In the film's madhouse passages, the grim mise en scene contrasts starkly with the warm glow of nightclubs and cabarets. |
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When he is onscreen, your eye stays with him, oblivious to the mise en scene. |
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Then we get on with the mise en place, get the cooking out of the way and get ready for the service. |
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Following the themes of relentlessness, fault and mise en scène, the clumsiness had been rotating around my studio work for a while. |
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The barely defined background is like a set for a mise en scene of Provence itself. |
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In short, the effigy found itself not well suited, in artifactual terms, to changes in the mise en scene of funerals. |
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Thus she introduces the mise en abyme of reality, composing and recomposing it till this achemical porosity between within and without surfaces. |
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Because it is a collective mise en abyme in an unsuspected place, where we will caress the inner surface and slow dance with the depths. |
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To change this, Bellanger's base preparations and mise en place are well organized for service, allowing him to operate the pastry station, like a hot line. |
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Recent developments in thermometry have motivated the creation of a broader, more flexible document that incorporates the temperature scales in current use: the mise en pratique for the definition of the kelvin. |
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Chefs have always regarded shallots as the cornerstone of their mise en place. |
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And thus, we can perhaps makes some sense of the narratives he reads as mise en abymes of his own desires. |
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Artistic effects and mise en scene of one of the most popular fiestas. |
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Yale University's Robert Fernandez prepared the lab bench for the camera as a chef might arrange his mise en place, deftly laying out a mini vortex, a fly aspirator, a T-maze, and a thermometer. |
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D'autre part, la mise en service de la tremie de Daksi est de plus en plus decriee par les automobilistes. |
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More specialized references such as mise en scene, Program announcements, and violon repetiteur are also present. |
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Fears without name, details, colours... The everyday filtered through and mise en scene by the fabulous imagination of Marcel Proust as a child with his extravagant keenness of observation. |
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She takes advantage of the technologic to increase the non-reality of the mise en scene and reinforces the process by the use of cinematographic elements. |
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Implicitly, the enunciative mise en abyme reflects an implied author who is attempting to persuade an authorial audience that would identify with the dismayed people. |
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His method relies on the enargeia and even on the vivid and dynamic effect of irrupting energies that break through the stylised, ekphrastic mise en scene. |
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Others found that coldness appropriate for a story framed by the mise en scene of dog-eat-dog, 19th-century London during the Industrial Revolution. |
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By the agreement known as the Mise of Lewes, Edward and his cousin Henry of Almain were given up as hostages to Montfort. |
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