Here, the mise-en-scene becomes almost televisual, with a flat, unidimensional naivete and bloodless characters. |
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Each environment is an elaborate mise-en-scene through which you furtively pick your way as though on a stage after the performers have departed. |
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I preferred a mise-en-scene that reflected the ambiguity that was the backdrop to the entire film. |
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The different disciplines are always given equal weight in the mise-en-scene. |
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Based on a series of diverse display items that can be mounted on a central rod, you can easily create a different mise-en-scene effect. |
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Figures have been worked and rehearsed by the cavaliers and their mount for this unique mise-en-scene. |
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I insist on the mise-en-scene through a relation between the model and the props: I tell a story between fiction and documentary. |
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But details extended well beyond a gnarly mise-en-scene. |
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The whole mise-en-scene gets shifted and everyone gets a bit clumsy. |
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It is there in the mise-en-scene of the show itself. |
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The final step consists in the esthetic mise-en-scene of data. |
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His mise-en-scene handles themes head-on, preventing hazy and hesitant memories from surfacing and adding an unwanted dreamlike dimension to the narrative. |
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Guillaume Bresson seems to situate painting in a temporal gap, between photographic mise-en-scene and pictorial construction, news stories and historical painting, intrigue and the elusiveness of a gesture. |
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Crowded into the small garden-level gallery, a simple theatrical mise-en-scene cast the shadows of eight everyday objects as seen through a semiopaque screen. |
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