic and volumetric rather than flat. It reads as clouds, as hills, as a stylized abstract sky all at once, which is exactly the kind of visual ambiguity that Chazelle’s cinematographer Linus Sandgren was doing with light and color on the actual film. My favorite detail, though, is the streetlamp. A single white gas-lamp post rising at the right edge of the composition, its globe rendered in translucent white bricks, warm and slightly luminous. It anchors the whole scene the way a key light anchors a stage, and without it the diorama would lose half its atmosphere.

The minifigures are pitch-perfect. Mia arrives in her yellow dress, printed with the small floral detail visible in the film, while Sebastian stands opposite in his white shirt and black tie, one arm raised mid-movement. Whether his hand is positioned correctly is a matter I will leave between TesrYer and Ryan Gosling.

LEGO Ideas is the fan-design platform where community-built MOCs (My Own Creations) gather votes toward the 10,000-supporter threshold required for official LEGO review. TesrYer’s diorama is currently in the early stages of its run, with nearly a 1,000 supporters and 334 days left on the clock. If you want to see this lovely little slice of cinematic nostalgia make it to a box, head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote here.