Top Banner
The Shot: Mise-en-Scene
44

The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

The Shot:

Mise-en-Scene

Page 2: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Film’s Stylistic System

• Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”)

• Cinematography (“writing in motion”)

• Editing (compiling shots)

• Sound (all auditory elements)

Page 3: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Verisimilitude• Film, like all art forms, is a lie. That is, it

is not the literal truth. It is not real.

• Mise-en-Scene is the element of stylistic form that seeks to create verisimilitude, or the appearance or semblance of reality, plausibility, or believability.

Page 4: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Elements of Mise-en-Scene

1. Setting

2. Figures

3. Props & Costumes

4. Light & Shadow

5. Color

6. Perspective Relations

7. Performance

Page 5: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

1. Film Setting

• Landscape

• Environment

• Spectacle

• Minute detail

• Directed attention

Page 6: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Landscape/Environment

Page 7: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Spectacle

Page 8: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Minute Detail/Directed Attention

Page 9: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

2. Figures in Film• Figures in film have behavior and

motivation. Examples:

Characters (people)

Animals

Machines

Some objects

Page 10: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Figures in Film

Page 11: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

3. Props & Costumes• Objects & clothing aren’t necessarily

props & costumes.

• An object becomes a prop when a figure interacts with it.

• An article of clothing becomes a costume when a figure wears it.

• A prop (or costume, for that matter) becomes a figure when it has behavior and motivation.

Page 12: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Objects vs. Props

Page 13: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Clothing vs. Costume

Page 14: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

4. Lighting: Type/Source

• Hard vs. soft light

• Key vs. fill light

• Light source

Natural

Artificial diegetic

Artificial nondiegetic

Page 15: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Hard Key vs. Soft Fill

Page 16: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Natural Light

Page 17: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Artificial Diegetic Light

Page 18: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Artificial Nondiegetic Light

Page 19: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

4. Lighting: Direction

• Frontal (flattens features)

• Sidelight (sculpts features)

• Backlight (creates silhouettes)

• Underlight (horror effect)

• Toplight (halo effect)

• Hairlight (specific toplight)

• Eyelight (tiny light for eye sparkle)

Page 20: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Frontlighting

Page 21: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Sidelighting

Page 22: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Backlighting

Page 23: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Underlighting

Page 24: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Toplighting

Page 25: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Hairlight

Page 26: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Eyelight

Page 27: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

4. Shadows

• Attached shadows (aka shading) – object/figure creates shadow on itself

• Cast shadows – object/figure casts shadow on something else

• Chiaroscuro – areas of extreme light and dark in a single shot

• Film noir – “Dark Film”

Page 28: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Attached Shadows

Page 29: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Cast Shadow

Page 30: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Chiaroscuro

Page 31: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Film Noir

Page 32: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

5. Color

• Descriptive – it looks like what it is

• Emotional – creates a feeling

• Symbolic – represents an idea

• Formal/structural – lines, areas of composition

Page 33: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Descriptive Color

Page 34: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Emotional Color

Page 35: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Symbolic Color

Page 36: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Structural Color

Page 37: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

6. Perspective Relations• Size & Balance – create depth cues and

emphasis

• Depth cues – clues as to distance

• Planes (overlapping) – a depth cue

• Size diminution – smaller = further away

• Linear perspective – parallel lines converge

• Aerial perspective – hazing of distant planes

• Shallow vs. deep-space composition – few planes vs. many planes in the shot

Page 38: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Overlapping Planes/Size Diminution

Page 39: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Linear Perspective

Page 40: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Aerial Perspective

Page 41: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Shallow-Space Composition

Page 42: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

Deep-Space Composition

Page 43: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

7. Performance

• Blocking – general movement and placement of figures

• Choreography – specific/detailed movement of figures (dance, fights)

• Acting

Page 44: The Shot: Mise-en-Scene. Film’s Stylistic System Mise-en-Scene (“putting in the scene”) Cinematography (“writing in motion”) Editing (compiling shots)

7. Performance: Acting• Two aspects of an actor’s performance:

Visual elements (body, gesture)

Auditory elements (voice)

• Film acting vs. stage acting – largely a

question of scale and spontaneity

• Acting Styles:

Realistic (aims for verisimilitude)

Stylized (stagey, fantastical)