Other Definitions
mise en scene (dict)

Mise En Scene

In film theory, mise-en-scne mizA~sEn refers to everything that is to appear before the camera and its arrangement -- sets, props, actors, costumes, camera movements and performances. The term was coined by early French film critics and means literally "put into the scene" or "setting in scene." In auteur theory, less creative directors are sometimes disparagingly called "metteurs en scne". German filmmaking in the 1920s excelled at conveying tone, meaning, and information through mise en scene. Perhaps the most famous example of this was The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari where the doctor's internal state of mind was represented in the sets and lighting. It has also come to represent a style of conveying the information of a scene primarily through a single shot--often accompanied by camera movement. It is to be contrasted with multiple angles pieced together through editing.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
indian pone
l system
blackberry mush
bread pudding
batavia
quince pudding
oats
rye
turnip (brassica rapa)
hedgehog
henry iii of england
hop (plant)
hay
straw
loom
drainage
earth observation satellite
leiden
cambyses ii of persia
darius
demosthenes
catiline
caesar
shovelware
clark county
soundtrack
automatic teller machine
embedded system
film format
the young ones
turing tarpit
xenu
maoism
dow
dow jones & company
world council of churches
nicholas i of russia
grep
enrico berlinguer
four cardinal principles
buttock
radio telescope
parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme
the graduate (soundtrack)